Monday, March 5, 2018

THE 2018 VIDEO VACUUM AWARDS


Now that we’re done talking about that OTHER Awards show, we can focus our attention on the only Awards that REALLY matter.  I’m talking of course about The Video Vacuum Awards.  Did your favorite movies make the cut?



BEST LINE

THE BABYSITTER for “CAN’T YOU JUST PUT A TAMPON IN THERE?”

CULT OF CHUCKY for “IT’S A FUCKING CUCKOO’S NEST!”

DEATH RACE 2050 for “I’M TRANSMITTING YOUR SMELL TO MILLIONS OF PEOPLE.”

THE EMOJI MOVIE for “THIS IS LIKE THAT TIME PEACE SIGN ONLY GAVE ME ONE FINGER!”

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY for “I’M MARY POPPINS, Y’ALL!”

JOHN WICK CHAPTER 2 for “YOU’RE NOT HERE TO KILL THE POPE?”

JUSTICE LEAGUE for “SLOW POKE!”

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE for “IRON MAN SUCKS!”

MOTHER! for “THE SINK’S NOT BRACED!”

XXX:  RETURN OF XANDER CAGE for “THERE ARE NO PATRIOTS ANYMORE.  ONLY REBELS AND TYRANTS.”



AND THE WINNER IS: MOTHER! for “THE SINK’S NOT BRACED!”



BEST 3-D EFFECT

3-D ARROW in THE GREAT WALL

3-D AXE in THE GREAT WALL

3-D EXPLODING MONSTER CHUNKS in THE GREAT WALL

3-D MATT DAMON in THE GREAT WALL

3-D ZIP-LINING MILLA JOVOVICH in RESIDENT EVIL:  THE FINAL CHAPTER



AND THE WINNER IS:  3-D ZIP-LINING MILLA JOVOVICH in RESIDENT EVIL:  THE FINAL CHAPTER



BEST SCENE I COULDN’T MAKE UP

BRITTANY ANDREWS TALKING ABOUT HER PROLAPSED ANUS in AFTER PORN ENDS 2

MICHAEL FASSBENDER KISSING MICHAEL FASSBENDER in ALIEN COVENANT

THE ROCK REDIRECTING A TORPEDO WITH HIS BARE HANDS in THE FATE OF THE FURIOUS

ANY GIVEN SCENE in MOTHER!

CARA DELEVINGNE STICKING HER HEAD UP AN ALIEN JELLYFISH’S ASSHOLE in VALERIAN AND THE CITY OF A THOUSAND PLANETS



AND THE WINNER IS:  ANY GIVEN SCENE in MOTHER!



BEST ACTION MOVIE

BOYKA:  UNDISPUTED

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE

SPIDER-MAN:  HOMECOMING

STAR WARS:  EPISODE VIII:  THE LAST JEDI

THOR:  RAGNAROK



AND THE WINNER IS:  THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE



BEST COMIC BOOK MOVIE

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE

LOGAN

SPIDER-MAN:  HOMECOMING

THOR:  RAGNAROK

WILSON



AND THE WINNER IS:  THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE



BEST SEQUEL

ALIEN COVENANT

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE

SPIDER-MAN:  HOMECOMING

STAR WARS:  EPISODE VIII:  THE LAST JEDI

THOR:  RAGNAROK



AND THE WINNER IS:  THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE



BEST HORROR MOVIE

ALIEN COVENANT

KONG:  SKULL ISLAND

THE MUMMY

MOTHER!

THE SHAPE OF WATER



AND THE WINNER IS:  MOTHER!



WORST HORROR MOVIE

CULT OF CHUCKY

A CURE FOR WELLNESS

DEATH NOTE

JIGSAW

UNDERWORLD:  BLOOD WARS



AND THE LOSER IS:  A CURE FOR WELLNESS



BEST DTV MOVIE

ARSENAL

THE ASSIGNMENT

BOYKA:  UNDISPUTED

DEATH RACE 2050

SAVAGE DOG



AND THE WINNER IS:  BOYKA:  UNDISPUTED



BEST ACTOR

VIN DIESEL in GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 2

MICHAEL FASSBENDER in ALIEN COVENANT


MICHAEL SHANNON in THE SHAPE OF WATER

JASON STATHAM in THE FATE OF THE FURIOUS



AND THE WINNER IS:  MARK HAMILL in STAR WARS:  EPISODE VIII:  THE LAST JEDI



BEST ACTRESS

CATE BLANCHETTE in THOR:  RAGNAROK

GAL GADOT in WONDER WOMAN

CARLA GUGINO in GERALD’S GAME


SAOIRSE RONAN in LADY BIRD



AND THE WINNER IS: JENNIFER LAWRENCE in MOTHER!



BEST DIRECTOR


RIAN JOHNSON for STAR WARS:  EPISODE VIII:  THE LAST JEDI

CHRIS MCKAY for THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE

RIDLEY SCOTT for ALIEN COVENANT

TAIKA WAITITI for THOR:  RAGNAROK



AND THE WINNER IS:  DARREN ARONOFSKY for MOTHER!



WORST MOVIE

A CURE FOR WELLNESS

DEATH NOTE

THE EMOJI MOVIE

SONG TO SONG

UNDERWORLD:  BLOOD WARS



AND THE LOSER IS:  A CURE FOR WELLNESS



BEST MOVIE

ALIEN COVENANT

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE

MOTHER!

STAR WARS:  EPISODE VIII:  THE LAST JEDI

THOR:  RAGNAROK



AND THE WINNER IS:  MOTHER!



Thank you to everyone who makes this blog possible.  Thank you for all the support and feedback over the years.  Thank you to all of you who’ve bought my latest book, The Bloody Book of Horror.



Wait, you haven’t bought my new book?  Well, it’s on sale now:  https://www.amazon.com/dp/1542566622/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1520113366&sr=8-1&keywords=mitch+lovell

THE 2018 VIDEO VACUUM TECHNICAL AWARDS


Thank you to Brett Leach for taking me to task for not putting up The 2018 Video Vacuum Awards in time for the Oscars. I will try to have the complete list of winners up soon.  In the meantime, here is a list of the Technical Award winners, which means I didn’t see enough movies in a given genre to make up an entire category.  And the winners are…



BEST SEQUEL STARRING VIN DIESEL

THE FATE OF THE FURIOUS

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 2

XXX:  RETURN OF XANDER CAGE



WINNER:  THE FATE OF THE FURIOUS



BEST SEQUEL STARRING RUBY ROSE

JOHN WICK CHAPTER 2

RESIDENT EVIL:  THE FINAL CHAPTER

XXX:  RETURN OF XANDER CAGE



WINNER:  JOHN WICK CHAPTER 2



WORST ACTION MOVIE

ATOMIC BLONDE



WORST COMIC BOOK MOVIE

DEATH NOTE



WORST SEQUEL

UNDERWORLD:  BLOOD WARS



BEST STEPHEN KING MOVIE

(TIE) GERALD’S GAME, 1922, THE DARK TOWER

(RUNNER-UP) IT



BEST REMAKE

THE MUMMY



BEST COMEDY

WILSON



BEST KIDS MOVIE

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE



WORST KIDS MOVIE

THE EMOJI MOVIE



BEST DTV SEQUEL

BOYKA:  UNDISPUTED



BEST USE OF MONKEYS AS A VIETNAM ALLEGORY

KONG:  SKULL ISLAND

(RUNNER-UP) WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES



BEST COMPILATION

TRAILER TRAUMA PART 4:  TELEVISION TRAUMA



(RUNNER-UP) VINEGAR SYNDROME SPRING 2017 CATALOGUE OF FILM



WORST COMPILATION

RETURN OF KUNG FU TRAILERS OF FURY



BEST DOCUMENTARY

AFTER PORN ENDS 2

RED SPARROW (2018) ***


It’s hard out here for a Russian ballerina.  You can pirouette all you want, but the second you break your leg, Mother Russia will turn her back on you.  If you want to keep hustling, you have to go to Sparrow School where you learn to be a spy.  And by “spy”, I mean you learn how to be humiliated, degraded, and raped.  That way, when you meet your target, you’ll let him do anything he wants to, so you can get close enough to him and get whatever MacGuffin Mother Russia needs you to get from them.

If you thought Jennifer Lawrence got put the wringer in mother! wait till you see her in this.  She is beaten, abused, raped, and humiliated constantly throughout the film’s two and a half hour running time.  No matter what Russia or the Americans throw at her, she perseveres.  She does what she must for her country (OK, for her sick mother), but just know if you cross her, she holds one helluva grudge.

Red Sparrow (directed by Lawrence’s frequent Hunger Games collaborator, Francis Lawrence) is a throwback to the Cold War espionage thrillers of yesteryear.  The plot is very simple yet convoluted at the same time.  The relationship between Lawrence and an American agent SEEMS genuine, but is it?  You never know who’s conning who although you THINK you have a good idea.  

Those seeking action and thrills will be disappointed.  This is more of a character study of how secrets kill, how loyalties are tested, and the toil dehumanizing yourself for your country takes on not only your body, but your mind.  Is it a little too long?  Perhaps, but the length helps to put you squarely in Lawrence’s shoes.  You feel every punch, slap, and slice she endures, and when she finally retaliates, it’s a truly rousing moment.

Lawrence, as she proved in mother!, excels at playing a put-upon woman who continually puts others above herself and sacrifices everything for a seemingly higher power.  You root for her every step of the way.  This is one of her all-time best performances and the film is worth checking out solely for her.  

The supporting cast is grand.  Joel Edgerton is a good match for her.  He has a way of breaking down the barriers between them in a realistic way.  He may be a spy, but he feels like a regular joe, which may or may not be a ploy on the character’s part.  Jeremy Irons is excellent as a Russian general who may or may not be advocating the termination of Lawrence’s character.  Charlotte Rampling is stunning as the cruel matron of the Sparrow School.  You’ll be certain she has ice water in her veins by the end of the movie.

The most entertaining turn comes courtesy of Mary-Louise Parker.  She plays a chief of staff member in cahoots with Russia who loves her vodka.  It’s little more than an extended cameo, but she practically steals the movie out from under everyone.  I’d pay good money to see her character in a spin-off.

It’s Lawrence who gets the best line of the movie when she says, “You sent me to whore school!”

DEATH WISH (2018) ****


When Charles Bronson starred in Michael Winner’s Death Wish in 1974, his career (at least in America) had started to fade.  The role of Paul Kersey fit Bronson like a glove, and audiences responded to his performance, making it a box-office smash.  The film’s success rejuvenated Bronson’s career and throughout the years, the increasingly wacky sequels found Bronson even more legions of fans worldwide. 

That’s why a remake of Death Wish seems tailor made for Bruce Willis.  Recently, Willis has been toiling away in the DTV market.  I’m not saying he’s been sleepwalking in his performances lately, but that old time Bruno swagger has been a scare commodity in recent years.  It’s been a while since he’s invested himself totally in a role.  

I’m glad to report that this is Bruce’s best performance in decades.  His portrayal of Paul Kersey ranks up there with the likes of John McClane and Joe Hallenbeck.  Not only is the new Death Wish Bruce’s best solo effort since Last Man Standing, it also happens to be the third best Death Wish ever made.

We shouldn’t have even doubted it.  After all, this is an Eli Roth movie we’re talking about here.  Like the last couple of Roth pictures, Death Wish ’18 has a knowing sense of humor about it that complements the graphic violence nicely.  The humor is never cartoonish or at the expense of the characters, but it is often black as midnight and funny as hell.

The film follows the beats of the original for the most part.  Paul Kersey is devastated by a home invasion that leaves his wife murdered and his daughter comatose.  Distraught, he grabs a gun and wanders into the bad part of town shooting down muggers and thieves.  He becomes a local antihero and the cops quietly try to figure a way to put a lid on his vigilante activities.

The biggest change is Kersey’s occupation.  I’m not sure I bought Charles Bronson as an architect in the original series.  I feel the same way about Bruce Willis portraying a surgeon in this.  However, his skill set is a perfect complement to his vigilantism.  When he gets shot during shootouts with street thugs, he can always go home and patch himself up, usually by MacGyvering something together using Krazy Glue and staples.  His knowledge of human anatomy also gives him the upper hand while torturing his victims.  I particularly loved the way Roth contrasted the duality of the character during a split screen montage where Kersey pulls bullets out of his patients while putting bullets into his gun.  

Another difference from the Bronson pictures:  Kersey isn’t a very good vigilante; at least in the beginning.  In fact, he even hurts himself the first time he fires a gun!  In the original Death Wish, it felt like Bronson was never in any danger… mostly because… he’s Charles Bronson.  Here, there’s a feeling Bruce might actually fulfill his death wish.  I mean he can’t even win an argument with an angry parent at his daughter’s soccer game.  How will he fare against a heavily armed den of thieves? 

He’s a quick learner though.  The film is structured like a Rocky movie.  This iteration of Kersey is an underdog and we’re rooting for him the whole time.  There are even montages like Rocky that show Kersey progressively getting better at shooting a gun.

Bruce is better than he’s been in years.  He hits the right notes as a grieving husband who feels he’s let his family down.  He’s even better when it comes to the scenes of him dishing out vigilante justice.  The supporting cast is equally stellar.  This is truly one of the finest ensemble casts assembled in recent memory.  Vincent D’Onofrio is excellent as Willis’ brother.  Their scenes together are some of the finest work either man has ever done.  I also thoroughly enjoyed Dean Norris as the detective on the case who slowly gets wise to Willis’ target practice.  Elizabeth Shue does a wonderful job as Willis’ wife.  She and Bruce feel like a real married couple and not just two actors playing scenes, which makes her death even more tragic.

Since this is an origin Death Wish story, it doesn’t veer heavily into the outrageousness that made the sequels so legendary.  However, there are a few moments that live up to the heights of the original series.  There’s a scene involving brake fluid that is cringe-inducing, and the confrontation with a hoodlum known as “The Ice Cream Man” is as badass as anything Bronson did in the O.G. D.W. franchise.  By the time the bad guys make their final siege on Willis’ home, he’s got a few tricks up his sleeve that Bronson himself would approve of.

What I’m saying is:  Any self-respecting fan of Death Wish or Bruce Willis needs to support this to ensure the survival of the series.  Can you imagine this incarnation of Kersey waging war against The Giggler?  Or using an exploding remote-controlled soccer ball on gangsters?  I for one am all for it.

If you enjoyed this review of Death Wish and are hungry for more reviews of Eli Roth movies, be sure to purchase my latest book, The Bloody Book of Horror as it contains reviews of Roth’s Knock Knock and The Green Inferno.  You can purchase it through Amazon here:  https://www.amazon.com/dp/1542566622/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1520113366&sr=8-1&keywords=mitch+lovell

Saturday, March 3, 2018

THE BLOODY BOOK OF HORROR--ON SALE NOW!


Hey everyone, I just wanted to let you know my new book, The Bloody Book of Horror is now on sale at Amazon.  It is a collection of over 150 brand-spanking-new reviews of horror films ranging from Mark of the Vampire to Don’t Breathe.  Here’s the official press release:

For the faint of heart, keep repeating--"IT'S ONLY A BOOK! IT'S ONLY A BOOK!" Do you love horror movies? Probably not as much as author Mitch Lovell does. He's been obsessively watching horror movies since the age of five. After three and a half decades of binging horror flicks, he's written about some of his favorite (and not-so favorite) genre films. From '80s slashers to '50s monster movies. From the works of Stephen King to the films from out of the WWE wrestling ring. From killer animals and creepy kids to wicked witches and deranged Satanists. Mitch reviews them all. Horror fans! This is the book you've been waiting for! 

Mitch Lovell is the proprietor of The Video Vacuum website and the author of Double Vision: Hollywood vs. Hollywood. He has also contributed to Exploitation Retrospect, Saturday Night Screening, and Rupert Pupkin Speaks.


If you’re tech savvy, you can get the e-book version on Kindle:  https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07B6TBVG1/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1520120839&sr=8-2&keywords=mitch+lovell

Thanks to everyone who has frequented The Video Vacuum in the past decade.  Thanks to everyone who's bought my previous books.  I hope you'll enjoy this one!  See you at the movies…

Thursday, March 1, 2018

4GOT10 (2015) **


4GOT10 plays like one of those Tarantino knockoffs from the ‘90s, minus the black humor and quirky characters.  It’s an Everybody’s-Chasing-a-Bag-of-Money movie.  A crooked cop (Michael Pare), an amnesiac crook (Johnny Messner from Anacondas:  The Hunt for the Blood Orchid), and a Mexican drug lord (Danny Trejo) are among the people after the loot after a shootout in the desert goes awry.  Dolph Lundgren is the DEA agent in hot pursuit of the cash, who may or may not have an ulterior motive.

We spend the most time with Messner.  He kind of looks and acts like a budget version of Hugh Jackman.  Like Wolverine, he spends most of the movie trying to remember who he is, and he doesn’t do a bad job all things considered.  Dolph is fun to watch as the straight-laced Fed.  He wore his nerdy horn-rimmed glasses well.  I know I’d pay good money to see him in a DTV sequel to Falling Down.  It’s Pare who gives the best performance though as the corrupt sheriff who quickly gets in over his head.

Despite the efforts of the first-rate cast, this is a thoroughly routine affair.  You know you’re in trouble from the first scene when the characters are introduced with a freeze frame and a title card with a stupid nickname like “The Kid”, “The Suit”, and “The Enforcer”.  It gets points for the OK twist at the end, and being relatively short, but it’s nothing you haven’t seen before.  One thing is for sure, 4GOT10 will be 4GOT10 not long after you watch it.

AKA:  The Good, the Bad, and the Dead.  AKA:  Forgotten.

CONTRACT TO KILL (2016) **


Steven Seagal has been Hard to Kill.  He’s gone Out for a Kill.  He’s even been Driven to Kill.  This time around, he's got a Contract to Kill. 

Seagal plays a former assassin who is lured out of retirement.  His mission:  Bust up a meeting between the Mexican drug cartel and an Islamic terrorist cell.  Seagal soon learns he and his team are merely a pawn in a bigger government scheme.

If you can get past the talky first half, you’ll be treated to some OK action.  Like most of the films Seagal makes for director Keoni Waxman, Contract to Kill has more action than many recent Seagal outings.  The fights are your typical Seagal slap-happy affairs.  Sometimes, the rapid-fire editing turns them into a near incoherent mess. The knife and sword fights are slightly better, if only because they're punctuated by someone getting a sword to the head or knife to the throat.  

Seagal is also more liable to get up and walk around for Waxman and does so again here.  There are only a handful of scenes of Seagal sitting around doing nothing.  (He does have one fight scene while sitting down though.)  Contract to Kill is a little low on late-era Seagal goofiness, but we do get a funny scene of a drone flying around carrying a machine gun. 

Waxman also has the uncanny ability to get Seagal to share scenes with other actors.  In most of his recent films, Seagal has been obviously inserted into the scene after the fact.  In Contract to Kill, he actually appears in several two-shots with other actors, which is a little jarring if you’ve become accustomed to seeing him awkwardly edited into dialogue scenes in recent years.  

Giving Seagal a team to work with is beneficial.  That way, he can delegate duties to others while sitting down.  Not only do these scenes help disguise the fact that Seagal has just spent five minutes of screen time sitting down, they also serve a plot function.  (These scenes are similar to the True Justice TV show in many ways.)  If filmmakers can find more justifiable reasons for Seagal to spend most of his screen time sitting down without being so obvious about it, I’d say he still has a long career ahead of him.