



"Breach" is a cheapo science-fiction movie, it's as simple as that. It's something that wouldn't look out of place debuting on the SyFy channel, and for most of it's short hour and thirty something minute runtime, I was on board. Not there was anything original to be seen, heard, or even suggested, but as a lazy midday rental, you get what you paid for, and more.
The "more" comes from the involvement of Bruce Willis, who really isn't the main character, playing a drunk janitor named Clay, but he's in most shots, and his trademark smirk and lethargy to the situation puts the film's tongue firmly in cheek. He never goes as far as "winking" to the camera, the way a lot of these disposable monster movies go for (I'm looking at you, the six-something "Sharknado" flicks), but this secondary tone gives the picture something most discount creature features can't seem to achieve: a sense of fun.
He expectedly yells in quips, in between swigs from his flask, and although they are far (and I mean far) from that pithy quality he's famous for, they're not bad. In his character's final shot, he goes full John McClane, complete with frantic head bobbing while talking to himself about the unwinnable position he's in. It's great stuff, if only to remind you of his better works.
Not to say the one-time action star puts his heart into the role, but he seems to be enjoying himself, the same way other expired heavy-hitters like Gary Busey or Nicolas Cage do. Willis is far more restrained (or less interested) than either of those two bonkers actors are famous for, but standing on murky sets, filled with fog, dull colored lights, and a mutilated body covered in blood, his grin brightens the mood.
It's something, at least, it's something! Because "Breach," previously known as "Anti Life" (a name that remains at end of the credits), is otherwise completely average (and frequently below average). It's something the dork at Blockbuster would recommend as an alternative when they've run out of copies of "Alien." Scene for scene, you know what to expect, save for the ending, where either the script ran out of creative juice, or the producers ran out of money, because it's incoherent and vague.
To describe the plot would be to plagiarize the synopsis of other movies, but my job as film critic demands it. Whoever said reviewing movies isn't hard work has never tried writing.
*cue announcer voice
"In the future, Earth has become inhabitable. Fleets of spaceships head out to "New Earth," with lucky passengers hopeful to rebuild society. But when a parasite is let loose on the ship, it begins to take control of its human hosts, and it's up to the surviving crew to save the world."
Phew. What an uninspired mouthful! But I promise things are better than that suggests. It's thanks largely to the aforementioned veteran cast member, as well as a cameo by Thomas Jane as the Admiral and an adequate supporting cast (and actual lead actor, Cody Kearsley as Noah) But director John Suits and his team deserve some recognition for their ability to create a faint sense of claustrophobia and atmosphere on the obviously minimal financial allowances. The monster, which only appears in-full towards the end, is laughably cheesy, but Suits works smartly around this by having those "infected" by the creature represented as zombies. Zombies are an economical cinema villain, because anyone with a gift-card to the local costume shop can make one (or many, if you have enough on that gift-card).
This is where things get tricky. "Breach" is clearly bankrupt of its own ideas and on actual budget, and teeters on the edge of being "bad." Why is that, just because it's derivative? Because of its bargain-bin production values? Those are qualities that are equal part important and unimportant to the art of filmmaking. More important questions: was I ever bored? Not really. Did I have a good time? Well I didn't have a "bad" time.
What am I supposed to do? Two stars is the default rating, so let's go with that.
Disclaimer: this rating depends on how much you appreciate junk, and how much you appreciate seeing a decent performance from Bruce Willis emerging from said junk.
The presence of Gerard Butler adds nothing but his fanbase to frequently delayed flick "Greenland." He's good in the role of the reluctant hero, as good as he is in any of his roles, but there is little of his trademark "everyman" superhero archetype on display, and his usual audience may feel tricked into a slightly smarter production absent of expected blood squibs and fisticuffs.
I'm actually not sure when he became an action star, with a career stretching back into the 90's, but he is. An economic actor who headlines films with plots lifted straight out of other movies (like last year's "The Fugitive" clone, "Angel Has Fallen"). Today he digs his meaty hands into the pile of disaster pictures, but the results onscreen are far more timely and intimate than he, the film or the audience deserves. At least for a good chunk of its runtime.
OK you know the drill: a man races to save his loved ones from the end of the world, this time a comet named "Clarke" that is about to hit Earth. Only this one is smarter than that basic plot synopsis suggests, forgoing spectacle in favor of family drama. The best parts involve the family when society goes to hell, an all-too familiar world where armed forces fire at civilians, panicked people pillage stores, and hysteria drives people to stealing, kidnapping and killing. It's simultaneously the right movie for 2020 and the wrong one, and it's these scenes that elevate "Greenland" out from the shackles set by its excessive peers.
There are some moments of sappy sentimentalism, as Gerard's character John Garrity's marriage is on the rocks, but this reconciliation does little to destroy the film's intelligent narrative or contemporary momentum.
A few more political wrinkles appear when John is separated from his wife Allison (Morena Baccarin) and diabetic son (Roger Dale Floyd) at a Georgian navel base. Selected families are being flown to a bunker in the namesake island, but why were they chosen, they wonder. So do their neighbors, and the people clamoring at the gates. Allowed entry after given an identification wristband, the parents find themselves the target of the general population; these wristbands are their one chance at survival, people think, and people act without thinking.
The best thing here is how the action is centered around the characters, instead of just on the action. I read the budget is a modest $35 million, a far cry from the usual blockbuster, and I'm sure that was the reason. I don't know about you, but my eyes were thankful for the optical relief, and my brain was just happy to be invited, instead of being told to stay at the door.
It's a shame, though, that we all watched this from our homes. Yes I know there is a pandemic, but the bombastic score and infrequent effects extravaganza demand something other than your crappy TV. Most of us are lucky enough to have something in 1080p, but fewer are set up with a humongous 4K screen or the appropriate sound system. This leaves several long stretches taking place night to appear dim and incomprehensible. Who's at fault? Is it mine for having a poor cinema setup? Or the filmmakers for a cheap home-viewing conversion? This is why we go to the movies, and it's another reminder of how much this year has sucked.
I do wish it leaned further into this human subtext, as the climax begins to ignore general logic and instead hit all the obligatory "disaster movie" beats. Yet I'm not surprised this happens. After all, the internet tells me filming ended last year, so all the similarities are merely coincidental. Let's just hope that 2020 ends the way "Greenland" does, with a light at the end of a tunnel.
Debuting on the television station Lifetime, it is notable only for being their first Christmas movie where the romantic leads are gay. TV has come a long way, but not the films released there. With a pandering narrative, clumsy performances, and low-stakes plot, this is everything we have come to expect from the medium, so grab a bag of popcorn and a blanket, and prepare to fall asleep.
It's the kind of picture where extras in the background pretend to sip from their coffee, only their lips are clearly not touching the cup. The type where you notice that a character is wearing the same pants the next "day." The sort where characters use a twenty dollar bill for a single mug of hot chocolate. Obviously, the budget went to acquiring all those Christmas decorations and fake snow.
Ben Lewis plays Hugo, a big-shot lawyer in NY who heads to his home town for the holidays, only to- gasp, bump into his high school crush. The flannel hunk of man-meat Patrick, played by Lewis' real life husband Blake Lee, and their existing relationship goes a long way in helping elevate the greeting-card material into something that is almost charming. The entire production fails their chemistry, but there's chemistry nonetheless.
Hugo's mother Kate is played by the always wonderful Fran Drescher, who's voice is just as nasally and debatably annoying as everyone remembers, but her professionalism is the rock to the shaky movie-making foundation. She dominates every scene she's in, and she's fortunately got quite a lot of screen time, adding a certain level of goofy class that this is so otherwise lacking in. Problem is, her dopey radiance even distracts from the fact that her fictional son is dating another man in a network first.
So aside from falling head-over-heals in television-PG love, Hugo and friends need to save the town's old train station. On top of that, his brother Aiden, played by Chad Connell, suddenly comes home as well, and begins propositioning Hugo's city friend Madelyn, played by Ellen Wong. And on top of that, he just got a promotion at work requiring him to move to London. Will Hugo and Patrick stay together? Will the historic landmark survive? And how will Madelyn and Aiden, and Hugo and Patrick, make it work long-distance?
There's so much going on! And yet, there isn't a moment that makes you care about any of it. The script defines each character as a caricature and provides zero chance for growth. The actors show up, read they lines, and pretend to look like they're having fun. Once or twice, they look like the honestly are. Other times, you can just picture the director waving their paychecks just off-camera.
Fran Drescher's presence gives this half of its one-star rating. The other half is the channel finally giving the LGBT community the feature-length recognition they deserve. The missing three stars are for being a piece of manufactured rubbish.
To go into detail of the plot would be a disservice to its manic charisma, but in short, its up to Santa to win back Christmas AND get Kate and her other stowaway Jack, played by Jahzir Bruno, her soon-to-be half-brother, or so she fears at least. It's a shame their roles aren't occupied by more convincing kid actors, as they entertain most of the runtime, and by the end you're kind of sick of their saccharine performances. It doesn't help that their personalities are defined by what adults think children are like (she misses her dad and he's a worry-wart), but it's times like this that you pine for someone like Mara Wilson, star of director Chris Columbus' own "Mrs. Doubtfire," among others, who's natural screen presence could meld any ponderous script into believable gold.
Talent like hers is missed, as the child acting here feels like they're auditioning for a commercial- smiling after every line delivery. Even the villain is oddly static, a credible threat not onscreen but only because the script demands he be. Hell, even the CGI monstrosities that are elves are more pleasing to the eye (and there are like a million of them).
That represents the other major issue with the picture, the visuals. While they have a sort of studio-backlot glamour to them, something you might find in a mall around December (well, maybe not this year), there's a gloomy dampness to every shot, a sort of artificial darkness that distracts from the whimsy that these scenes should invoke. This overreliance on computer-generated effects is glaring, from the sleigh riding to Santa's Workshop (or was that "Mrs. Santa's Workshop" now?); it's obvious where the real set ends and where the computers take over. Even the snow looks fake- it's 2020 and we still can't get snow to look real in the movies?!
I dunno. There's a lot going on at any one time that it'll surely hold the attention of the millions of Netflix-subscribing tykes. And the parents? Well, they're just be happy with the peace and quiet.
As for the film itself, none of these musing matter, because towering above all the inadequacies is the great Kurt Russell as Saint Nicholas himself, and the irresistible Goldie Hawn, as who else but Mrs. Claus. They were born to play these roles, and fill the screen with a chemistry that only almost forty years of dating can create. Your eyes can't leave their toothy smiles and huge personalities, a wonderful duo clearly having so much fun that it forces you to join in on the joy. Would the inevitable "Christmas Chronicles 3" benefit from tighter dialogue and a more cohesive plot? Of course! But only if these two return. In the meantime, number 2 ain't so bad.
What if Santa went bankrupt? Here's another one- what if a hitman was going after Santa?! Oh I've got one more- what if Mel Gibson played Santa?
See this is what they call a "high concept" film, and these three disparate narratives are awkwardly sewn together in the new movie "Fatman," only it's never as emotional, thrilling or funny as any of those gimmicks suggest. It's instead a slow, confused and turgid cocktail of too many genres, though the few sparkles of imagination present do go along way.
Mel Gibson of course plays Mr. Claus, who drinks his way through the daily, dull life of being Father Christmas. He's pretty good here, though the script fails to see the satire in having such a controversial figure play such a beloved character. He utters I think one swear, and seems to love all people of all places. That's not the Gibson I read about in the tabloids.
His doting wife, the wonderfully charming but ultimately accessory Marianne Jean-Baptiste, bakes him cookies as he crunches the numbers, fixes up the sled and checks up on the elves. Only these aren't your normal Hollywood elves- these are just relatively short but extremely efficient factory workers.
But the numbers aren't so good- on the verge of going under, the government steps in to have Santa's Workshop work on... something for their military. Suddenly the money's there to save next Christmas, even if it means Uncle Sam is oblivious to the potential of having someone on their payroll who knows "who's been bad or good" and when the bad is sleeping (and no doubt hiding). Honestly, am I the only one who's heard that song?
At the same time, the tyrant of a child Billy (Chance Hurstfield), frustrated by the lump of coal under his tree, exploits his sickly grandma's wealth to put a hit out on the man in red. The man for the job is Miller, played by Walton Goggins, who has unpleasant feelings towards old man Cringle of his own. There's a throwaway line about him not getting his dead parent's back, but I dunno, there isn't much effort put into character development here. What you see is what you get. Are you the kind of person who thinks seeing Goggins as an assassin, out to get Mel Gibson as Satna, is pure comedic gold? Well, this is the movie for you.
Problem it's not terribly funny. There are a few pieces of glib dialogue, but it's primary agenda is to keep the plot moving along, albeit slowly. It has the potential to be clever, a level of sensationalism, whimsy and hilarity that lives just below the surface of its approximate 100 minute runtime, but it's never the film we ever end up watching.
That doesn't make it a family movie either. Between the rare display of potty mouth, every bullet that lands results in a big pool of blood or splatter. But that's another problem- this is far tamer than something like last year's "Rambo: Last Blood," for example, so if they weren't going to go "all in," why bother showing any violence at all?
It comes down to concept, and how the three (or more, I wasn't counting) just don't jell into a cohesive picture. It's a neutered, frequently boring execution of some pretty interesting ideas that sucks the inherit fun out of the outrageous stunt-casting.
Maybe next time, get an actor who's actually fat to play the title character in a movie called Fatman. Or, at least have a script smart enough to mention this irony.
There is no reason for "Tremors: Shrieker Island" to not just be called "Tremors 7." There is no reason for "Tremors" to have seven movies. There is no reason for "Tremors" to be a franchise. There is no reason for Michael Gross" to have appeared in all the films. There is no reason for this film to exist in the first place. But all of those are true.
This time in the "Tremors" franchise, we find Gross' Burt Gummer character helping a team of scientists who's outdoor facility is on the neighboring island to Bill (Richard Blake, who chews more scenery than the monsters), who's bred "graboids" on his private resort. See, he finds these bored millionaires and promises them the hunt of their lives, subterranean worms. These creatures make for perfect low-budget monster movie stars, as it allows the limited budget to focus on the suggestion of the beasts, not necessarily their presence. Toss some dirt around and bam- you instantly have a behemoth nearby. No fancy special effects needed!
The times we do see them onscreen, they look pretty good, or at least, better than "Sharknado." Problems with the film begin once its established that we have shriekers, a sort of evolution the worms that walk on land that first debuted in the first sequel. Have we run out of steam? This is the seventh(!) film in the timeline, and we've gone back to pillage material from earlier films in the series?
The power of suggestion doesn't work here, and the budget constraints show- this is most obviously not something intended for theaters; these look like something you'd use a fake gun to blast away in the arcade video game in the theater's lobby.
A film like this defies regular film criticisms, as actors overact, do dumb things, and say even dumber things. But that's part of the charm, take a scene where Bill, after one of his rich friends is eaten, quips "if your gonna piss like a puppy you better stay on the porch."
... What? It's campy bits like this that keep you paying attention between the monster action, and even the occasional misfire is usually accompanied by an amusing or exaggerated facial expressions. Look, this movie is pretty bad, but it knows it's bad, and never settles for simply being bad. Thanks to the energetic and efficient direction from Don Michael Paul, who also co-wrote the script, the well-shot location and fun performances lift the picture out from the bargain bin fate of most direct-to-video/streaming sequels.
Yes yes I know, it's lazy movie making no doubt, but it's not boring movie making, and there's a lesson to be learned here. I can't recommend something you'll fall asleep during, but "Tremors Shrieker Island" is no lullaby- it is escapist genre fare with thrills as familiar as they are entertaining.
So what else is new? Why are we all here? Did anyone eagerly await this review to see if they should press the "play" button on Netflix? My guess, if you've read this far, you've already watched it. Good for you, you've done your cinematic duty of helping B-movie filmmakers get their paycheck.
The disconnected narrative follows Arvin Russell, played by Holland, who's dad (Skarsgard) killed himself after his mother's cancerous death. Now grownup, raised by his grandma and uncle, his step-sister Lenora (Eliza Scanlen) kills herself after getting pregnant with the creepy local preacher (Pattinson). You don't want to be one of his relatives.
We also follow bent police sheriff Lee Bodecker (Sebastian Stan), who's promiscuous sister (Riley Keough) sleeps with hitchhikers before her husband (Clarke) kills them behind a camera lense. That's a problem for Lee, since he's up for reelection, a timely plot considering November is only two months away, but it never leans far into this political satire, instead settling into being but another way to sensationalize violence for the lusting camera.
These two primary stories are connected to each other not only with characters but with the picture's core concept, which is the corruption of religion. Everyone's motives, in some way or shape, leads back to god, and it's never for the better. Men and women are not only killed, but brutalized, both physically and emotionally. You see as much sex and gore an R rating will allow- even the dog dies!
Thankfully that's off camera, but why? Because people don't like it when an animal dies? Do you think they like it when a woman has a screwdriver shoved in her throat? Because that happens here, shown in its entirety. We see all the blood spill between her fingers as she tries to put pressure on the gash. This is a moral compass as corrupt as the characters it tries to villainize.
Save for Spiderman, every man targets women for their own perverse actions. If you're not comfortable with watching a grown man force fellatio on his wife, after having sex with an underage girl in his car, then please, keep scrolling through the list of recommended films on Netflix. It just leaves a bad taste in your mouth, a rampant exercise in sexism that just doesn't sit well with me. I refuse to accept this as a thriller, not only because the movie fails to thrill but because the material does too. Religion is ripe for mockery, but statutory rape is not.
IMDB.com tells me that the film's slogan is "Some people are just born to be buried;" some films are too.