Plus: Steve Martin gets the documentary treatment; David Krumholtz nabs a lead role and Olivia Colman swears a lot. Greetings, film fans! As (perhaps the first real post-pandemic) blockbuster season looms on the horizon, the next crop of genre filmmakers sought to make their mark at SXSW this month. Our attendant reporters have written up the best of the fest for Journal, citing bold new visions such as Magpie, Oddity and The Fall Guy. Like we said: blockbuster season looms. Journal contributor Annie Lyons attended the world premiere of incoming Ryan Gosling/Emily Blunt action spectacular The Fall Guy, where she spoke to both leads, as well as director David Leitch. The rest of our Journal team has been busy conducting interviews with Love Lies Bleeding director Rose Glass; Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker from Sleater-Kinney and Pablo Berger, director of Robot Dreams, which was nominated for the Best Animated Feature Oscar. You’ve probably noticed that our whole Four Favorites thing has picked up steam over the last year or so. We certainly have! If you want to make sure you don’t miss any of the increasingly steady stream of fascinating entries—erm, William Shatner, anyone?—you can find them all on our YouTube channel (in this playlist). Patron member André has also noticed the Four Faves proliferation, and maintains an extremely impressive list of all 1,500+ movies ever cited in a Four Favorites interview. Nice work, André! His assiduous commitment to this task means André may also be amenable to Ray’s list of films featuring people doing their job really well. Ray has designated this subgenre with a title we don’t want to put in this email because it may result in it being filtered, but it’s very safe for work, trust us. | | Happy watching, The Letterboxd crew | | | Opening Credits | In cinemas and coming soon | | | Arriving hot on the heels of Godzilla Minus One could work both for and against Godzilla × Kong: The New Empire. For, in that Godzilla fever is raging thanks to the success of the Oscar-winning breakout sensation, and against, in that director Takashi Yamazaki and his collaborators’ craftsmanlike approach demonstrated just how creative and emotional a kaiju picture can be—and on a budget approximately a fraction of the size of this new one. Ultimately, though, the two movies are attempting something different, and returning director Adam Wingard had some cool ideas up his sleeve in 2021’s Godzilla vs. Kong. Member FULCiBABY is more than satisfied, calling it “a bonafide monster-mashing metro-mulching schlockbuster of the highest order.” Ben stresses the importance of the big screen in appreciating it: “not sure how I would feel about this film if viewed from home, but it’s a five-star jam from the fourth row at the IMAX Theatre.” Now in theaters. | | | | Amongst the ocean of underutilized actors who got the chance to shine in Oppenheimer, it was especially gratifying to see the always appealing David Krumholtz sink his teeth into the relatively meaty role of Nobel Prize-winning physicist (and Oppenheimer confidant) Isidor Rabi. Still perhaps best known for memorable youthful performances in movies like Addams Family Values and 10 Things I Hate About You, Krumholtz has long since graduated into a versatile grown-up cinematic presence. He gets a rare lead in indie comedy Lousy Carter, in which he plays the titular misanthrope whose bad behavior gets worse when he receives troubling medical news. If anyone could sell such a premise, it’s Krumholtz, and Chloe is onboard the Krum-train: “Absolutely understand the appeal of David Krumholtz now. This movie is so spiky and mean, and yet there’s still a warmth to it. Tart and delightful.” SwargAces says the dark comedy “lulls you into thinking it’s another self-pity-filled apologia for the mediocre yet narcissistic white man; it upends those expectations with charm, humor and confidence.” Now in select US theaters. | | | | A little known but rather notable scandal surrounding poison-pen letters in a small British village in the 1920s comes to light in Wicked Little Letters, a gleefully profane comedy starring two of the top actresses currently working. Olivia Colman and Jessie Buckley are both strong enough talents to spin the saying of naughty words into cinematic gold. “Felt like it was made just to give Olivia Colman a reason to swear a lot. Not that I’m complaining,” says Matthew. Ema concurs: “Nothing brings me more joy than hearing Olivia Colman swear like a sailor and give a full-body cackle.” The film teases a contemporary resonance with its tagline ‘Be Careful What You Post’, and Liam could clearly feel that: “I can only dream of being this much of a hater.” Summarizes Matt, “One of the most entertaining English period films made in years. A vulgar and hilarious whodunnit scandal stirred by female repression and false superiority.” Now in select US theaters, expanding wide on April 5. | | | | | Léa Seydoux and George MacKay watch it all burn in The Beast. | French star Léa Seydoux and British actor George MacKay star in French filmmaker Bertrand Bonello’s time-spanning sci-fi romance The Beast. Loosely inspired by Henry James’ 1903 novella The Beast in the Jungle, the film follows Seydoux’s character, who undergoes a procedure that will allow her to experience her past lives. The 146-minute picture received considerable acclaim upon its premiere at Venice last year, and there are plenty of enticing comparisons being made in reviews: “An epic, artful and challenging vision akin to Mulholland Dr., The Tree of Life, Cloud Atlas and The Holy Mountain,” says Diego. Seth reckons it “will undoubtedly divide opinion once it’s widely available”, and that in addition to the “Lynchian storytelling”, it at times, “feels quite modern Cronenberg-esque”. “Uncomfortable, emotional, sometimes juvenile, but insightful, and truly bracing,” says Michael Mann Facts, who then goes on to compare it to two albums by the post-hardcore band Thursday. Keep an eye out next week for Rafa Sales Ross’s interview with Bonello on Journal. In select US theaters April 5. | | | | Long-time Letterboxd fave Dev Patel makes his feature directing debut with action-thriller Monkey Man, in which he also stars as a monkey-mask-wearing underground fighter in Mumbai who embarks on a bloody quest for vengeance. The Jordan Peele-produced effort apparently blew the roof off at its SXSW premiere, where Annie Lyons spoke to Patel and Peele for Journal. Kit calls it a “crunchy, sweaty, down-and-dirty brawler anchored to a bloody, beating heart”. Tessa promises a “gory revenge story packed with intense action, stunning cinematography and a fire score.” AmandaTheJedi says she “saw one of the best action-movie kills of [her] life in here”, while Sydney simply states that “there was action before Dev Patel and now there is action after Dev Patel”. In theaters in most territories April 5. | | | | The ever-escalating preciousness of tangible media informs the new documentary Kim’s Video, which has been charming audiences at festival screenings all around the world since its premiere at Sundance 2023 more than a year ago. Concerning a legendary New York video store (which counted filmmakers Alex Ross Perry and Todd Phillips amongst its former employees), it’s mainly about the crazy story of what happened to its huge collection of movies when it closed down. Will says that, as a VHS fan, he found it a “very emotional viewing experience”. “It starts out insane and it ends up INSANE,” promises Karl. Sara says the film “shows the everlasting staying power of the physical.” In select US theaters April 5. | | | | Finally emerging from Warner Bros. copyright claims thanks to parody law, The People’s Joker has already garnered a reputation as an anarchistic assault on corporate intellectual property and comedy conformity. Director/co-writer/star Vera Drew plays the titular figure, a trans woman who moves from Smallville to Gotham to break into stand-up. Alt-comedy staples such as Scott Aukerman, Tim Heidecker, Maria Bamford and Bob Odenkirk (as Bob the Goon) pop up in unrecognizable roles, and the film is currently sitting at an extremely impressive 3.9 average rating. “Punk rock as f*ck,” lauds horror-director Joe Lynch, while Jack says it’s “a film that makes you realize that art that really has something to say is rarer than you think, so it’s no surprise it was silenced for so long.” “For the people and deserves to be seen by the people,” preaches Dan. We’ve got an interview with Drew coming soon, but until then, let’s give Alexei the final word: “No question, the best superhero movie since Batman Returns.” In select US theaters April 5. | | | | | Star Wars | One star vs five stars, fight! | | | | “Paul Rudd looks bored in this. Most of the dialogue and emotion […] just feels half-baked in terms of delivery and Bill Murray looks so lost. It ruins a lot of the impact in terms of emotional scenes. Nostalgia bait from Afterlife is back and somehow it’s more shameless and annoying this time around… They’re not even subtle about it in these films. It’s sauceless in the direction and style department and the visual effects aren’t good. There’s just not much you can do with this franchise anymore; it should’ve ended by now. I’m just bored and sleepy at this point by Hollywood’s refusal of letting franchises clearly meant to end keep chugging or making pointless remakes.” | | | | | “I loved it! I really did. Maybe it’s a nostalgia thing, but I think Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire gives us a classic Ghostbusters story while injecting it with the new characters from Afterlife. I realize that not everyone is going to feel the same way I do. There are some minor pacing issues, and the larger number of characters means that a few stories don’t get fully fleshed out, but for the most part I thought it was great. Having Annie Potts suit up and join the team was fantastic, and I enjoyed the story with the ghost girl, Melody. The music cues from the original two movies help a lot […] by giving even small scenes the creepy feel of the classic Ghostbusters films. While nostalgia plays a role in my rating, it’s not the only reason I loved the film. Sure, it’s great to see the firehouse again… But where this film stands out to me, is in the way it looks forward. Winston’s ghost facility is really cool and gives us a lot of potential for future storylines… It’s great because as the original actors continue to age, this new era gives us several different directions in which the franchise can move forward for future projects.” | | | | | Dom’s Pick | A recommendation from the editor | | | Neve Campbell and Denise Richards ponder last century’s communication devices in Wild Things (1998). | It’s time for Dom’s Pick! Every fortnight, your humble Call Sheet editor closes with a recommendation for your watchlists. This edition: Wild Things (1998). John McNaughton’s aspirationally controversial, self-aware erotic thriller came late in that subgenre’s ’90s heyday, but it remains one of the more enduringly entertaining examples of the form. Neve Campbell and Denise Richards play opposite-sides-of-the-tracks high-schoolers mixed up in an extortion plot involving guidance counselor Matt Dillon and cop Kevin Bacon. The film’s endless twists are a little too self-satisfied, but McNaughton (a long way from Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer) keeps things amusingly lurid throughout. Glossy and trashy in equal measure, the proceedings are buoyed by lively supporting turns from Bill Murray and Theresa Russell, the latter perfectly cast as Richards’ mother. Streaming on Netflix from April 1. | | | Receive this monthly email by joining Letterboxd, the social network for film lovers. | | | |