Showing posts with label Jacki Weaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacki Weaver. Show all posts

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Widows (2018)


Directed by Steve McQueen

Screenplay written by Steve McQueen and Gillian Flynn

Based on "Widows" by Lynda La Plante

Starring Viola Davis, Liam Neeson, Michelle Rodriguez and Elizabeth Debicki 











Normally, a crime drama movie like this isn't really up my alley. Not to say there are not plenty of crime based drama movies that are very good and suspenseful, it's just not a genre of movies I enjoy that much. I gave Widows a chance because 1. It was free to watch on a flight I was on, and 2. It is starring Viola Davis. Any movie that features Viola Davis yelling and slapping people, and is readily available for my free entertainment, is a movie for me.

Set in modern day Chicago, the film follows three women; Veronica (Viola Davis), Alice (Elizabeth Debicki) and Amanda (Michelle Rodriguez)-- whose lives are connected by the sudden deaths of their husbands, whom were all working together on a heist. When Veronica learns that her husband Harry (Liam Neeson) owed 2 million dollars to a malicious crime boss and politician, she enlists the help of the other widows whose husbands were involved with this shady activity. The women must attempt to pull off a 5 million dollar heist to pay off the dangerous politician and keep their own lives afloat.

Widows has a few sub-plots that were kind of confusing. Colin Farrell has a role in the movie as another politician who is running against Jamal Manning (Brian Tyree Henry), Carrie Coon plays another widow who never really becomes involved in the heist but still makes a few cameos in the movie. There was just too many stories all trying to connect and it got a bit confusing and cluttered at times. However, McQueen sets out to make an entertaining, crime thriller and that is what he does successfully. With previous titles like the Indie drama, Shame and the Oscar winner 12 Years a Slave, McQueen brings us something very different from his past work with Widows. 

The cast is what ultimately brings life to this movie. While Davis brings so much strength to anything she even makes a small cameo in, its the supporting cast that really impressed me. Elizabeth Debicki's character goes through some real development while she starts out as a damaged, vulnerable widow and turns into this bad-ass independent women. Michelle Rodriguez brings her normal level of feistiness. Daniel Kaluuya plays the henchmen for the crime boss, and his character is devilishly psychotic.

Overall this movie was satisfying, with the tension building up the whole movie to a very suspenseful ending. Sure there are a few plot holes, but in the end who does't love the idea of a group of bad-ass widows taking on one of the scariest crime lords of Chicago. Definitely a better female driven heist movie than Ocean's Eight. 

6/10


Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Silver Linings Playbook (2012)


Directed by David O. Russell

Screenplay written by David O. Russell 

Based on the novel written by Matthew Quick

Starring Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver











Silver Linings Playbook will always be one of those movies I come back to periodically because of the outstanding acting performances. The satirical take on mental health that Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper display is so entertaining, and the story between them is hilarious and charming. One of David O. Russell's best. 

After a brief stint at a mental hospital, Pat Solitano (Bradley Cooper) is released and sent to live back in Philadelphia with his parents (Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver). After beating up the lover of his ex-wife Nicky, which is ultimately what led Pat to the psych ward with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, he is set on a new path of healthy living and silver linings, and he is determined to win back Nicky. Along the way, Pat meets the mysterious and sexy, Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence) and things are never the same after that.

This film is heavily driven by the acting performances. The former Hunger Games heroine Jennifer Lawrence, delivers the role of a lifetime. She's foulmouthed, sexy, rude, blunt, sensitive, vulnerable and a little slutty but she likes that part of herself (not a judgment, just a reference from the movie). Lawrence somehow portrays all these emotions in every scene, sometimes in every sentence Tiffany speaks. This was one of the most deserved Oscar wins of all time. Cooper plays a damaged guy suffering from bipolar who is largely driven by his lust for love and forgiveness from his ex-wife. His performance is raw and funny, but Lawrence steals the show. De Niro and Weaver deliver strong supporting performances as Pat's parents.

Only in Hollywood can mental illness be cured by the depths of this endearing romance between two broken souls. Russell sets a new bar for romantic comedies to rise to with this flick.

9/10