Category Archives: Drama

Jackie (2016)

Less than a month ago, I would have said Natalie Portman (Black SwanBrothers) was the one lock for an Academy Award win. Her portrayal as the grieving Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in the wake of her husband’s assassination by Lee Harvey Oswald. Portman just looked the part, and it felt like this was the role she was born to play. Portman is a fantastic actress who did an above-average job in Jackie. But this movie was so flat and depressing that I wonder if it will be enough to take out Emma Stone in La La Land, which has been gaining lots of steam in recent weeks. I’m not overly impressed when I look at this list of contenders for Best Actress. This helps Portman. This film only had to be pretty good to convince me she should win. Unfortunately, the movie did not live up to my expectations at all. While I learned a lot about Jackie Kennedy, her relationship with her family, the media, and the people of America, and the events that occurred on November 22, 1963, and the week afterward, this movie overall was very dark and dull. Though only an hour and a half, it felt like a three-hour snoozefest. It’s hard to recommend a film that felt more like a history lesson that you should be required to watch in your 11th-grade U.S. History class.

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Loving (2016)

Jeff Nichols’s (Take ShelterMudLoving is an early contender for my most disappointing movie of the year. While there are plenty of other candidatesLoving is the only one likely to be considered for Oscar contention. It likely will get a nomination for Joel Edgerton (WarriorThe Gift), who I think is one of the best actors we currently have but whose performance was not one of the five best of the year (and probably wasn’t even one of the ten best). It likely will also get a nomination for Ruth Negga (Of Mind and Music, Warcraft), whose performance was equally uncompelling. And it could earn Oscars for Nichols (who I also love, but who should get nominated as well as Best Picture).

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Manchester by the Sea (2016)

While it may not end up in my top five movies of the year, Kenneth Lonergan’s Manchester by the Sea was almost perfect. I said the same thing when I started my review for Nocturnal Animals a week ago. Both movies could potentially be serious contenders, but both had some serious holes. While Nocturnal Animals will likely not receive any nominations com, Manchester by the Sea will likely earn multiple ones. Manchester by the Sea will likely finish as one of my five favorites of the year, but boy, did it have the possibility to be number one.

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Allied (2016)

While a 65% fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes suggests a movie should be checked out, sometimes you wonder why the score isn’t higher. Allied, the Robert Zemeckis (Back to the Future, The Walk) World War II love story set in Casablanca and London about two intelligence officers from opposite sides of the world says a lot. The movie has been loosely referred to as Mr. and Mrs. Smith (because of Brad Pitt) meets Casablanca. While I understand the reference, this is far from the truth. I was not too fond of either of these other movies. While I did not particularly like either of those movies, I enjoyed Allied.

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Cassandra’s Dream (2007)

Not being the biggest Woody Allen (Annie Hall, Match Point) fan, I’ve always felt that his romance and dramas needed more substance than he offered. Cassandra’s Dream is a movie I would never have given a chance when it was released back in 2007. Likewise, Colin Farrell (The Lobster, In Bruges) and Ewan McGregor (The ImpossibleIncendiary) are not my biggest fans. Ferrell has grown on me by shedding his bad boy, box office revenue-chasing persona and doing more indies. I am surprised I even watched it. I’m grateful I gave it a chance after it was released. It was a nice, simple film that entertained me the whole time.

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