“It’s a kick to watch these characters sashay their way through Austen’s timeless tale with margaritas in hand, peppering the traditional rom-com trappings with some spectacularly naughty banter. Fire Island is proudly, indefatigably dirty in ways that movies about minorities are often too timid to be, weighed down by the burdens of representation and role models.” – North Shore Movies, 06/03/2022
CRIMES OF THE FUTURE
“You’ll find bits and pieces of a lot of his previous films in this one, which feels like a cross between a greatest hits album and a grand summation of conversations Cronenberg has been having with audiences since the 1970s. It’s all played as a horny, poker-faced comedy of manners, trying to get you turned on and grossed out at the same time.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 06/01/2022
ONE HEAT MINUTE RUM AND RANT #55: OLD MAVERICKS
On a Patreon subscriber exclusive Blake and I bask in the glow of Top Gun: Maverick, talking about the rare pleasure of seeing blockbuster entertainment done right and how we’re suckers for stories about underestimated old guys who aren’t obsolete yet. Warning: We also get awfully sentimental about our plans to go see Heat together in New York next month. – One Heat Minute, 05/31/2022
COWS IN THE FIELD #64: TOP GUN
Had a lovely time chatting with Justin and Laura Khoo on the Cows In The Field podcast, talking about the ecstatic ridiculousness of the original 1986 Top Gun and how it transformed the war film into a sports movie. We also discussed the career mythology of Tom Cruise, his role as America’s son, and decided that my call-sign should probably be Brewski. – Cows In The Field, 05/27/2022
YIPPIE-KI-YAY MELON FARMER: CHARLES BRONSON IN MR. MAJESTYK
“Vince Majestyk is a classic Elmore Leonard protagonist in the tradition of Chili Palmer or Raylan Givens, an unflappable fellow completely at ease in his own skin, matter-of-factly reacting to violent threats in ways that reduce the bad guys issuing them to furious, sputtering wrecks. These are the coolest characters because they don’t ever try to be cool.” – Crooked Marquee, 05/27/2022
TOP GUN: MAVERICK
“Outrageously entertaining, boasting the most exquisitely choreographed action sequences since Mad Max: Fury Road. The movie, like its main character, is a relic from another era, somehow still buzzing the tower of a world that’s passed it by. This is the kind of massively-scaled, old-fashioned crowd-pleaser you probably thought Hollywood forgot how to make.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 05/26/2022
EMERGENCY
“Dávila’s script won the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at Sundance, I’m guessing on the strength of this premise. Their journey across campus is like a frat comedy remake of The Wages Of Fear, except instead of transporting nitroglycerin through the jungle they’re carrying a passed-out white girl across an ocean of privilege, which might be even more dangerous.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 05/19/2022
MONTANA STORY
“Pained monologues are delivered, pondering the ruins of the white man’s settler colonialism while the minority characters nonetheless remain on the margins, speaking like sentient fortune cookies. It’s all very staid and reverential and rather annoyingly enamored of its own importance. But I’ll tell you, that Haley Lu Richardson sure can pluck a chicken.” – North Shore Movies, 05/19/2022
SEMI-TOUGH: JULES AND JIM ON THE 30 YARD LINE
“Ritchie keeps a polite distance from the novel’s more notorious shenanigans. Football is a backdrop instead of the film’s focus, and you’ve never seen a SuperBowl treated so nonchalantly. Fans of the book found the adaptation treasonous, but others were beguiled by the offbeat rhythms and an airy, almost European approach to such a distinctly American game.” – Crooked Marquee, 05/13/2022
OUT OF THE BLUE AT THE BRATTLE
“A masterpiece of alienation returns in all its ragged, unseemly glory. The movie means to be Hopper’s reckoning with the legacy his generation has left for their children, and as far as metaphors go, the original Easy Rider wiping out a bus full of kids while he was wasted isn’t exactly a subtle one. But then, we never admired Dennis Hopper for his understatement.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 05/11/2022









