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#thegrizzlies
extremeplatesllc · 1 year
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We are excited to introduce our newest product, the Grizzly Rock Screen! This beauty is available now for rent and for purchase! Prior to delivery, we adjust the spreader bars to accommodate the preferred size rock that you want to end up with (between 2" and 8" rock). Our Grizzly's dimensions are: 12' wide x 9.5' high x 7' deep. Please contact us for more information. www.extremeplates.com #extremeplatesllc #thegrizzly #constructionequipment #newbuilds #constructionsites https://www.instagram.com/p/CqbR9EnvhTF/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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kizzyedgelll · 4 months
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Hi, everyone! After a long time of not posting anything to my shoutout series, I'm back! You can see previous posts here, but basically, I used to make one of these every week to give a shoutout to creators on this site.
Since it's been a while, I've decided to gather all of my favorite posts through all of those weeks (that's why some creators may appear more than once :p) and make a Christmas edition!
Merry Christmas to those who celebrate and, if you don't, you're also more than welcome to enjoy all of the beautiful creations under the cut. 💝🎄❤️
Alex Claremont-Diaz from Red, White and Royal Blue gifset by @leclercpiastri
Nick and Charlie from Heartstopper gifset by @strandtk
Parasite gifset by @wongkarawai (blood tw)
Elmo gifset by @margarethcarter
Red, White and Royal Blue gifset by @ninzied
Various Marvel films gifset by @commander-codys
Stranger Things gifset by @meliorn
Nick and Charlie from Heartstopper gifset by @narliee
Max Mayfield from Stranger Things gifset by @candicepatton
Jennifer's Body gifset by @phoebesbridgers (blood tw)
Erik Killmonger from Black Panther gifset by @alicentt
Tara and Darcy from Heartstopper gifset by @heroeddiemunson
Jennifer's Body gifset by @meliorn (blood tw)
Max Mayfield from Stranger Things gifset by @thegrizzlies
Nick and Charlie from Heartstopper gifset by @swearphil
Various films gifset by @possession
Carrie (1976) gifset by @saw-x (blood, fire tw)
Stranger Things gifset by @heroeddiemunson
The Shining gifset by @saw-x (blood tw)
V for Vendetta gifset by @meliorn
The Innocents gifset by @buckhelped
Vecna/Henry Creel/001 from Stranger Things gifset by @uservalerian (flashing, blood tw)
Emily Blunt in various films by @emilybluntt
Various horror films gifset by @vampirecorleone (blood, flashing, gore tw)
The Love Witch gifset by @maxinesminx
Matthew Lillard in Scream x Five Nights at Freddie's gifset by @williamsafton
V for Vendetta gifset by @darckxlady
Heartstopper gifset by @heroeddiemunson
Erica Sinclair from Stranger Things gifset by @stargyles
Bridgerton gifset by @snikkts
I Know What You Did Last Summer gifset by @daenerys-tarrgaryen (blood tw)
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filmdiagnostic · 3 years
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The Grizzlies★★★★
Unexpectedly raw in its form, a dark and touching story about survival. The Grizzlies is an inspiring story that conveys an important message. In a small town in the arctic called Kugluktuk, Nunavut bears a vast number of teenage suicide- the highest in North America. Due to early exposure to alcohol and drugs, kids grow up thinking there is no future. Based on a true story, this film is captivating and can be heavy to take in. However, it is a reality, and when it’s genuinely authentic, it is not pretty most of the time. Now, over two years have passed, The Grizzlies are still roaring for the continuity of a better future filled with freedom from addiction and violence. A film to watch and cherish for when we see triumph over struggle, humanity prevails.
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adamwatchesmovies · 5 years
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The Grizzlies (2018)
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The Grizzlies is a sports drama that’s a cut above the rest. It tells its inspirational story with a surprising sensibility - which I guess is another factor which makes it uniquely Canadian. Some of this material would be emotional no matter how you presented it but the execution makes it something special.
The northern community of Kugluktuk, Nunavut, boasts the highest rate of suicide in North America. Many of the students skip class to help provide for their impoverished families. For them, there’s little to after their chores except for alcohol and drugs. High school teacher Russ Shepherd (Ben Schnetzer) is sent to the wintry village to teach where he comes to believe that giving the students something to be proud of, their own lacrosse team, will help.
No, this is not one of those “white savior” movies where the outsider comes to a community of aboriginal peoples and finds a way to wrench them from their worst demons. It may seem that way initially, but trust me. Firstly, this is a feel-good, crowd-pleaser but not always. The Grizzlies does not shy away from showing just how serious the situation in Kugluktuk is. Suicide is prominently discussed, as is substance abuse, the lingering damage of residential schools, violence at home, and poverty. A single game could never solve all these, but they might bring a glimmer of hope to a select few, and it’s the community that ensured Russ' idea is more than vapor. 
There’s an uncommon sensitivity found in this film by Miranda de Pencier. To give you an idea (and this is something I’d never seen before), the end credits, where they show how Adam (Ricky Marty-Pahtaykan), Kyle (Booboo Stewart), Spring (Anna Lambe), and Miranda (Emerald MacDonald) did after these events make sure to tell you which characters are composites, how their portrayal differs from the real-life people, etc. Russ is the main character but the students are given their own, meaty parts to play, with Paul Nutarariaq standing out as particularly good. I’ll also single out Tantoo Cardinal as the school’s principal, the closest thing the film has to an antagonist. Unlike Russ, she isn't naive and knows the price of failed promises.
The biggest surprise in The Grizzlies is the outcome of the “big game” because there isn’t really one. The victory comes when Russ doesn't attend a lacrosse practice by itself, when the community gets excited about this extra-curricular activity, when a student who has stopped going to school for years comes in so he can earn the right to go to practices. It builds to a conclusion unlike the kind you're used to in these kind of inspirational sports films. The frankness makes it feel even more uplifting despite the numerous tragedies we've faced along the way. (Theatrical version on the big screen, April 21, 2019)
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itsredwritinghood · 2 years
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Too full from birthday goodies to do anything tonight, so gonna relax and watch #thegrizzlies on @netflix and figure out how to use one of my b-day gifts a #scrib3dpen cause everyone is now getting 3D printed gifts for Christmas 😂 #kiddingnotkidding #movienight #toofulltomove #movies #moviesbasedontruestories #3dpen https://www.instagram.com/p/CWj8jVnl5G-/?utm_medium=tumblr
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alyssaep · 4 years
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The Grizzlies
The movie, The Grizzlies, is a movie that I will never forget watching. It follows Russ Sheppard, a recently graduated White teacher from the city who takes what he thinks will be a resume-building task in Kugluktuk, a distant Canadian Indigenous people group. His students are dealing with genuine difficulties, including poverty, hunger, aggressive behavior at home, substance abuse, and homelessness. The Nunavut region is also facing an epidemic of teen suicide. Numerous characters, including teenagers, as often as possible, consume alcohol and smoke both cigarettes and pot. Sheppard falls into "White savior" territory,  he wants to "fix" his Inuit students and their community, however his lack of understanding of their way of life prompts desperate results. Eventually, the story sends the message that there's no such thing as a one-size-fits-all solution and clarifies the harm individuals can do when they attempt to push their lifestyle onto a new culture. It also celebrates teamwork and sports as a way to increase hope and self-esteem. This movie is hands-down a 10/10 and I highly recommend you give it a watch.
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weekendwarriorblog · 4 years
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The Weekend Warrior September 18, 2020 – MR. SOUL!, THE GRIZZLIES, MY NAME IS PEDRO, ANTEBELLUM, THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME, THE NEST, ALONE and More!
Usually, I’d be using this weekend in September to wrap-up my usual week in Toronto for the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), though I haven’t gone the past two years and this year, I couldn’t get credentials because… well, who knows? You would think a virtual festival would allow more press, especially since there wouldn’t be the cost for attending, but the demand was greater than the capabilities of TIFF’s video streaming service, I guess. Either way, there are just way too many movies to talk about this week, so let’s get to it.
After sharing some stuff about TIFF… how’s that for a big-time fake-out?
Despite not getting credentials, I did get to watch a few of the movies, including the opening night film, Spike Lee’s movie based on David Byrne’s American Utopia; Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland, reviewed here; Werner Herzog and Clive Oppenheimer’s new doc Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds; and I Care a Lot the new film from The Disappearance of Alice Creed director J. Blakeson, starring Rosamund Pike, Peter Dinklage, Eiza Gonzalez and more.
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Starting with American Utopia, I wasn’t sure if this Broadway musical would be for me, despite being a life-long Heads fan. It seemed like it could be the definition of a jukebox musical with Byrne just playing his greatest hits and maybe talking in between. That’s exactly what it is, in fact, but it turns out that Byrne is quite a storyteller on stage as he is in music and books. The way that some of the Heads’ oldest tunes have been repurposed for the stage leads to a lively show where everyone on stage is playing an instrument while also singing and dancing. No, there’s no actual narrative or story tying all of the songs together as might normally be the case but the music and stage show more than makes up for it, and Spike Lee (as always) does a grand job capturing it. This will be on HBO on October 18.
Herzog’s latest doc is an interesting one, and a weird one, and one that’s chock-full of eccentric nerds speaking on the topic of meteorites, as Herzog fills the role of narrator and allows Oppenheimer to take center stage in front of the camera, as the duo travels around the world talking to experts on meteors and meteorites, accompanied by gorgeous cinematography and a beautiful score. I’m not sure this may be as immediate as some of Herzog’s Antarctica docs, but it’s another bonafide experience you’ll be able to see on Apple TV+ from November 13.
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And that brings me to Blakeson’s I CARE A LOT, a dark crime comedy with an impressive ensemble cast but most of the focus put on Rosamund Pike’s Marla Grayson, a professional guardian and caregiver who has made a fortune preying on the elderly and putting them into retirement homes before cleaning them out of money. Her partner in crime, Fran, is played by Eiza Gonzalez, and things are looking good for them as they are given a “cherry,” in Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest), an old woman with no known connections who just happens to have a fortune in diamonds in a safe deposit boss in the bank. Oh, those also might belong to her estranged son, a crime-boss played by Peter Dinklage, who is outraged by what’s been done to his mother and swears revenge. Listen, these kinds of dark comedies aren’t always for everyone, because it’s really hard to root for Pike’s character, who is about as close to a “hero” as this movie comes. Either way, Blakeson has found a way to milk a rather untapped source in terms of a unique environment for this crime-comedy that ends up working far better than last year’s The Laundromat by Steven Soderbergh, maybe because it’s more about creating interesting characters rather than trying to give audiences a learning moment. (Also, Chris Messina is fantastic in this movie as Dinklage’s lawyer who first confronts Marla, and I’m really starting to see him in a better light as an actor. No idea what’s planned for this one, although it’s distributed by Elevation Pictures in Canada, and they seem to be making a foray into U.S. distribution. (See below)
Also, the New York Film Festival starts this week both virtually and in local drive-ins with opening night being one of three new Steve McQueen films that act as part of his “Small Axe” anthology with Lovers Rock being available to rent for just $25 via the Virtual Cinema starting Thursday. I still haven’t watched anything, as of this writing, but I hope to rectify that soon, so look for some reviews soon.
Before I get to this week’s movies, I do want to say that every once in a while (or maybe twice), I miss a movie or two. Very seldom do I have a chance to write about said movie while it’s still available to watch in theaters (or in this case, digitally), but not this time!
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MR. SOUL! is a doc by Melissa Haizlip (co-directed by veteran Spike Lee editor and doc director Sam Pollard, who directed the excellent Two Trains Runnin’) about her uncle Ellis Haizlip, who produced and hosted the semi-long-running PBS show “Soul!” from 1968 to 1973. It was a touchstone for black communities throughout the country for those years, helping to break so many musical artists and poets and other personalities. I found the movie to be quite amazing, mainly since I had never heard of it. I didn’t move to the tri-state region until well after it was off the air, and honestly, I had never even heard of the show or of Ellis Haizlip, so watching his story being told in such a compelling way with so much archival footage, I was pretty blown away. I feel like what Ms. Haizlip and Mr. Pollard did with this movie is as groundbreaking and as important as the James Baldwin doc, I Am Not Your Negro, from a few years back in terms of helping modern-day people, both black and white, understand the black experience of he ‘60s and ‘70s. Mr. Soul! Is now available through Virtual Cinema across the country, and I hope those who enjoy learning new things will give it a look.
Let’s get to all of the new releases… because there’s a TON!
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First, I’m gonna start with this week’s “Featured Flick” and yes, that might be considered Mr. Soul!, but the reason I write this column is to call attention to movies you might not have seen otherwise. That’s why I want to draw equal attention to a movie called THE GRIZZLIES (Elevation Pictures), which played at Toronto two years ago and is just now finally being released.
The directorial feature debut by producer Miranda de Pencier, The Grizzlies stars Ben Schnetzer as Russ Shepard, a recent graduate of McGill, who is sent to Kugluktuk at the very Northern ridge of Canada to teach a bunch of Inuit kids, as part of a program to pay back his college tuition. There, he learns that few teens even bother to show up for school, either kept away by their families’ traditions or just their desire to drink and do drugs. This kind of lifestyle inevitably ends to many suicides. Shepard has a hard time getting through to the kids until he realizes that maybe they just need a hobby, so he puts together a group of boys (and one girl) to play lacrosse.
My first year at the Oxford Film Festival (where I saw Sam Pollard’s Two Trains Runnin’), I also saw another excellent doc called Children of the Arctic about the teens from Barrow, Alaska, which is on a similar Northernmost part of the continent where this based-on-a-true-story takes place. Because I’d seen that doc, I was already interested in the setting for what might have otherwise been a typical teacher helps troubled students, not too unlike last week’s John Leguizamo film, Critical Thinking. What differentiates this from many previous movies like this (besides having lacrosse as its white savior sport, rather than chess) is that the setting is so unique, and it allows director Miranda De Pencier to work with a lot of really talented young indigenous actors, many who probably have never acted before. One exception is Boo Boo Stewart as Kyle, one of the kids dealing with domestic abuse from his drunken father.
I also liked Ben Schnetzer, who I wasn’t even remotely familiar with before seeing this, maybe because he had been doing mainly supporting roles; he proves himself to be perfectly capable of being the type of everyman lead we’ve seen other actors to portray. (Ben Affleck in The Way Back from earlier this year comes to mind.) More importantly, Schnetzer is just great with the talented younger cast. Sure, there are a lot of the normal cliches that come with this type of movie including the rousing coach speech to get the team motivated, but there’s no denying that this is one of the better iterations of a what has been a sadly overused movie genre.
I was kind of surprised to learn that this premiered at the Toronto Film Festival two years ago, and it’s just been sitting dormant waiting for someone to pick it up and release it. Actually, I found it quite shocking, because this is an absolutely wonderful and inspirational story that offers some hope in a world that’s gotten so dreary and depressing over the past few months. If you want to see a movie that can get you out of the doldrums, this is definitely one I’d recommend highly. If you can imagine a cross between The Bad News Bears (or even Slapshot) with Whale Rider, then that���s what The Grizzlies delivers.
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Another wonderful and equally inspirational film to seek out is Lillian LaSalle’s doc MY NAME IS PEDRO (Sweet 180), which looks at the life and career of South Bronx resident Pedro Santana. The young Latino came from his own troubles going to school in the Bronx to becoming a beloved educator trying to help others using his unique personality and skill set. There’s no denyhing that Santana’s enthusiasm is quite infectious, so he’s quite beloved by everyone he encounters. Unfortunately, he runs into problems, including being systematically booted from his position at the Ramapo school district due to his lack of credentials. He then spends some time teaching in Haiti and gets a job in Dubai but then gets diagnosed with Stage 4 Kidney Cancer. I won’t say more because it’s a movie that, while not particularly ground-breaking in terms of technical aspects, it is indeed quite an inspirational and heartwarming film in the way it tells Pedro’s amazing story. My Name is Pedro will open at the Maysles Center’s Virtual Cinema in New York on Thursday, and then the Laemmle in L.A. on October 2, and then more cities on October 9.
There aren’t a ton of other prominent docs this week, although one of the more high-profile ones is Dawn Hudson’s doc THE WAY I SEE IT (Focus Features), which unfortunately, I received too late to watch and review. (Partially my own fault, to be honest.) It takes a look at two Presidents, Barack Obama and Ronald Reagan as seen through the eyes and lens of renowned photojournalist Pete Souza, who was the official White House photographer and had an unprecedent access to the country’s leaders. The movie will open in select theaters but then will be on MSNBC on Oct. 10 at 10pm Eastern.
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Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz’s thriller ANTEBELLUM (Lionsgate) is a movie that’s being released this weekend via VOD after being delayed since April. Honestly, I’m not sure what I can say about it, because it relies so much on its rather ludicrous twist that anyone who watches the trailer can probably figure it out in 15 minutes or less. But I’ll play along. Janelle Monáe plays best-selling author Veronica Henley, who has been having dreams about being back in the Confederate South, working and being abused as a slave by racist soldiers.
We probably should get out of the way that Bush & Renz’s movie actually opens in the Antebellum South on a plantation where we watch a number of slaves being tortured and killed, including Monáe’s Eden and a fellow slave played by the always wonderful Kiersey Clemons from Dope. Jack Huston plays the particularly loathsome Confederate captain who is so awful to them.  About 40 minutes into the movie, we meet Monáe’s Veronica Henley as she wakes from a dream of going through that ordeal we just watched. Got it? So it was all a dream, right? And I bet you really believe that. Again, I promised not to give away the “big twist” but after watching Veronica and her friends (including Gabourey Sidibe from Precious) attending a book conference and Veronica dealing with all sorts of weird people (including Jena Malone in a deliciously evil role) and other strange things, the movie quickly gets tiring. It just takes so long to get to how and why Monáe and the others are on the plantation, and there had to be a better way of making that happen in a more interesting way.
At least the film’s last act turns into a bonafide revenge-filled action thriller, and by then, you’ll be ready to see anything that gets your pulse above a 5. The last 20 minutes are so good you wonder why the filmmakers didn’t seem to care that they were likely to lose people from walking out of theaters – or I guess their homes -- long before the movie gets anywhere worthwhile.
I didn’t watch the trailer for Antebellum until after seeing the movie, but it’s a particularly deceptive piece of work because it says it’s from the “Producer of Get Out and Us,” so you assume (as I did) that this is a movie produced by Jordan Peele or Jason Blum, but neither is involved with it. The trailer also inserts a number of scenes that do not appear in the movie to try to make it seem eerier, and frankly, this being sold as a “horror movie” is probably its biggest infraction. Instead, Antebellum is a weak “Twilight Zone” episode that’s handled so poorly you’re not sure whether to be offended by figuring out the twist almost immediately or offended that these two filmmakers thought they might have you fooled for longer than that. Again, Antebellum is skipping a theatrical release entirely and being released straight to VOD, which is probably for the better.
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Antonio Campos, director of Simon Killer and Christine, returns with his adaptation of Donald Ray Pollock’s THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME, which will be streaming on Netflix actually right now! Set in 1957, it stars Tom Holland as Arvin Russell, the son of a religious father (played by Bill Skarsgård) who has come home after seeing all sorts of horrors in World War II. The expansive story follows both father and son but also the residents of a small town called Knockemstiff in Southern Ohio and how they’re all connected through a series of incidents.
Narrated by Pollock himself, Campos has created a brilliant Southern Gothic thriller that’s far more of an ensemble piece than some may expect because the biggest name stars, Tom Holland and Robert Pattinson, don’t appear in the movie for a good 40 minutes! Instead, we follow the story from Arvin’s father Willard and the incidents that lead to Arvin becoming an orphan, living with his half-sister Lenora (Eliza Scanlen). Years later, Arvin finds himself having to protect Lenora from the lecherous young preacher, Preston Teagarden (played by Pattinson), who is preying on the town’s young women. The movie also stars Jason Clarke and Riley Keough, as a couple who pick up hitchhikers for evil intentions, and Sebastian Stan as the latter’s sheriff brother who gets dragged into all the evil-doings in town. It also has Mia Wasikowska and Haley Bennett in smaller roles as two of the beleaguered women caught up in the story.
I went into The Devil All the Time knowing full well that I’m rarely a fan of most Southern-based dramas with a few exceptions, like Dee Rees’ Mudbound. There have been just as many that just didn’t connect with me like Hounddog. Either way, this is a similarly complex tale for Campos to tell because there are so many characters, and it spends quite a bit of time in the past before we finally meet Holland and Pattinson’s characters. This will most definitely annoy some people, but I was intrigued enough by how everyone was being slowly introduced that it didn’t bother me so much.
I’ve always been quite aware how talented a filmmaker Campos is but like with Rebecca and Michael C. Hall in Christine, he also benefits from having one of the strongest ensemble casts put together, as well as great craftspeople -- like cinematographer Lol Crawley -- helping to realize his vision.
It takes its sweet time getting to the point where things start to get interesting, which for many will probably be when Pattinson shows up as Preston Teargarden. At first, I didn’t like Pattinson’s character or performance much, but it certainly grew on me and it’s not the only solid performance of note. Campos has created a movie that gains so much from a second viewing once you know the true nature of the characters. Make no mistake that Campos has kept all the complexities of Pollock’s book for a movie that kept my attention in ways that few other movies have this year with a number of scenes that really shook me up. Besides streaming on Netflix today, The Devil All the Time will actually be opening theatrically in a few cities so check your listings! I interviewed Campos over at Below the Line, and you can read my interview with Cinematographer Lol Crowley over there later today.
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As excited as I was to watch a new film from Campos, even MORE exciting, in some ways, is that we’re getting a new movie from his (former?) Borderline Productions partner Sean Durkin, whose Martha Marcy May Marlene was one of the breakouts from Sundance the year it premiered all the way back in 2011. Durkin has returned with THE NEST (IFC Films), a movie starring Jude Law and Carrie Coon as Rory O’Hara and his wife Allison, a married couple with two kids who move back to England for his job, taking up residence in an opulent mansion before things start to fall apart.
I went into The Nest (i.e. I hit play on the screener on my computer) thinking that it was going to be one of those old school British thrillers from the ‘60s and ‘70s, especially once it gets to the giant eerie mansion that reminds you of something from The Omen (one of my favorite horror movies, incidentally). In fact, the movie is more of an intense family drama where we watch Law, Coon and their kids pushed to the edge by circumstances, which one might assume is something being caused by some toxic aspect of their new house, but actually, nope, it’s just everyday life stuff.
For Law’s Rory, it’s a huge deal that falls through as he tries to bullshit his way through it, yet he keeps turning to his wife for money. She has her own problems to deal with including her rebellious stepdaughter Samantha (Oona Roche) and younger son Benjamin (Charlie Shotwell), neither of whom are adjusting well to the move. Her hobby is riding horses, and just bad things keep happening to all of them that all collides on one fateful night that includes Samantha having a crazy house party.
Although The Nest wasn’t nearly as much of a genre movie as I hoped it might be, one thing that really jumps out and makes it worthwhile is Carrie Coon’s performance. There’s no denying she’s just one great role or movie away from being in the Oscar game. Sadly, this one is is not it.
Like the film by Durkin’s producing partner, The Nest takes its own sweet time getting anywhere as Durkin goes for a slow roll approach, but that also allows him to embellish the images with a great score that includes quite a bit of ‘80s music. (I wasn’t sure if the movie actually was taking place in the ‘80s or not.) Although the influence of Stanley Kubrick seems fairly present in Durkin’s The Nest, it’s really more Eyes Wide Shut Kubrick than The Shining, and that might dismay those who are seeking the film’s horror potential. But if you like Eyes Wide Shut and go in expecting that, you won’t be as disappointed.
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Another really solid thriller worth seeking out is director John Hyams’ ALONE (Magnet Releasing), which actually played as part of the Fantasia Film Festival a few weeks back. It’s true that there have been way too many movies with that title, but this is a fairly compelling thriller that starts as something that might seem fairly obvious and then goes into so many amazing and unexpected directions. The movie stars Jules Willcox as Jessica, a widow who is moving to a new place when she encounters a creepy guy on the road (played by Marc Menchaca), who seems to be following her. Pretty soon, it’s obvious that he is following her and has bad intentions for her by trapping her in his basement.
Honestly, I wasn’t sure what to expect from Alone, because it starts out so much like The Hitcher or even the recent Unhinged with a woman being plagued by a creepy guy, and it’s hard to watch at times because it gets pretty violent.  I was definitely uncomfortable watching this, since it felt like there was a voyeuristic aspect akin to torture porn that made me not to watch any more of this poor woman's torture and abuse. Fortunately, she does escape only to have to survive while trapped in the woods surrounding the cabin.
I wasn’t familiar with Jules Willcox before seeing this movie, but her performance and all the places it takes her in terms of fear and desperation is fairly impressive, as is Marc Menchaca, who does a great job playing one of those psychopaths who somehow can behave normal whenever it calls for it. (Think more Ted Bundy than Jeffrey Dahmer.) You combine these two amazing performers with a cat-and-mouse situation that combines their acting with some brilliant sound design work and cinematography, and you have a movie that goes far beyond what I expected from the premise.
Even so, Alone successfully explores the real fear women must face every day when they’re alone and feeling defenseless, and it shows Hyams to be an incredibly skilled filmmaker when dealing with a lot of elements. The last act where all of these skills come together, including some amazing stuntwork, is what takes what’s a thriller with an overly used premise and makes it something that’s far more unique and memorable. It will be available to watch in some theaters as well as On Demand.
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Speaking of movies with unfortunate title choices, I’m guessing that director Kurtis David Harder was well into making his movie SPIRAL, on Shudder beginning Thursday, when it was announced that the next “Jigsaw” movie from Lionsgate would be called that. Fortunately, this Spiral has nothing to do with that one, the only thing in common is that they’re both horror. (This Spiral actually played at least year’s Brooklyn Horror Film Festival and a few others, in case you weren’t convinced.) In fact, this one is probably more in the vein of Get Out or even Hereditary, as it follows a same-sex couple, Malik and Aaron (Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman, Ari Cohen), who move to the suburbs with Aaron’s teen daughter Kayla (Jennifer Laporte) and begin to experience weird occurrences and behavior from their new neighbors. Of course, Malik thinks it’s homophobia, something he’s experienced in his past when he was put through a horrific experience during his early years exploring his sexuality.
I was pretty impressed with what Harder did with this premise, but just as much due to the performance by Bowyer-Chapman than I was of the director’s ability to build the tension as we learn more and more about the couple’s new suburban neighbors. Spiral is just a really well-done thriller in every regard, because it keeps things rather enigmatic, so you’re never quite sure if Malik’s paranoia is justified or not. Combine that solid premise with a terrific score – definitely one of the themes of this week’s movies – and Spiral is another fantastic offering from the horror streaming network that keeps blowing me away with the movies they pick up that you really can’t see anywhere else.
As luck would have it Harder also produced and co-directed (with Noah Kentis, directing under the pseudonym “Lankyboy”) Summerland, a coming-of-age comedy which I didn’t have a chance to see. (Actually, I did, but from the trailer, it didn’t seem like I’d like it, plus I’ve seen WAY too many coming-of-age movies the last few weeks and I’m getting burnt.) Anyway, this queer coming-of-age indie stars Maddie Phillips (Teenage Bounty Hunters), and it’s a road trip comedy that involves social media (if you remember my review of Spree and read one of my reviews below, that’s another warning sight for me), and it’s available on Demand on iTunes, Vudu, GooglePlay and Amazon right now!
And here’s the trailer!
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Noomi Rapace and Joel Kinnaman star in Yuval Adler’s THE SECRETS WE KEEP (Bleecker Street), a thriller set in the late ‘50s with Rapace playing Maya, a Romanian woman living in the suburbs with her doctor husband Lewis (Chris Messina), who thinks that their new neighbor (Joel Kinnaman) may be the Nazi soldier that assaulted and killed her sister during the war, so of course, she kidnaps him.
There’s something very familiar about this dramatic thriller, partially because it takes a similar approach as Bryan Singer’s Apt Pupil, but I feel there were other movies like this that I’m forgetting. The title basically comes from the fact that Maya has kept her past a secret from her husband, who gets involved in the grilling of Kinnaman’s character, who has kept his own past a secret from his wife, played by Amy Seimetz. Even while Kinnaman is tied up in her basement, Maya tries to befriend his wife to see if she can get some information that will prove that her captor is who she thinks.
I’m a pretty big Noomi Rapace fan, and I’m always excited to see her in movies because she tends to be give very dramatic performances, and that’s certainly the case although sometimes, the emotions go a bit overboard. The good thing is that here’s another movie where Chris Messina has really surprised me, just like he did all the way at the top of this column in J. Blakeson’s I Care A Lot. I always found him to be a rather bland and very vanilla actor, but he seems to be doing something to change that, and I fully approve.
There were certainly aspects and moments of The Secrets We Keep I liked because Adler is not a bad director, but there are also aspects that made me feel this would have worked fine or even better as a stage play. As a movie, it’s just kind of drab and predictable as the characters spend almost the entire film yelling and hitting each other. When you compare this to some of the movies above, there just isn’t enough mystery about where it might go, so more like Antebellum than Spiral or Alone despite being a more grounded and less genre-based thriller. Ultimately, it just fails, but it will be in theaters and on VOD starting today.
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I knew I was in trouble with Will Wernick’s NO ESCAPE (Vertical)  -- not to be confused with the Owen Wilson-Pierce Brosnan thriller – when I realized that the film’s main character Cole (Keegan Allen) was another one of those social media wannabe stars like the kid in Spree. Surprise, surprise, he is JUST as annoying. The concept for this one is that Cole does all sorts of crazy stunts on his feed to prove he’s not scared of anything, but then he and a group of friends (including his girlfriend Erin, played by Holland Roden) are invited to Russia to take part in the “scariest escape room ever” by a guy named Alexei (Ronan Rubinstein). Bad stuff happens.
There are a few rare times when I watch a movie and wonder how on earth a filmmaker was able to put together what seems like a pretty hefty budget for a movie as bad as this one turned out to be, and stuff like that just leaves me shaking my head. The premise itself isn’t so bad, even if it isn’t particularly original. (Imagine my surprise when I looked at Wernick’s IMDB page and his previous movie from 2017 was called “Escape Room” and not the Sony one either. It makes it pretty clear that this guy is the definition of a one-trick pony. Oddly, he ALSO has a movie called Alone.)
The problem is that Keegan Allen and most of his friends – including his best friend Thomas, played by Denzel Whitaker, who seems to have been doing so well in his career up until this movie – are so effin’ annoying, you never care one bit what happens to them, whether they get beat up in fight with Russian mobsters or end up in a series of death traps, many that are swiped directly from the Saw movies. In fact, that’s basically what this movie turns into once the friends are locked into a Russian prison and Cole has to try to save them. It basically becomes a cross between Saw and Hostel, but with Cole so flippant with his jokes and asides to his watchers, it completely takes away from any tension or scares. By the time the movie starts to get serious, it’s just far too late, because just when you don’t think the movie can possibly get stupider, it gets stupider.  (And seriously, if I have to watch ONE MORE MOVIE that has people commenting or clicking on hearts in a way that’s so unbelievable and unrealistic, I’m gonna be even MEANER to that movie.)
The title of this movie may be No Escape, but there is a perfectly reasonable way to escape this time-waster, and that’s just not to watch it. It’s just another exploitative and predictable movie that lacks anything even remotely approaching originality.
There are a few other movies out this week that I either didn’t get to watch or I watched and just didn’t have enough to say to write a review. Listen, you have nearly 13 reviews above, so is that not enough for you?
Susan Sarandon leads an amazing ensemble cast that includes Kate Winslet, Sam Neill, Mia Wasikowska and more in Roger Michell’s BLACKBIRD (Screen Media), which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival last year and is finally being released. After a Fathom Events release over the last couple days, it will be released in more theaters this Friday. Sarandon plays Lily, a woman who has been battling ALS who has decided to end her life on her own terms, so she and her husband (Neill) summon their daughters (Winslet, Wasikowska) and extended family for one last goodbye to celebrate Lily’s life before she’s gone.
Kieron J. Walsh’s THE RACER (Gravitas Ventures) was supposed to premiere at the SXSW Film Festival earlier this year, but that didn’t happen. It’s set during the summer of 1998 during the early stages of the Tour De France where Belgian rider Dominique Chabol, played by Louis Talpe, has been one of the team’s better support riders on the tour for the past 20 years, his job being merely to set a pace and never to win. When Dom is dropped from the team (for doping), he has to see if he can accept a civilian life after meeting a pretty Irish doctor, played by Tara Lee.
Next up is Steve Collins’ absurdist comedy, I’VE GOT ISSUES (Gravitas Ventures), which includes an amazing cast that includes Macon Blair, Claire Titelman, John Merriman and Byron Brown, with Jim Gaffigan narrating. I knew almost immediately while watching that this movie wasn’t going to be for me, and that’s all I’ll say.
A few of the movies I wasn’t able to get to include Last Call (available through the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema), The Last Laugh (High Octane), Film Movement’s God of the Piano and from Kenya, Sam Soko’s doc Softie about photojournalist Boniface “Softie” Mwangi, which won a Sundance Special Jury prize for its editing. There’s a thing called Google if you wanna know more about them.
My beloved and sadly shuttered local theater, the Metrograph, are continuing their digital live screening series with their Ulrike Ottinger retrospective that will debut her film Joan of Arc of Mongolia  (1989) tonight at 8pm. Friday, they’ll be screening Eric Rohmer’s The Aviator’s Wife (1981) and then continuing the “Nan Goldin Selects” series on Saturday and then Ottinger’s Exile Shanghai (1997)  son Sunday.
Film Forum’s Virtual Cinema will add Jan Oxenberg’s Thank You and Good Night (1991) today and then Jan Swankmaier’s Faust (1994) this Friday.
Next, we’ll look at some streaming stuff. The latest from Ava Duvernay’s Array deal with Netflix is Merawi Gerima’s Residue, which follows Obinna Nwachukwu as aspiring filmmaker Jay, who returns to his home in Washington, DC, to find his neighborhood being gentrified and finds himself being alienated by his old friends. It will debut on Netflix Thursday as well as be available in select virtual theaters. A number of series are starting up on Netflix his week, including Ryan Murphy’s Ratched, starring Sarah Paulson as the Nurse Mildred Ratched character from One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, this series being a prequel to that Oscar-winning film. Netflix is also launching the four-episode docuseries Challenger: The Final Flight, which features interviews with the engineers and crew’s family members from the 1986 shuttle disaster. Lastly, there’s Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous, an all-ages animated series based in the world of the beloved movie franchise.
Over on Hulu, I’m super-psyched for the second season of Pen 15, starring Maya Erskine and Anna Konlkle, which I discovered well after the hilarious first season debuted.
No idea what’s going on next week, but Gerard Butler’s Greenland certainly isn’t! I guess you’ll just have to come back and find out.
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It’s T-Day, which means it’s time for a feature on Inuit Cultural Heritage. . I have already talked about @grizzliesmovie a lot. I first watched it during the Inuit Studies conference in 2019, and it affected me so strongly that I’m still talking about it. If it’s available to you - watch it! . The film is produced by Unikkaat Studios, a company based in Iqaluit and founded by the great Alethea Arnaquq-Baril (@alethea_aggiuq ) I might have to do a whole other post on Alethea because she’s a powerhouse in her own right, but for now let’s focus on this film. . Initially I thought it was doing to be a happy, feel good, sports film. And in some ways, it is, but in other ways it most definitely is not. The central theme is around the discussion of youth suicide in Nunavut. It is based on the true story of a group of students from Kugluktuk - a town which had the highest suicide rate in North America - who are introduced to the game of lacrosse. What I really loved about the film is how true it was to life in the Arctic, something I was able to see thanks to my own recent trip to Nunavut just before watching it. I don’t think I’ve ever been so emotionally exhausted after a film, but it is still one of the best films I’ve ever seen. . #nunavut #film #inuk #Inuit #inuitculturalheritage #culturalheritage #heritage #culture #arctic #movie #movies #thegrizzlies #lacrosse #art #sport https://www.instagram.com/p/CCnRP_hHqax/?igshid=mo3lzzo6ye87
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tomorrowedblog · 4 years
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First look at The Grizzlies
A new trailer has been released for The Grizzlies. No release date was specified.
Based on a true story, Inuit youth in a small community gain a powerful sense of pride through the sport of lacrosse, in this true-story account of tenacity, renewal, and inspiring resilience.
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boysbygirls · 3 years
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For 'Let Him Go' and 'Twilight' actor Booboo Stewart, every character is a journey to uncover. We dive into his creative process, finding joy in life's details. Photography by Elizabeth Weinberg. Fashion by Fernando Pichardo. Interview by Hedvig Werner.
Meet Booboo.
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Booboo wears Corduroy Shirt by Kenzo, Shirt by Mr.P at Mr. Porter and Hat by Gladys Tamez Millinery.
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dryasadingo · 2 years
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Day 19 #americanbrownipa not familiar with the style the colour threw my at first but the ipa flavours are there #thegrizzly @slipstreambrewing @beercartel #beercartelxmas #thebeermatesnetwork (at Googong) https://www.instagram.com/p/CXp9U39JJuq/?utm_medium=tumblr
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toratannerchung · 4 years
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With shuttle service suspended due to COVID, our first day in Yosemite was kicked off by a long dusty hike down to the Mariposa Grove🌲 to visit with the Fallen Giant, the Bachelor & Three Graces, the mighty Grizzly, and the elusive Jason Tree🤪. #yosemite #yosemitenationalpark #mariposagrove #mariposagroveofgiantsequoias #fallengiant #bachelorandthreegraces #thegrizzly #yosemitehike (at Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias) https://www.instagram.com/p/CDulf1JBGFZ/?igshid=1is754z1snxh8
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skylesbian · 2 years
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i was tagged by @fearlessslive thank you 🙏🏽💜
put your on repeat playlist on shuffle and add the first 10 songs here
1. gay street fighter by keiynan lonsdale
2. home by one direction louis tomlinson
3. we made it by louis tomlinson
4. two of us by louis tomlinson
5. no by little mix
6. estufa a gas by papina de palma
7. little me by little mix
8. folki by papina de palma
9. clued up by little mix
10. back to you by louis tomlinson ft bebe rexha
i tag @politedemon @waynedrake @thegrizzlies @silverfoxlou & @crankydee
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thegrizzlies · 2 years
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staceyslater > thegrizzlies
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It’s T-Day, which means it’s time for a feature on Inuit Cultural Heritage. . I have already talked about @grizzliesmovie a lot. I first watched it during the Inuit Studies conference in 2019, and it affected me so strongly that I’m still talking about it. If it’s available to you - watch it! . The film is produced by Unikkaat Studios, a company based in Iqaluit and founded by the great Alethea Arnaquq-Baril (@alethea_aggiuq ) I might have to do a whole other post on Alethea because she’s a powerhouse in her own right, but for now let’s focus on this film. . Initially I thought it was doing to be a happy, feel good, sports film. And in some ways, it is, but in other ways it most definitely is not. The central theme is around the discussion of youth suicide in Nunavut. It is based on the true story of a group of students from Kugluktuk - a town which had the highest suicide rate in North America - who are introduced to the game of lacrosse. What I really loved about the film is how true it was to life in the Arctic, something I was able to see thanks to my own recent trip to Nunavut just before watching it. I don’t think I’ve ever been so emotionally exhausted after a film, but it is still one of the best films I’ve ever seen. . #nunavut #film #inuk #Inuit #inuitculturalheritage #culturalheritage #heritage #culture #arctic #movie #movies #thegrizzlies #lacrosse #art #sport https://www.instagram.com/p/CCdkklcn1ps/?igshid=18n388slfx6bt
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toptenbestblogs · 4 years
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Best grizzly table saw
Best grizzly table saw
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When it comes to deciding who makes thegrizzly table saw or who the grizzly table saw are, there are a selection of world-renowned companies that you can rely on
The good news is, we’ve tested tons of these increasingly popular true grizzly table saw, and found the best of the best. Right now, our top pick is the Powermatic PM-TJ Tenoning Jigwhich feature incredible active. But if…
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