Sunday, January 7, 2024

2023: All the Good Stuff (and the Bad Stuff)

Due to a number of factors, I'm going to be doing my year-end best of blog posts a little differently from now on. For one thing, I'm going to start listing the top movies I watched during the previous year, paying no mind to when the movie originally came out. Yep, that means that if I watch a movie from 1973 and it's one of my favorite movies I watched during the year, it goes on the list. The only stipulation is that it has to be a "first watch", meaning the first time I've seen it. I will try to stick to a "top ten", but I can go above or below that number if I feel it is warranted.

Additionally, I'm going to start doing favorite TV shows and favorite books I watched and read during the year. These lists will probably be a bit shorter than the movie lists, though again not confined to a specific number.

I'll also list the "worst media" I consumed over the year, though it's likely that these will mostly be movies since I tend to tap out early on crappy books and TV shows.

So, without further ado, here are my lists for 2023:

***

Top 10 movies I watched in 2023

10. Saltburn

Emerald Fennell's sophomore film Saltburn is not a great film...and some would say that it's not even a good film. But what it is is a wild, fun, outrageous film and it warrants a place on this list for the glee it elicited in me. While I left some of the "big" movies of 2023 with a feeling of "that's it?", I left Saltburn cackling and texting my friends about it. Plus, Barry Keoghan's performance as the snake-y Oliver Quick is one of the most fun performances of the year.

9. The Handmaiden (2016)

It's wild that I didn't watch this erotic tale of cat-and-mouse games and betrayal between a pickpocket, a con man, and a wealthy heiress in early 20th century Korea until just this year. Based on the novel Fingersmith by Sarah Waters, The Handmaiden is a very tricksy movie in which men try to control and dominate women, only for the women to turn the tables--and find a hot and heavy sapphic love while doing so. Directed by Park Chan-wook, whose films always feel like the perfect mix of pulpy trash and luscious class, and with gorgeous cinematography by Chung Chung-hoon (who often works with Park), The Handmaiden is a movie you don't want to sleep on.

8. How to Blow Up a Pipeline

Speaking of sleeping on, How to Blow Up a Pipeline is a tight eco-thriller that flew under the radar in 2023. Although it did get a theatrical release, I didn't even hear about it until it was streaming on Hulu. I'm so glad I watched it. The film follows a group of people we might ungenerously call "eco-terrorists" who come together to blow up an oil pipeline in Texas. Each person has their own reason for being involved in this plot, ranging from despair due to climate change to anger at an oil company seizing property under eminent domain laws. The film has empathy for the characters and pays a small amount of lip service to the regular people they'll fuck over through their act of sabotage, but it's also not a preachy movie that lionizes this group or their actions. Regardless of the politics of the film and its characters, How to Blow Up a Pipeline is thrilling and timely.

7. Infinity Pool

Like SaltburnInfinity Pool is a movie for the sickos. It contains orgiastic sex, sociopathic violence, ritualistic execution, and a completely unhinged performance by horror "It Girl" Mia Goth. Directed by Brandon Cronenberg, son of David, the film follows a group of rich white people vacationing in a fictional country called Li Tolqa where you can get away with murder...if you have the money. The government of Li Tolqa has a process in which a "double" can be made that looks like and even contains the memories of a person. If you commit a crime, you can pay to have a double created and executed in your place. Writer James (Alexander Skarsgard as you've never seen him before--pathetic, terrified, and weak) discovers this after accidentally killing a man while driving drunk. But it's what happens after James' double is made and executed that makes up the bulk of Infinity Pool--and baby, it's a wild (and bodily fluid-drenched) ride. 

6. Elle (2016) -- second review down

Elle, directed by provocateur Paul Verhoeven and starring the queen of fucked up French movies, Isabelle Huppert, is a rape-revenge thriller that is incredibly good despite being very upsetting and violent. It's not so much that the film is "empowering" (although Huppert's character, Michele, is definitely a strong woman), but more that it's unexpected. Elle doesn't follow any of the typical rape-revenge tropes. Michele is raped in her own home by a masked assailant and she doesn't call the police. She also doesn't gain super-human strength and hunt down her predator, like we often see in these kinds of films. She kinda just...goes on living. But she also lures her predator back so that she can discover who he is and the two begin a weird cat-and-mouse game. Some critics decried the film as being a male fantasy in which a woman enjoys being raped and brutalized. But I didn't see it that way at all. It felt more like a movie that says "who knows why people do the things they do?" How very French. 

5. May December

Well hey, here's another movie about sexual abuse! May December is director Todd Hayne's fictionalized take on the Mary Kay Letourneau-Vili Fualaau story. Natalie Portman plays actress Elizabeth Berry, who visits Gracie Atherton-Yoo (Julianne Moore) and Joe Yoo (Charles Melton) at their home in Savannah. The Yoos are a married couple with a very large age gap: Joe is 36 and Gracie is 59. A little unusual, but no problem right? Well, they first "got together" when Joe was 13 years old and Gracie was 36. Gracie spent time in prison, where she gave birth to the couple's first child. When Gracie got out of prison and Joe came of legal age, the two married and have been happily together since. What a great love story, right? Elizabeth will be playing Gracie in a movie and wants to make sure she fully understand this "human" story. Director Haynes makes it very, very clear that Gracie is an abuser who controls Joe through emotional manipulation and  that Joe suffered dearly from being raped by an older woman at such a young age. Of course, the word "rape" is never used. Charles Melton gives a heartbreaking performance as a man entering middle-age who doesn't even fully comprehend the ways in which his wife abused him and continues to do so. May December has a campy, melodramatic tone that may be off-putting to some viewers, but rightfully pokes fun at the characters who downplay--or even romanticize--their repulsive actions. 

4. Sanctuary

And here we have a movie about sadomasochistic head games! Seeing a theme? This nifty little two-hander of a movie stars Margaret Qualley as Rebecca, a dominatrix, and Christopher Abbott as Hal, her wealthy client. After the two have an extended scene in Hal's hotel room, which culminates in Hal masturbating to completion while being told he's less than nothing by Rebecca, the two crazy kids enjoy a meal together. Then Hal informs Rebecca that now that his father is dead and he is taking over his hotel conglomerate, the two can't do BDSM anymore because it would basically make Hal look bad if it came out that he, you know, likes to be forced to clean a bathroom on his hands and knees. Thus begins a cat-and-mouse game (this is like the third movie on this list that has "cat-and-mouse games"!) in which Rebecca demands more and more money from Hal because, as she argues, her dominance of him is what gave him the self-esteem, the cojones if you will, to even *think* about being the kind of guy who can run a hotel conglomerate. Sanctuary was a wonderful surprise that feels both dangerous and very, very fun and has, in my opinion, the best ending of the year. 

3. Talk to Me

Seeing Talk to Me in the theatre was probably the best movie experience I had this year. This horror movie, directed Danny and Michael Philippou, is gory, unsettling, and sad. It's not quite Hereditary-level, but it's close. And listening to people absolutely lose their shit during some of the scenes was...well, it's weird to say "fun", but that's what it was. Plus, the movie randomly shut off in the middle for five minutes and we were all given a free movie ticket. An unexpected bathroom break and a free movie? Sweet! Talk to Me is about grief and the lengths people will go to find connection in the midst of depression. The title refers to the incantation the group of teenagers at the center of the film say while holding the embalmed hand of dead person in the hopes of communicating with the dead...but it's also a plea for connection and attention. Main character Mia (Sophie Wilde) is two years out from losing her mother. She is deeply depressed and can't confide in her dad.  She also feels alienated from her friends. So when this new "game" of talking to the dead pops up in her friend circles, she eagerly joins in...until tragedy strikes and leads to further isolation and alienation for Mia. I probably thought more about Talk to Me than any other movie on this list. 

2. Triangle of Sadness (2022)

Directed by Ruben Ostlund, Triangle of Sadness is a film that satirizes the rich. It follows a young couple, Yaya (Charlbi Dean) and Karl (Harris Dickinson), who are both models and are given a free vacation on a luxury yacht in exchange for Yaya promoting the cruise company on social media. But when the yacht is bombed by pirates, the survivors must work together on an island until they are rescued. So imagine a group of super wealthy people and cruise employees who typically cook for those wealthy folks and scrub their toilets trying to get along in order to survive. When it becomes clear that Abigail (Dolly de Leon), a housekeeper on the yacht, is really the only one who knows jack shit about survival--such as how to catch fish--the power dynamics are turned upside down. Look, "eat the rich" movies are a dime a dozen these days, but Triangle of Sadness is hilarious and worth the watch.

1. Poor Things

Wildly creative director Yorgos Lanthimos strikes gold again with Poor Things. Emma Stone stars in a career-defining role as Bella Baxter, the "creation" of Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe), a surgeon who discovers the near-dead corpse of a heavily pregnant women who attempted suicide. Godwin--or "God" to his friends--removes the fetus's brain and puts it into the head of the woman and then revives her with, like, electricity or something. So, Bella is a baby in an adult woman's body at the opening of the film. But babies grow and learn, and so does Bella, who eventually runs off with the Victorian era version of a fuckboy, Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo in an unforgettable role). Bella is horny as hell and enjoys "furious jumping" (as she terms it) with Duncan. But she also discovers that she likes exploring and reading and philosophy, making her more annoying and less adorable to Duncan as time goes by. Eventually, she abandons Duncan completely to work as a whore in a brothel in France. Every girl has to have her French prostitute era, am I right ladies? This is where Bella learns about socialism. But the party is abruptly over when Bella is sent word that Godwin is dying and she returns home to meet her maker one last time...but old Duncan has one more trick up his sleeve to destroy Bella's happiness. Poor Things is a visually gorgeous, deeply humanistic film about our capacity to learn, grow, and become better people. Bella slips out of the grasp of the many men who would control and conquer her, and she learns to be her own conquerer and protector. If you felt that Barbie was a little too basic (and capitalistic) in its views on feminism, try giving Poor Things a watch.


Honorable mentions:

The Iron Claw, Oppenheimer, Killers of the Flower Moon, Barbie, Asteroid City, Beau is Afraid

***

Top TV shows I watched in 2023:

5. Black Mirror, S6

After a couple seasons that fell flat, Black Mirror returned with five strong episodes. "Beyond the Sea", starring Josh Hartnett, Aaron Paul, and Kate Mara is a particular standout. Like previous seasons, season 6 of this modern day Twilight Zone is a mix of humor and horror. 

4. The Curse

The word that comes to mind when I think about The Curse, a show created by Benny Safdie and Nathan Fielder, is "sinister". While the show, which stars Safdie, Fielder, and also Emma Stone (yay! 2023 is the year of weird Emma Stone), is not technically horror in the sense of ghosts and ghouls, it is a horrific (and hilarious and hella awkward) look at clueless white privilege and gentrification. There is no way I can describe this show without it sounding like the most off-putting piece of media to ever exist (which is basically is!), so if absolutely gritting your teeth in white-hot awkwardness sounds interesting to you, check it out! I can say for sure that I've never seen a show like it before. It's fucking wild.

3. Yellowjackets, S2

Yellowjackets is one of the most addictive shows I've seen in a while. The premise--a plane carrying a high school girls soccer team crashes in the Canadian wilderness and the girls have to do horrible things to survive--is enough to draw you in. But the acting, the 1990s-era needle drops, and the mysteries of the woods will keep you coming back for more. 

2. The Last of Us

I wasn't planning on watching The Last of Us, but when I found out that the cause for the zombie-like outbreak that fuels this apocalyptic show is a Cordyceps fungal infection, I was immediately interested (I knew about how Cordyceps can affect ants, so I was very intrigued but the idea of it infecting humans). What I discovered is that The Last of Us is less about how humans survive in an apocalyptic situation, and more about how they love in such a situation. It's about how and whether we choose to go on when all hope seems lost. The (in)famous third episode, "Long, Long Time" made that clear. The Last of Us is a perfect mix of action, horror, sci-fi, and heart-warming drama. It also cemented Pedro Pascal's place a Zaddy Extraordinaire. 

1. Severance

Pay attention folks: Apple TV's Severance is the best piece of media I consumed in 2023. The show follows a group of people who have undergone a procedure called "severance", in which their memories are severed in two: when they are at work, they have no memory or knowledge of their home lives and when they are at home, they have no memory or knowledge of their work lives. Sounds like a great way to increase work/life balance, right? Well, consider that the part of you that works basically never leaves the office. Not so balanced now, eh? Adam Scott plays Mark Scout, a man who underwent the severance procedure after the death of his wife because he thought it would give him some relief from his grief. But when his "outie" (the nickname for people when they're at home) starts discovering some not-so-cool stuff about the company his "innie" works for, Mark begins to wonder if severance was the right choice. Severance was, to me, a deeply emotional show about the ways in which we avoid bad feelings. The lengths we will go to avoid looking grief and pain right in the eye, and how that avoidance leads to greater pain down the road. I'm so psyched for season 2. 

Honorable mentions:

Barry, S4; The Bear, S1 and S2

***

Top Books I read in 2023

3. The Book of the Most Precious Substance by Sara Gran

I heard about this book on a Facebook group I'm in called "The Turn of the Page". I had already read Gran's Come Closer in 2022 and was very impressed with how quickly it sucked me in. So when I heard about The Book of the Most Precious Substance, which follows a rare book dealer's quest to find a book of sex magic that supposedly grants the practitioner any desire they have (at a cost, of course...this is the occult we're dealing with!), I was all in. Precious Substance is a mix of occult horror and erotic thriller with a dash of wry humor. Definitely the most fun reading experience I had this year.

2. A Heart That Works by Rob Delaney

Actor and comedian Rob Delany lost his two year old son, Henry, to brain cancer in 2018. This short memoir chronicles Henry's illness, death, and the aftermath of grief. In my humble opinion this book is a masterpiece. The way Delaney approaches grief is singular--I don't know if I've ever read a book that feels this honest. Delaney expresses his boiling hot anger with people who say the wrong things to him when they hear about his dead son. He also expresses his understanding that other people can't understand what he and his wife have been through unless they've been through it themselves. Delany has immense empathy and forgiveness for those same people as well as for himself and his reactions to his own grief (which include, at one point, punching himself in the face). Despite the complete and total agony of losing a young child, Delaney finds joy, humor, and hope--being a comedian, there are some truly funny observations in the book, as well as a sense that Henry's life can be celebrated as well as grieved. A Heart That Works is a remarkable work of grief, love, and compassion.

1. From Hell by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell

And in contrast to the above, Alan Moore's epic graphic novel about Jack the Ripper was described to me as a book that felt "evil". So, of course I had to see what the fuss was about! From Hell certainly is dark, but it did not feel evil to me. Moore weaves historical fact in with fiction. He takes a specific theory about who Jack the Ripper was and what his motivations were (a theory that has been presented before, but is likely not what really happened or who Jack really was) and runs with it. Without spoiling too much, the theory is that the sex workers who were murdered by Jack knew a secret about the royal family (the family of Queen Victoria, that is) and that Jack was a person close to the royal family acting on orders. Moore provides copious notes at the end of this enormous tome of a book which I eagerly read after I devoured each chapter. Overall, the book took more than a month to read and I went out of my way to read it slowly and deliberately, since I knew that was the only way to approach From Hell. The experience of reading this book was similar to eating a very filling meal at an expensive restaurant--it demanded time, attention, and thoughtfulness and the result was feeling very full and satisfied.



***

The Worst Media I Consumed in 2023:

2. Leave the World Behind

The more I think about this movie, which was recently released on Netflix, the more I am annoyed by it. For one, it squanders a lot of talent: it is directed by Sam Esmail, creator of Mr. Robot, and it stars Mahershala Ali, Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawke, and Kevin Bacon. The premise is also interesting: what if you rented a house for a vacation weekend and apocalyptic events began occurring and then people showed up at the house claiming it was theirs but with no identification? Sounds pretty wild, right? Sadly, Leave the World Behind is an exercise in frustration and boredom. Is it the worst movie of all time? Not hardly. But it was just an all-around disappointment. 

1. The Scary of Sixty-First (2020)

This bizarre horror film, which can be found on the streaming service Shudder if you want to give it a go, is one of the only movies I've ever rated an "F" on this blog. That's because it goes above and beyond just being bad and into the realm of morally repulsive. Now, if you read this blog regularly, you might wonder what I could possibly find morally repulsive? Hell, I gave Salo, or, the 120 Days of Sodom an "A" rating! 

Well, The Scary of Sixty-First is about two young women who rent an apartment in New York for a suspiciously good price. Turns out, Jeffrey Epstein is the former owner. Yup. So, one of the women begins obsessively researching Epstein and associated conspiracy theories and the other woman somehow becomes possessed by living in the apartment and starts to act babyishly when having sex with her boyfriend: asking him to pretend she's 13 years old and talking in a high-pitched baby voice. In another scene, she furiously masturbates to pictures of Prince Andrew.

I have no idea what director Dasha Nekrasova wanted to accomplish in making this film, which is nothing less than an exploitation film which, in my opinion, disrespects the actual victims of Epstein and his associates. If she wanted to make a haunted apartment movie and even wanted it to be haunted by the ghost of a dead pedophile, sure, whatever. But why choose an actual pedophile who harmed actual people? I've watched movies about pedophilia and child sex abuse before (Mysterious Skin is one example) and they have never felt exploitative of the victims. But The Scary of Sixty-First uses a real life person who destroyed countless lives and uses him as a Boogeyman for entertainment purposes. I don't think this film should be banned or anything...freedom of speech and artistic expression and all that...but goddamn this movie is stupid and sick...and well deserving of it's place as the biggest piece of shit I watched all year.

***

That's all, folks! See ya in 2024!



Monday, January 1, 2024

Stuff I Watched in...December, 2023

Leave the World Behind (2023)

Based on the book (which I have not read) by Ruuman Alam, Leave the World Behind might be one of the most disappointing movies of the year. With a stacked cast (Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawke, Mahershala Ali, and Kevin Bacon) and a fascinating premise (what if you were renting an AirBNB and the world, like, ended and the owners came back to their house) this movie adds up to a whole lotta nothing.

Roberts and Hawke play Amanda and Clay Sandford, who, with their two kids, take a vacation on Long Island. But the first night they're at the rental house, the owner, G.H. Scott (Ali), and his daughter Ruth (Myha'la) show up because there are blackouts in the city and they don't want to go to their apartment on the 14th floor of a high rise when the elevator and lights are out of commission. Or so they say.

Amanda is immediately suspicious of them, and, frankly, rude as hell. G.H. left his ID in his coat which he forgot at the opera he and Ruth were attending, but he also has a key to the liquor cabinet and knows his way around the house. It's pretty obvious that these people are who they say they are. However, they are also Black. 

Here is where the movie fails. I 100% thought this would be a movie about racism amongst a small group of middle-class people during the apocalypse. But race is *barely* mentioned. And I don't see that as a point in the movie's favor. Although the word "racist" is never used, Amanda is hugely racist. She doesn't believe G.H. and Ruth when they show up, she makes weird comments about Ruth's hair, and then later she dances with G.H. to the song "Too Close" while drunk. She's basically a bingo card of awkward white lady racism: pissed off at these Black people when it suits her, but also weirdly horny for the dad. Her character is fucked up and I absolutely hated her, which I guess is a testament to Roberts' acting.

The film instead pulls the "we all just need to get along" card in the end, suggesting that things fall apart when the world ends because people just aren't nice enough to each other. It's a child's version of morality and I wanted a hard-hitting film about how people would actually treat each other in this exact scenario. What a phony, bullshit movie and a waste of an interesting premise. Would recommend skipping.

Grade: C

***

Birth (2004)

Director Jonathan Glazer's Zone of Interest is coming out soon and so I wanted to go back and watch some of his earlier films. He directs very strange and dreamlike movies. Birth is about Anna (Nicole Kidman), who loses her husband Sean at the beginning of the movie. Ten years later, she's celebrating her engagement to Joseph (Danny Huston) when a 10 year old boy (Cameron Bright) shows up during a family gathering and announces that he is Sean. Anna's Sean.

The boy, whose name is, in fact, Sean, knows a lot about Anna and Sean's relationship, including intimate details about their sex life that no one else would know. At first, Anna sees Sean as innocent and misinformed. Sean's dad lives in the same building as Anna's mother, so Joseph and Anna take him home and explain to the dad what's going on. Sean's dad tries to force him to say that he'll leave Anna alone, but the boy keeps reiterating that he can't and he loves her.

Anna continues to try to have an (appropriate) relationship with 10-year-old Sean in the hopes that he might snap out of it and realize that he's not the reincarnation of Anna's dead husband. But Anna starts to fall in love with this little boy. Birth was controversial for obvious reasons when it came out. However, at least in my opinion, there is absolutely nothing salacious that happens in the movie. There is a scene where Anna and 10-year-old Sean take a bath together (Kidman says that they filmed their closeups separately and were never actually in the bath together)...but really, this isn't a sexual scene at all. In fact, the entire movie is more about spiritual love than sexual love. 

Birth is a beautiful and mesmerizing movie about grief. How do we move on when we're still haunted by memories of the past? Does love transcend death? It's well worth watching as long as you're not squicked out by the premise.

Grade: B+

***

Angel Heart (1987)

Angel Heart is a neo-noir thriller that takes place in the 1950s and stars Mickey Rourke as Harry Angel, a private detective, and Robert De Niro as Louis Cyphre, a mysterious rich man who hires Angel to track down a singer, Johnny Favorite, who owes Cyphre a debt.

Angel's search for Johnny Favorite takes him from Brooklyn to New Orleans, where he tracks down and interviews former associates (and lovers) of Johnny to gather information. The only problem is that the people Angel interviews wind up dead not long after. With Angel implicated in their deaths.

Angel Heart was a really fun movie and gets progressively wilder as the film goes on, reaching a nearly ridiculous (in a fun way) climax. And yet, I felt like *something* was missing and I'm not sure exactly what. I think I went in with really high expectations because the movie had been recommended to me by multiple people and it also seems exactly like the kind of movie I'd love. That said, I still recommend it because it's a lot of fun.

Grade: B

***

The Report (2019)

If you're in the mood for a "people research and uncover startling truths" movie, a la Spotlight, then this one's for you. Based on the true story of Senate staffer Daniel J. Jones' (played by a very impassioned and shout-y Adam Driver) research into the "enhanced interrogation techniques" the CIA engaged in during the post-9/11 "war on terror", The Report is a haunting reminder that the United States is capable of great evil (what a shock, lol). 

So, I lived through all this history and kinda knew a little about what was going on, but I didn't know the extent to which the United States went out of their way to figure out a way to torture supposed terrorists for no other reason than the fact that they could get away with it. The story back then and to this day is that even though "enhanced interrogation techniques" were brutal and ethically ambiguous, they worked and they prevented deaths of innocent civilians and so it was worth it. In fact, what Jones uncovers is that techniques like waterboarding, sleep deprivation, and humiliation of prisoners didn't work at all. Waterboarding was supposed to get the truth out of someone after one use and some of these prisoners were waterboarded almost 200 times and they made up shit to stop the torture. Which is like, 100% common sense, right!? 

I learned a lot from The Report and none of it really shocked me. I could go into a rant about the absolute insanity that is "American exceptionalism", but if you read my blog regularly, you already know what I think. Instead, I'll just encourage people to watch this excellent film which shows how the US government stooped to the level of the terrorists and perhaps even lower the minute it had an excuse to do so. It's also not lost on me the parallels between post-9/11 USA and post-10/7 Israel. Terrorist attacks are evil, but that doesn't justify striking back tenfold. 

Grade: B+

***

A Murder at the End of the World (2023)

This show, which I described as "Agatha Christie meets Mr. Robot", started strong but fizzled out near the end. The show follows Darby Hart (Emma Corrin with a shaky American accent), a Gen-Z sleuth and hacker who writes a book about how she and a fellow true crime enthusiast, Bill Farrah (Harris Dickinson), tracked down the identity of a serial killer. Darby and Bill are subsequently both invited to an exclusive retreat in Iceland by Andy Ronson (Clive Owen), a tech mogul in the style of Steve Jobs meets Elon Musk. Ronson is married to Lee Anderson (Brit Marling), a female hacker from the 90s who was doxxed and retreated into obscurity soon after. 

Ostensibly, this retreat is to gather some of the sharpest minds in tech and innovative thinking to come up with solutions for climate change. However, once guests start dying one by one, Darby starts thinking there might be more sinister reasons for the retreat--especially once a snowstorm blows in, trapping everyone Andy's luxury (and high tech) hotel. Can Darby figure out who is behind these deaths before she becomes the next victim?

A Murder at the End of the World (created by Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij) is intriguing but muddled. I was much more into the true crime aspects than the tech aspects. It's still very entertaining and I'd recommend it to anyone who enjoys "locked room mysteries", but I don't think it will be a show I ever return to or think much about in the future.

Grade: B

***

Birth/Rebirth (2023)

Not to be confused with Birth, the movie I reviewed above, Birth/Rebirth is a horror film inspired by Frankenstein. Marin Ireland plays Dr. Rose Casper, a morgue pathologist who experiments with bringing dead animals back to life in her spare time. She discovers that a serum derived from fetal pigs allows her to revive a dead pig and keep it alive as long as she infuses it with fresh serum. Now, if serum from a pig fetus can revive a dead pig, what could revive a dead human...? Hmmm...

Meanwhile, single mom and maternity nurse Celie Morales (Judy Reyes) loses her six year old daughter, Lila (A.J. Lister), to bacterial meningitis. When Lila's body disappears from the hospital, Celie suspects Rose and ends up breaking into Rose's apartment to find Lila--alive, but barely. Given the chance to bring her daughter literally back from the dead, Celie teams up with Rose to find a way to keep Lila alive.

Birth/Rebirth is a gross and ballsy horror film that fully embraces some taboos concerning pregnancy and children. Very little is sacred in this film and it goes places that will make you wildly uncomfortable. Recommended for those with strong stomachs.

Grade: B+

***

The Bear, season 2 (2023)

While I feel like The Bear doesn't have what it takes to be one of my *favorite* TV shows of all time (or even of 2023), it's undeniably excellent. Season 2 is even better than season 1 because it dives into the backstories of some of its characters and also shows immense character growth (particularly of Richie, played by Ebon Moss-Bachrach). 

The standout episode, "Fishes", takes place 5 years in the past and shows what Christmas dinner was like at the Berzatto household. In a word: dysfunctional. Matriarch Donna Berzatto (an excellent Jamie Lee Curtis) is an alcoholic narcissist who effectively ruins Christmas even as she creates a beautiful meal--a feast of seven fishes, which is an Italian tradition. However, she couldn't ruin Christmas without the help of the codependent and sometimes cruel people around her. We understand why Carmy (Jeremy Allen White, he of the sad, blue puppy dog eyes) got the fuck out of Chicago and was reluctant to return in the first place.

So, "Fishes" is the best episode, but "Forks", in which Richie stages at an upscale restaurant to learn more about the business, is almost equally good. Richie is a supremely annoying character and getting to see him be vulnerable really helps the viewer empathize with him. 

Overall, The Bear lives up to the hype, if you can stand its stressful and fast pace. I look forward to season 3. 

Grade: A-


You're killing me with those bedroom eyes, Chef.