Meewella | Critic

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Tag: Dakota Johnson

QuickView: Madame Web (2024)

“Let’s try that again.”

Cassandra Webb

Let’s not, and say we did. Madame Web is Sony’s second big budget disaster in its attempt to build out a Spider-man spin-off universe and, for a woman who can see the future and correct mistakes, Cassandra Webb perhaps ought to have arrived before superhero fatigue set in. That alone is no excuse given Sony’s animated success, but audiences have no patience for a muddled and uninspired comicbook origin story that is, ironically, so focused on the the future that it forgets to be interesting in the present. 15 minutes into the film, we see an intriguing glimpse of three super-powered women killing the villain in a recurring a dream that haunts him. That promise (heavily featured in the marketing) is never realised; instead, Madame Web has Cassandra babysitting three teenage girls who might be relevant in another movie. The film has a habit of killing off characters before we have any connection to them, neutering the impact, while Ezekiel’s dialogue is too overwrought to be threatening (“it’s a good thing you had no idea today was the day you were going to die”), worsened by distractingly bad ADR. The action cinematography was nauseating within the first ten minutes, relying on repeated shaky cam and rapid cuts. In fact the only element of subtlety is a coquettish refusal to speak Peter Parker’s name despite myriad heavy handed references (“Mr Ben Parker here did all the work”). It is rare for a Hollywood blockbuster to underwhelm in every aspect of its production but such is the case here — Madame Web ranges from bland to incompetent without the benefit of being enjoyably awful.

3/10

QuickView: Daddio (2023)

“I’m not claiming to be some Sherlock or something, just a guy who pays attention.”

Clark

A bottle movie set inside a New York cab on a single night time journey from the airport, writer-director Christy Hall’s terribly titled debut is an acting showcase for Dakota Johnson and Sean Penn as their characters discuss emotive aspects of their lives and relationships. Hall’s script is thoughtful if not deeply insightful, capturing the kind of late-night conversation that I love and the honesty that can emerge between total strangers. The driver is perceptive but not artificially erudite, often vulgar in expressing his cynical worldview. His customer is sweet and smart, yet seems wearier than the older man. Most impressive is the camera work within such tight confines, using the glass and lighting to place the viewer inside the cab — one shot frames Johnson’s face perfectly through the open partition, while keeping Penn in view. The characters are well matched, each able to make the other uncomfortable and frequently the camera captures these reactions rather than remaining on the speaker. It is these features of the film making, rather than the characters or their insights, that draw in the audience and makes me curious to see where Hall goes from here.

7/10

QuickView: The Lost Daughter (2021)

The Lost Daughter poster

“I am an unnatural mother.”

Leda

Olivia Colman delivers a powerfully understated performance in Maggie Gyllenhaal’s directorial debut, a moody character exploration of a woman’s troubled past, which rises to the surface during a beach holiday alone. Colman is initially charming as the academic Leda, lonely and awkward as she can be, but this gradually wears away over the film’s two hours as we glimpse something darker beneath. With its structure hinting at a mystery, Gyllenhaal’s script leaves some motivations deliberately (if frustratingly) vague, but it is through seeing Jessie Buckley play Leda as a young mother that we recognise more overtly impulsive and selfish characteristics that are veiled⁠ — yet still present ⁠— in Colman’s performance. Through the family Leda meets on the beach, The Lost Daughter casts its net wider in addressing the societal expectations placed on young mothers in contrast to the harsh reality of parenting and the inescapable resentment and regret at lost opportunity despite love for one’s children.

7/10

QuickView: The Peanut Butter Falcon (2019)

“I can’t be a hero because I am a Down’s syndrome.”

Zak

This delightful adventure-on-the-run is a modern spin on classic American fiction like Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, notable for starring an actor with Down’s syndrome rather than resorting to caricature. Zack Gottsagen’s performance feels natural, the actor being both self-effacing and determined in his portrayal of a sheltered youth desperate to experience the world for himself. The striking geography of North Carolina’s coastal plain provides a grand backdrop to this journey of self-discovery. Shia LaBeouf is the ideal wilderness companion, rough and yet innately sensitive to the fact that Zak requires freedom from his constrained existence in order to develop and flourish. Sweet without being saccharine, The Peanut Butter Falcon walks the perfect line for a feelgood movie, undermined only by its abrupt ending.

8/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2023 Priyan Meewella

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