Meewella | Critic

According to P

Tag: Kerry Bishé

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: Grand Piano (2013)

“Do what you do. And try and have some fun. And remember, it’s just music.”

Reisinger

High concept thrillers can be great fun and an effective way to use budgetary constraints to heighten tension through claustrophobically limited settings. Such films rely, however, on selling the audience on that concept sufficiently to allow suspension of disbelief. A virtuoso concert pianist being threatened during a concert with being shot by a sniper if he plays a single wrong note is so preposterous that it struggles out of the gate, not least because heightened stress and conversing via an earpiece are possibly the worst ways to elicit a flawless performance. That Grand Piano works at all is a testament to the commitment of the filmmakers in spite of the content, with a cast that plays it straight throughout. The film makes good use of its space, being set almost entirely within a concert venue, providing the audience with brief interludes of breathing space beyond the auditorium itself. However, the psychological exploration of the mind of a troubled soloist whilst performing is vastly inferior to other representations (such as the the concert scenes in the anime Your Lie in April) and any veneer of cerebral sophistication swiftly falls away. The result is an exercise in old-school filmmaking and a serviceable 90-minute distraction.

5/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2023 Priyan Meewella

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