Thanksgiving Ketchup
Rating: Microwaved–Crispy
Fuck I got busy
Watching a lot of movies
Over Thanksgiving.
In what probably isn’t a record for me but is definitely getting up there, I watched nearly a movie a day over the past week and a half. And because I’m a working man now with a full-time job (I’ve joined the “rat race,” as my dickhead dad reminded me mere seconds after signing my offer), I don’t have time to write six reviews for this blog that only I, and the occasional recruiter, read. Actually I do have time, but I’d rather spend it playing the best video game ever or reading the Stephen King memoir that my new work friend Sara just lent me. So after further adieu, let’s see what’s Soggy and what’s not!
Widows. “Widows” was bookended by one of my favorite opening sequences in recent memory and a heart-stopping heist that almost redeems the middling middle. Like a good Gillian Flynn novel (I just read Sharp Objects, so I’m a Gillian Flynn expert), it’s really engaging when you’re in the thick of it but starts to unravel when you start asking questions. I will be returning for a second viewing, if only to see the legendary Brian Tyree Henry kill it outside of the “Atlanta” universe. Rating: Crispy.
Instant Family. The highest compliment you can give a Mark Wahlberg family vehicle is that it’s watchable, and watchable “Instant Family” is. It’s not the best movie you’ll ever see with Rose Byrne as a new mom or (probably) the best movie about adoption to be released in 2018 (I still haven’t gotten to it, so I can’t say for sure!), but it’s not bad. Really! Rating: Microwaved.
Never Goin’ Back. Is “Never Goin’ Back” the “Mystic Pizza” of our generation? I wouldn’t know because I’ve never seen Mystic Pizza, but it is one of my mom’s favorite movies. What I can say is that I thoroughly enjoyed Never Goin’ Back, and low-key it has one of the most debatable endings since Christopher Nolan mind-fucked us with a spinning top. Rating: Crispy.
Hot Summer Nights. A movie starring Timothée Chalamet as a budding drug dealer (budding, get it?) in the heat of summer 1991 should be more fun than this. At first I thought its measly 44% on Rotten Tomatoes was a flaw in the system, but the movie does its damndest to wipe away everything I liked about it in the last 30 minutes. Rating: Microwaved.
Searching. “Searching” is what happens when “Unfriended” and “Taken” meet for a passionate tryst in the back of a screenwriter’s mind, and that screenwriter happens to have an intense fascination with an angry John Cho. Searching is clever, but not as clever as it thinks it is. This is a spoiler-free zone, but if you can read between the lines, I’ll just say Searching is one movie that really could have benefited from an R-rating. Rating: Crispy.