Showing posts with label Dark comedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dark comedy. Show all posts

Sunday, February 25, 2024

Drive-Away Dolls

8/10

In Drive-Away Dolls, during the 90's lesbian friends, uptight, serious Marian (played by Miracle Workers' Geraldine Viswanathan) and southern twanged free spirit Jamie (Margaret Qualley, the hitchhiker from Once Upon a Time in Hollywood) go on a trip to Tallahassee, not knowing that there's been a mix-up and that the car they're dropping off is carrying a package that some dangerous people want.

This is the first solo film directed by Cohen brother Ethan. Whereas Joel showed that he may be the more serious brother and went with his adaptation of MacBeth, Joel may be showing that he's the more comedy-oriented one. (Not claiming this as an original idea. I'm not the first one to make this conjecture online.) DAD may be the guy's most over-the-top film and makes for a fun ride. This has that Cohen/Pulp Fiction style of chaotic, gonzo, pulpy comic feel that latter movies haven't been able to recapture. There are some solid comedy bits with a great cast and unexpectedness to where the story is going. This is also Cohen's raunchiest comedy, so if you like hard R than this is for you. 

Admittedly, at a short 84 minutes the movie does still have a few scenes that felt unnecessary or drawn out. There are definitely two dream segments that could've been cut. Also, there are a few trippy interstitials that feel indulgent and the budget for the graphics doesn't feel great. The endgame of what is in the car may not live up to expectations of what you want it to be.

Viswanathan and Qualley make the film. They may be playing ropes, but they really manage to shine with great delivery and chemistry amongst them. Qualley shows that he she finally deserves a lead role. Viswanathan who was already a great comedic talent in Miracle Workers, but the first three seasons did have her shackled down with a straight man role, gets to show her talent a lot more. Other fun performances are Beanie Feldstein as Jamie's rightfully angry ex-girlfriend and Twisters' Joey Slotnick as a goon who is also a people person.

Recommended. This was a pretty good time. This isn't top tier Cohen like Fargo and Big Lebowski, but it's up there, and I liked it better than the likes of Brother Where art Thou? or Hail Caesar. 

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Miracle Workers- Season 4 (Final), End Times

8/10

The final season of Miracle Workers on TBS takes place in the post-apocalypse. In it, heroic nomad Sid (played by Daniel Radcliffe) and warlord Freya (Geraldine Viswanathan) fall in love, get married, and decide to settle down in a town.

The show ends on a strong note. Given the more over-the-top nature of its setting the show tackles some of the craziest ideas it ever has. Really, the previous seasons have nothing on how inventive this season is. Plus, End Times has fun parodying every post-apocalyptic and dystopian movie it can.

Be forewarned that this season is a lot, lot darker and messed up than any of the previous ones. I mean props to the writers' ambitions, but this may not be for everyone.

I appreciate that this season has bucked the tired trend of having Viswanathan's and Radcliffe's characters falling in love over the course of the season. We've seen that all before. It's refreshing to see them already together and just working on themselves as a couple. 

Again, Radcliffe is such a comic gem in this show. He does a great job reacting to the insanity around him and continues to have excellent chemistry with Viswanathan and Steve Buscemi, this time playing Morris "The Junkman" Rubinstein, the town's richest man. Viswanathan arguably gets some of her best material in this. In all the previous seasons she's had to play the optimistic woman who wants more. Here she's someone who's achieved what she wants and honestly gets more to do than Radcliffe. Jon Bass, who's been one of the show's unsung foundations since the beginning and has always put in good work, plays Scraps, their human pet. Admittedly, I felt they went too far and weird with Scraps (and his story does get DARK), but one cannot knock Bass putting his all into the role. Though he gets more to do than last season, Karan Soni as a robot and Freya's best friend is still not given as much time to shine as the others.

I'd rank this as the second best season of the show. (Weird how the show got better as it continued. I found the first season to be the weakest.) A lot of the individual material is funnier than season three, but three felt more consistent overall. End Times does feel a little thrown together at times.

Recommended. Maybe too dark for some, but the show ends with a bang and not a whimper.

Monday, July 31, 2023

Captain Fall- Season 1, Episode 1, An Unconventional Cruiseline

 

4/10

I watched the first episode of Captain Fall the new Netflix show about Jonathan Fall (voiced by Jason Ritter), who's been made a captain of a cruise line, but unbeknownst him to him it's a smuggling operation and he's a potential fall guy. After this episode, I won't be returning.

If you've seen the trailer, Fall's that trope where the guy isn't liked much for no good reason by his toxic family. You'd think the storyline of his background would only be the beginning of the episode and that he'll soon be on the boat, but NO, the full first episode is mostly the family.

The problem is that the family isn't funny at all. I think the toxic parents trope is getting old these days and then the show runners had to dial things up to eleven. Their dialogue is a chore to get through.

Another issue with the show is that all the jokes are stretched out so much, which makes the characters disapproving of or upset with other characters moments so tedious.

Understand that so far this show is very, very dark. This is far more cold-blooded, especially in terms of murder, than you'd suspect.

The animation's good-looking and distinct I'll give you that. It looks like a European indie comic book. 

Not recommended. Yeah, I didn't even stay through to the ship, the main part of the story, and I hear the show gets better in the last third, but after such a botched first episode so bereft of laughs, I'm not inclined to be charitable.

Thursday, December 29, 2022

Violent Night

 

7.5/10

Santa Claus (played by Stranger Things' David Harbor) delivers presents to wealthy Gertrude's house, which at the same time has been taken over by a heavily armed group of thieves. It's up to St. Nick to fight the robbers and save her family. So, yeah, this is exactly Santa Claus in a Die Hard.

Yeah, Violent Night was advertised as a tongue-in-cheek action film and it delivers. The majority of this is the writers trying to come up with inventive, Christmas-themed kills, and they pretty much nail it. (Bear in mind, if this is the sort of thing that bugs you, for a movie that's trying to have goofy fun, the civilian death count is higher than you'd expect.) 

The violence is pretty much why people will watch this, never mind the plot. The script itself is uneven, featuring some fun or clever parts and some that are just okay. Santa is well characterized and his interactions with the matriarch's granddaughter Trudy (Leah Brady), a true believer in Christmas, are well handled. However, the rest of the family are just kinda there, or in the case of Trudy's aunt's family, a little too cartoonish and one note even for this.

Harbor, who I noticed with his new found-fame often picks the let's-have-fun projects like Winter Soldier, Hellboy, and that Netflix special he did, knows exactly what's he's supposed to do in this, playing a jaded  and entertaining Santa, and he definitely nails the John McLaneesque hero-thrown-in-the-fire-pan role. Admittedly, a lot of the cast, played by people I've never seen before, are just alright. To be fair, the script isn't Shakespeare. The two actors who do make the dialogue work are the other two known actors in this, Beverly D'Angelo as the tough, no-nonsense Gertrude and John Leguizamo as the robbers' leader Scrooge (his codename, don't worry about it). Credit should especially given to Leguizamo. Lesser actors probably wouldn't have made the dialogue work. Though Scrooge has a good backstory, he's a basic Christmas villain who happens to have beef with the holiday. Leguizamo really manages to bring personality and conviction to him. Okay, still not the strongest antagonist ever, but it's a solid performance. 

Recommended. I mean, the movie earns its R rating, so if violence isn't your thing then it isn't your thing, but I think most people will have a good time. 

Sunday, August 14, 2022

Bodies, Bodies, Bodies

 7/10

In this dark comedy/thriller, Sophie (played by The Hate You Give's Amandla Stenberg) takes her new girlfriend Bee (Borat Subsequent Moviefilm's Maria Bakalova) to hang her with her friends at her best friend David's parents' huge, lavish house. Soon, things go horribly wrong, emotions start running, and everyone starts becoming suspicious of each other. 

The first act does start out a bit slow and partially weak. Don't get me wrong, there are some good lines and the movie does a good job with Bee of encompassing the awkwardness of being somewhere where you don't know anyone, but it runs a little too long with the whole millenials being kinda toxic/ridiculous. schtick. I think too many lines are given to some characters than needed.

But when things get dark, that's when it starts getting good. The movie does a great job of making you guess what happens next, including one particularly tense scene in particular. (I particularly like how this ends.) This is also when the making-fun-of-millennials humor really pays off. The movie takes a lot of shots at the shallowness of the social media generation.

At first, I didn't like the cinematography in this. It had a sort of art-house quality. I was like, "I get it this is an A24 film. Not all their films have to look like this!" However, I think I understand why they went that way. The style definitely allows color to work. After the second act, a lot of this is shot in the dark, and the cinematographer/lighting person really managed to make light and color work in contrast to the blackness. Seriously, my congratulations to the lighting department; they did an excellent job. Also, I love the house or sets for this film. It is an impressive place.  

Acting's good across the board. (Cast includes Lee Pace and SNL's Peter David.)

Recommended. It's not a perfect film, parts could've been tightened and the spoiled kid dialogue can get a bit basic, but it is an interesting film that does hold your attention in the end.


Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Search Party- Season 4

 

5/10

NOTE: This review doesn't contain spoilers, but it could spoil the end of season 3 if you haven't seen it yet.

Dory (Alia Shawkat) is kidnapped by a psycho named Chip (Cole Escola). Meanwhile, the the rest of the gang try to move in on from the events of last season.

I really liked the last three seasons, but this was a huge let down. This show has always been a dark comedy, but this one went toooo dark. In the previous seasons, the reeeaaaalllyy dark moments were few and far between padded by the wackier comedy elements. This is episode after episode of a woman trying to escape or at the mercy of a very sick person. Sure, Dory has done some pretty awful stuff and you could say she's deserving of a punishment, but this shouldn't have been it. The situation is too much and uncomfortable and not in a fun way. Rather, it feels actual drama dark and not over-the-top comedy dark. Also, it's kind of boring. Dory's story is really stretched out. 

It doesn't help that there are a lot of leaps in real world logic in order to help Chip keep doing what he's doing. I know the comedy in this can be a bit exaggerated in it's humor, but this season in general really felt like it's pushing things.

Chip feels like a mistake. Escola does a good job and he is a fully realized character, but he isn't deserving of so much screentime. There isn't enough about him to be entertaining. He has specific issues and personal demons and they're repeated one too many times. Besides, it isn't very entertaining watching a character who's legit the-writers-don't-pull-their-punches sick.

This is too bad, the rest of the main cast's storylines are funny and provide new material for them, plus there there is a hell of a final episode.

In Elliott's storyline, SNL's Chloe Fineman continues to do a great job as shameless conservative TV host Charlie Reeney. Unfortunately, she isn't in this too much. I won't spoil who she is or what she's doing since they keep her out of any of the advertising, but Rebecca Robles also has a very fun recurring part.

Yeah, I can't recommend this season. Some may argue that I'm silly for complaining about a dark comedy being dark. But everything has it's limitations and this show just flew too close to the sun.