Movie Journal: Lucy

IMDB labels Lucy as science-fiction, but I prefer to think of it as fantasy. It’s foundation is the popular but debunked misconception that human beings use only ten percent of their brain, and it posits a scenario where tapping into the other ninety percent gives us extra-human abilities like telekinesis, telepathy, and omniscience. In...

Movie Journal: The Neon Demon

Hell no, Mr. Refn, The Neon Demon doesn’t have to make sense; it can wallow in obscurity. Just look at the films of David Lynch—obscure as all get out. True, he grounded these obscure plots in well-rounded, if quirky, characters, but you don’t need to worry about that. And it’s okay if the plot...

Movie Journal: Life

Six astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) recover a probe returning from Mars, where it drilled into the soil looking for life. Following careful protocols, called firewalls—since any extraterrestrial life form, even a germ or a bacteria, could be harmful for life on Earth—they processed the samples and discovered a single-cell organism. Ecstatic,...

Movie Journal: Kong: Skull Island

There is a scene early in Kong: Skull Island where Vietnam-era Hueys fly low over the ocean in attack formation. It’s a beautiful shot, reminiscence of Apocalypse Now, which I suspect it was meant to homage, but I couldn’t help but think how much better it would be if “Ride of the Valkyries” played...

Movie Journal: King Kong (1976)

Merian C. Cooper was an adventurer, who joined Pershing’s expedition in the hunt for Pancho Villa, who flew for the United States during World War I, and for Poland in the Polish-Soviet War (1919-1921). Later in life, he made a Hollywood career as a screenwriter and director, and in said role, he created the...