19 May 2025

First Impressions: Thunderbolts*

I really had no desire to see this for a long time. All of recent Marcel output has kind of broken me. But then it got decent reviews, I still like the concept (which, don't get me wrong, is just Suicide Squad), and I do want to feel something again. Anything!

It turned out...that this thing is actually pretty good. One of the better Marvel movies...period. It is remarkably tight, balances a bunch of characters old and new, and has some legit enthralling action. Spoilers who cares, let's dive in.

I don't really know how this came about, we do have a lot of cast offs from various properties hanging around at this point. It's the tough thing, as a medium, comics are so disposable, you can have a one-off with the Leader or Yelena Belova and leave it at that. Lining up film production is such a bigger deal.

This movie feels like a melding of Black Widow and Captain America worlds, and those are pretty melded from Winter Soldier (2014). You've got Yelena, Red Guardian, and Taskmaster from Black Widow (2019) mixing it up with US Agent and Bucky from Falcon and the Winter Soldier. Throw in Ghost from Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018) and we're all happy.

Oh, and Sentry of course. I was impressed with how accurate and organic they presented Sentry's origin and Lewis Pullman deftly played in between dope, God, and Devil. I read a lot of Dark Avengers and Siege storylines back in the day. This team definitely slides more akin to Dark Avengers with Julia Louis-Dreyfuss pretty much taking the Norman Osborn role, but it all works.

Let's get the rest out of the way. Taskmaster, already perhaps the most altered and wasted MCU character gets Slipknot'd here pretty much immediately. It's a bizarre game of poster and trailer editing from here. I get it. The character doesn't have too much to do, everyone hates her, why not just kill her quick.

Bucky is also weird. He brings a weariness here as the closest anyone on this team is to a real avenger but he's not the leader, definitely shouldn't be a senator, and is pretty far from the unstoppable badass he was 11 years ago. Just kind of a puppy now.

Red Guardian is David Harbour going nuts, I mean, this is the man who brought us Victor Frankenstein's Frankenstein after all. He largely hits the mark and the laughs aren't so much the "That just happened!" bullshit from Marvel, Star Wars, and SNL lately.

I do like how him, John Walker, and Taskmaster all have shields and basically everyone except Yelena have some variety of Super Soldier serum.

Ghost is...here. She's a super useful team member and the only one with real out there super powers. It'd be nice if she had any real character lifting work to do but we can't have room for everyone.

Wyatt Russell plays a really great asshole and there is enough depth here to make a somewhat well rounded character.

But the star is really Florence Pugh, who is not only effortlessly embodying this character, but somehow proving her late stage MCU value, being a WAY more interesting Black Widow than Scar Jo ever was, and being a really true Eastern European. I feel like I know girls like her, how she talks, how she reacts, is all spot on.

This film is all about trauma, and that's kind if something the MCU has needed for like six years. There us A LOT of collective trauma in this Universe that everyone ignores or plays with sarcastic disdain like Thor: Love and Thunder (2022). It took a really great screenwriter to realize this was the common bond between all these wretches, and then pull it off.

This is most centered around the Void, who is really just an unstoppable nightmare. I remember in Siege, Loki had to employ the Nurn stones just so all the heroes could fight it together and then Thor struck it with the biggest lightning bolt of all time. We really needed to see Sentry ripping Ares in half tho.

There's no way to fight this thing, the only way us to heal. While Brave New World (2025) did this with the elegance of performing surgery with a piece of wet fish, Thunderbolts* does the work and it pays off. Plus they kill a little kid! That might be the boldest move ever in the MCU.

This thing is shot pretty well, I actually struggle to remember a Marvel movie that made NYC look so big and authentic. You always got to remember that Whedon shot the Avengers like a TV show with the flatest lighting imaginable. There is good contrast here, even if it is filled with quite a bit of grays and browns, as is typical.

There is also a nice progression of moments and beats, it focuses in character, and as mostly street level blokes, it has a lot of grounded action instead of big weightless CGI. Basically everything is good and it's astounding.

I couldn't give less than a crap about the Fantastic Four (2025), no matter what the reviews will say. I'm also sincerely doubtful about Doomsday (2026), it seems way too desperate. But I do find myself for the first time in a long time really interested in seeing more of these characters and not the same old played out actors.

Where do they go from here, though? I'm not talking about that excessive Doomsday cast list. Who is still in play? I don't think Doc Strange has used up his welcome. Nor Spider-Man but they gotta figure out what to do with him. I'd like to see more Namor but I think that actor got in trouble? And man, where the hell is the most charismatic dude they got right now, Simu Liu?!

But the iced Wanda, iced Vision, I don't think the Shuri Black Panther works, no one's clamoring for Iron Heart, Kate Bishop maybe, and the Marvels, despite me being a big Teyona Parris fan, were such a dud they might just can the MCU's most powerful character.

Michael Shannon for Beta Ray Bill!

06 May 2025

First Impressions: Sinners

 Hello there! It's been a while since I saw anything in the Theaters and I was happy to break that streak with Sinners (2025) which has gotten magnificent reviews and widespread acclaim. I didn't like it that much! I do think my criticisms are totally in line with any of the reviews that have been harsh on it, so I'll try to add to that fire. There were bits that were so rock solid in this as well, though. SPOILERS FOREVER, let's get into it!

The best summation is that this movie has an unreal first half that's grounded, interesting, well-produced, and frankly, amazing, and then a big turn into supernatural nonsense that goes completely off the rails. Let's talk about what works in the first half first and then how it all falls apart.

Longtime collaborator Michael B. Jordan rejoins Ryan Coogler in dual roles here. It's nice that this isn't really a gimmick, it's pretty motivated. Jordan plays both Stack and Smoke, twins from the Mississippi Delta region who went up to Chicago to be gangsters and then came back home to open a Juke Joint. Everything about the character set-ups are really great and the performances are fantastic. Michael B really nails playing two characters, who are separated by red and blue hats, but also in subtle personality differences and mannerisms. Stack is a bit kinder, more empathetic. Smoke is more ruthless. But they both support each other and it feels pretty real. They're also both nuanced characters. Smoke will shoot a thief in the street on principle but also has the more stable and loving relationship. Stack will argue that hardworking sharecroppers should get a break, but he's also going to insult them (Cornbread) until they buy in. It's all really great stuff.

Delroy Lindo has had a resurgence with this and Da 5 Bloods (2020) where he also shined. He's a little bit comic relief but he has an intensity to him as well. Sammie is the guitarist whose soul is on the line (although it never really feels like it, probably because Michael B. Jordan is just too charismatic to be a tempter), Wunmi Mosaku plays a weary exposition dumper but also shades of empathy. The two Asian shopkeepers really have a nuanced relationship that's developed rapidly and they end up being the most stable love story that's really sold. I loved them dancing to the blues, it's a jarring but fitting mix of multi-culturalism. And they actually have a pretty pivotal part to play.

Then there's the white folk. This gets into the second half but the acting and characters are all great. This is B movie material that is elevated because of the commitment to these roles. There's a lot of structural problems here, none that have to do with acting or characters, except the Head Vampire was the one dude whose motivation was muddy as hell, but we'll get into that.

The first half shows this step by step set up of the Juke Joint. The Twins go around town, doing their thing, recruiting everyone they need. It's all motivated, no one is random, nothing really out of place. It's shot with impeccable composition and high contrast. The endless cotton fields of Mississippi have never been seen on film like that. They center around black neighborhoods and gatherings and it feels like a really coherent world. You get bits and pieces of backstory, constantly caught in a middle of a conversation but it's clear enough that you can figure out each characters' relationship. It's equally brilliant and sadistic when Stack gets Slim to play their joint by offering him a cold beer. It speaks to his desperation, alcoholism, Stack's moral gaps, and Slim's background, that a cold beer would be so rare that he'd instantly throw away his regular Saturday night gig. Stuff like that is amazing.

The movie puts all its pieces in place and then gets them all in one room for a huge party. The Juke Joint is great but the first flaw rears its head in that the spacing is difficult to establish. It's hard to know where the entrance is, where those huge barn doors are, where the backrooms are, all of which play a really important part but it's all kind of random. I kept thinking about The Hateful Eight (2015), which plays in a similar enclosed wooden place but has such a crystal clear sense of geography.

I also find it insane that Coogler seems to have trouble lighting black faces at night. There was a scene where Stack is talking to Hailee Steinfeld and he's wearing a hat and you just can't see the work he's doing at all. The white girl is fine. He eventually takes off the hat and you see him better. I couldn't really believe that Coogler would drop the ball on something like that, but all the great contrast and lighting in the first half evaporated in the second half.

Before we start trashing this, let's talk about the obvious best scene, when Sammie starts playing unreal blues that connects to music and ancestors from the past and future. It's a really cool moment (and one that shows good spatial geography!) and you see African drummers, modern funk guitarists, DJs, and you get this really great sense of everything. It's a soulful scene, one that I think people mistake for the whole movie when they call it good.

Immediately after things go off the rails from here. Vampires stop by and start killing people. So, the idea of vampires invading a party and a group led by two gangster brothers holding out until morning is basically From Dusk Till Dawn (1995), except much less zany. Where the movie trips is that all that careful plotting and character set-up and foundation of arcs immediately starts getting rushed. We don't get a ton of pay off for Delroy Lindo, who cuts his wrists to tempt the vampires but he doesn't really take any of them out with him nor does he really buy any of the survivors more time. It's a huge waste. Other important, established characters die really quickly without getting a moment.

I did get FROM vibes, which was cool. They were pretty strict about the vampires being unable to enter houses and they did a good job trying to trick people to come in. But maybe most importantly, I do not understand how the vampires in this film operate at all.

What is their deal here. Wunmi talks about how their souls are caught between life and the only way to free them is through death. But that is wildly inconsistent. We know that when you're turned you start sharing a collective memory. But what does that mean? Is it good to be a vampire? Like, they seem instantly happy but also instantly evil? Or is it even evil to want to turn others? Do they want blood or do they want to increase their brood?

This is going to sound weird, but I started thinking about Neighbors 2 (2016), which I though really fell apart by making the opposing sorority way too sympathetic. They spent so much time justifying every motivation that you didn't know who to root for and then felt bad when the good guys won. Sinners does something similar, but skips the motivation part. Are we supposed to sympathize with the Irish vampire whose culture was also taken away? It's just a hard pill to swallow and reeks of neo-conservative "Irish were oppressed, too!" bullshit, which is true but the Irish are so ingrained in white American culture by now that it's just not a leg anyone can stand on.

The reason why this sticks is because it seemed like the Irish Vampire's big desire was to bite Sammie so that he could co-opt his music to connect with his ancestors. This is just thematically all over the place. Is it a metaphor for white people seeking to dominate black culture and call it their own? That's what it seems on the surface but it also feels like the vampire's desire to connect with his past comes from a place of genuine pain and longing, not pure evil white folk stuff. But also, wasn't that whole dance scene a metaphor?! He didn't actually bring back his ancestors, right?! It seems to confuse all this stuff and just blows apart all the good work they did.

My understanding would be that when you're bitten, you're just a part of the vampire collective. But they explicitly say that killing the head vampire won't bring everyone back. Once you're bit, that's it. Fine, so kill them all to give their souls peace. But they they don't do that! They blatantly refuse and after Stack is bit, Smoke really should have been the one to kill him, although there is zero catharsis there. Stack needed to have some kind of sin, something to atone for, some big issue. They touch on their father and his abusiveness, but Smoke killed him, seemingly without regrets. There's not really an emotional motivation in the film for Stack to become a vampire and then it does not make sense that Smoke would not be able to grow enough to let go of his brother to kill him.

But then the ending entrenches further in two big ways. First, it does seem to ease off the vampires as being the main villains by just having a bunch of white former Klansmen show up and becoming a revenge fantasy for like, two seconds. Again, I kept thinking about the incredible spatial composition of a super similar scene in Rebel Ridge (2024), which is set up with such careful tension. Here it's just time to kill white folks. Again, Tarantino-esque in justified fantasy, but it didn't seem to have anything to do with the story or Smoke's arc. It was just a reason for him to be badass.

The moral of the story seems to be don't trust the white man? Or worse, that all black-businesses are doomed to failure? Shut up and keep sharecropping? They all die because they were tempted by making a bit of money! Or maybe it's that white folk come in and ruin everything with their cultural assimilation. There are some questions there. Would we be better off with a homogeneous and harmonious cultural stew or should we appreciate black businesses and black culture for its own sake and honor those differences? I'm not sure this movie has an answer, and that's not totally a bad thing.

And then there's the mid-credits scene. Little Sammie grows up to be Buddy Guy and has a great blues career and then is visited in 1992 by Stack and Hailee Steinfeld for some reason. First, I found it insane that Steinfeld literally didn't have a line here and is more a trophy in a film that has honestly been pretty great for female characters. This was the big clincher - is it bad to be a vampire or not?! Like, they just never show the horror. Are they even killing people if they're just turning them? They seem to have their memories and personalities intact. So where is the regret? Where is the conflict after being turned? Where is the struggle? Wunmi says "That's not your brother anymore!" to Smoke. ... Is he? Is it all manipulation by the Head Irish Vampire? I kind of feel like it isn't. Maybe killing the head vampire freed them of his memories? I don't know.

All of this is just from packing in two decent ideas into one movie. I think if it was to go this deep into mysticism we needed some kind of foreshadowing of vampires, some kind of set up for emotional catharsis, and some kind of pay off for all the work they did in the first half. I think about the title, who were the Sinners and what was their sin? I don't think I need stuff spelled out but when there's so much conflicting motivation present it makes it really muddled. This movie makes me angry for how good it could have been. It's not like just watching a bad movie. It's like watching the Atlanta Falcons in the Super Bowl. You had it! And then blew it.

I will say again - the acting is amazing, the characters are so rich, the shots and progression in the first half are so good it makes this movie worth watching. 
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