Steve Martin Looks Back, and Other First-Quarter 2024 Reviews

27 Mar
Q1 2024 movies

For 50 years, Steve Martin has been different things to different people: For those of a certain age, he was a “wild and crazy” standup comedian, whose shows and albums broke records in the late 1970s. To others, he’s the star of classic films like The Jerk, Three Amigos!Roxanne, and All of Me. To others, he’s the star of family-friendly movies like Parenthood, Father of the Bride, and Cheaper by the Dozen. To others, he’s a sophisticated writer of New Yorker articles. To others, he’s a musician and composer, who collaborated with Edie Brickell on the Tony-nominated Broadway musical Bright Star. And to others, he’s the co-creator and star, alongside Martin Short and Selena Gomez, of the Hulu TV show Only Murders in the Building

Suffice it to say, the man has invented and reinvented and reinvented himself multiple times throughout his career, adapting to the highs and lows — which is why today, he probably has fans of all ages.

However you know Steve Martin, you’re likely to know him a little better after watching Steve! (martin): A Documentary in 2 Pieces, which premieres on Apple TV+ this week. Directed by Morgan Neville (Won’t You Be My Neighbor? and the Oscar-winning 20 Feet from Stardom), the roughly three-hour doc is broken into two parts: “Then,” which traces Martin’s rise through the standup circuit, and “Now,” which documents many things since then.

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Should You Return to the Road House and the Ghostbusters Firehouse?

21 Mar
Road House and Ghostbusters Frozen Empire

It’s the middle of March 2024, but moviemakers seem to have their minds on the 1980s. This week, two films are dropping that hope to recapture the fun of much loved movies from back in the day. 

Are they worth seeing?

Read on to learn what I thought of Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire and Road House.

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All the New Movies I’ve Seen: Fourth-Quarter 2023 Edition, Part 2

26 Jan

We’re already at the end of January 2024, and awards season is in full swing. (If you missed them, the Oscar nominations were announced earlier this week.) Unfortunately, I had to wait to see some of the potential contenders till they were released widely, so I decided to wait to share my final reviews of 2023. 

And so, better late than never, and just like I did in the firstsecond, and third quarters of this year, here’s a (slightly delayed) roundup of what I thought of all the movies I saw in the — let’s call it, second half of the fourth quarter of 2023, in reverse chronological order, with a note about how/where I saw them.

FYI: You won’t see recent wide-release films like All of Us Strangers or Poor Things here; I saw those in the first half of the quarter. For the record, they both earned a spot on my list of the year’s best films.

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Another Year Comes to a Close, but Challenging Times Won’t End

29 Dec
The road continues, photo by Mason Wildfang

We have reached the end of another year, and I don’t know about you, but I am exhausted.

The first half of this year was good, and I had a lot of fun. But the second half? Definitely more stressful and challenging.

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The Year in Movies: My Favorite and Least Favorite Films of 2023

26 Dec
Top movies of 2023

It may be hyperbole to say this, but 2023 was the year the movies came back.

After three years of Hollywood being in pandemic mode and struggling to recover, including a year like last year when the films just felt so forgettable and meh, this year was filled with so many movies that were worth seeing that it was hard not to feel like things were back to normal. 

Of course, it was interrupted by the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes, which set production on many projects back a few months (or, in some cases, a year) and meant that nearly every film that was released during the strikes did so with little to no fanfare. If one of those releases found an audience, it could consider itself lucky.

But by year’s end, things were back on track, and here we are again taking stock of the best and worst releases of the year. 

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The Year in Music: What I Listened to in 2023

13 Dec
Bruce Springsteen live in concert at Gillette Stadium

Every year, I’m fond of looking back through the music I’ve added to my annual Time Capsule playlist on Spotify and seeing what it says about those 12 months, if anything.

Rather than ranking the “best” music of the year, like so many music writers and publications do, or letting Spotify tell me my most-listened-to songs and artists, I find the Time Capsule playlist is a more accurate representation of not only what I listened to but what I want to remember about the year. Often, it reveals a narrative, providing a soundtrack of sorts for the last 12 months that helps me recall good times and bad, significant milestones, and the everyday joys of driving around with a good song playing at top volume.

This year, when taken as a whole, my Time Capsule playlist is kind of an odd collection of tunes — but then again, it was also kind of an odd year (more on that in another blog post). There’s less new music than usual, some definite themes or trends, and a bunch of seemingly random inclusions. The playlist (which is largely chronological and not ranked) is all over the place.

In short, what appears here requires a little explanation.

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Thankful for True Friends and So Much More

21 Nov

On October 7, I was in Chicago enjoying a fun weekend with friends. But I awoke that morning to the shocking news of the attack on Israel by Hamas and the deaths of a then-unknown number of people. As the day went on, the details became grimmer, and I was thankful to be out of town and busy, otherwise I surely would have been firmly planted in front of the TV all day watching for the latest developments. (Checking in on Twitter was more than enough, for better and for worse.)

Since then, I’ve been horrified by what we’ve learned about the attack and just how brutal it was. Not only were between 1,200 and 1,400 innocent men, women, and children murdered, and not only were more than 240 people taken hostage, they were beaten, raped, mutilated, beheaded, tortured, and more. Early on a Shabbat morning, a day that was also a Jewish holiday. Elderly. Babies. Disabled people. Young people enjoying a music festival. Some were burned beyond recognition and still have not been identified, all these weeks later. Parents were taken from their children and children were taken from their parents right in front of them. All of this was carried out with glee by terrorist monsters who documented it on camera, celebrated it, had plans for it to be much worse than it was, and saw October 7 as just the first in a series of attacks on Israel. One Hamas leader actually said the terrorist group intended to launch “a second, a third, a fourth” attack until Israel is “annihilated,” as if it was perfectly normal thing to say and do.

Despite those details, I’ve been equally horrified by the reaction of the world, and the fact that people didn’t instantly, universally condemn what happened, and haven’t come to Israel’s defense as it fights to defeat Hamas once and for all and bring all of the hostages back home. It didn’t even take a day for sentiments like “Israel deserved it” to spread all around the globe.

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All the New Movies I’ve Seen: Fourth-Quarter 2023 Edition, Part 1

16 Nov

To quote a beloved song, “It’s the most wonderful time of the year!” No, I’m not talking about the holiday season specifically. I’m talking about the last three months of the year, when the movie-release schedule really heats up and some of the most anticipated films of the year are released.

And, since the SAG-AFTRA strike was resolved (after 118 days), and actors are now able to promote their work again, things are back to “normal,” so you should be hearing about many of the new releases on talk shows, podcasts, and in magazine profiles. (Hooray!)

Since my last roundup seven weeks ago, I’ve seen 18 more movies (I’m counting two short films), bringing my total for the year so far to 68 new releases — which is more than I saw last year in total, just for the record. Given how many more movies will be released between now and the end of the year, I thought it’d be a good idea to share a roundup of recent releases and what I thought of them now, before there are too many, so these reviews can still be relevant and timely. 

And so, just like I did in the firstsecond, and third quarters of this year, here in one place (and in reverse-chronological order) is a list of all the movies I’ve seen so far in the fourth quarter of 2023, how I saw them, and a quick review of each one.

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All the New Movies I’ve Seen: Third-Quarter 2023 Edition

2 Oct
3Q movie reviews

The third quarter of 2023 sure did have its ups and downs — where the movies were concerned, anyway.

On the one hand, we had the one-two punch of Barbie and Oppenheimer — or Barbenheimer, if you prefer — movies that broke box office records and were actually very good, proving that sometimes, the hype is actually justified.

But on the other hand, there was the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes, which halted production and limited promotion for nearly all new releases. Some release dates were delayed as a result, and movies that did come out often did so quietly. Thankfully, after nearly 150 days, the writers got a great deal from the studios. Hopefully, the actors will get one, too, and soon.

Over these last three months, I saw 14 movies, bringing my total for the year so far to 50. (I’m counting a collection of four short films as one feature.) I’ve shared my thoughts about most of what I’ve seen on Twitter and/or Instagram (Stories), but I haven’t documented my thoughts about everything. So, just like I did in the first and second quarters of this year, here in one place (and in reverse-chronological order) is a list of all the movies I saw in the third quarter of 2023, how I saw them, and a quick review of each one.

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#Barbenheimer: What I Thought of This Summer’s Two Biggest Movies

24 Jul
Oppenheimer and Barbie

You had to be sleeping under a rock to not have heard about Barbenheimer, the portmanteau made by combining the names of this summer’s two most eagerly anticipated movies: Greta Gerwig’s Barbie and Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer

Other than ambitious filmmakers taking large swings and huge ensemble casts full of recognizable faces, the two films do not have much in common; one is a candy-colored comedy based on a popular toy, and the other is a drama about one of the darkest chapters in American history. But the hype over the last few months turned their release on the same day into a legitimate event. Just check out the memes and social media chatter — not to mention the brand partnerships. In response, fans showed up in droves; the two movies together earned more than $235 million at the box office on opening weekend in the United States and Canada.

If you’re someone who’s still on the fence about seeing one or both of these movies, or you’ve somehow managed to avoid all the buzz, let me cut to the chase and share the good news that they’re both worthy of the hype and worth seeing. That’s a bit of a modern-day miracle given we’re living in times when hyperbole and (undeserved) overpromotion are the norm.

What more do you need to know? Here are my thoughts about both films, in reverse alphabetical order.

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