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HOW TO BLOW UP A PIPELINE (2022)

May 28, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

I recently watched HOW TO BLOW UP A PIPELINE (2022) on Google Play and was impressed at the incredible balancing act displayed in this portrayal of a group of Americans who decide violence is justified as self defense against energy corporations during the climate crisis.

The movie rolls out as a kind of 70s or 80s thriller movie, though the protagonists aren’t protecting the free world from terrorists. They are the terrorists. From various walks of life, these people have all been deeply impacted in some way by the climate crisis, and they’ve decided peaceful protest isn’t accomplishing anything. There’s a woman poisoned by chemicals emitted by a nearby refinery, a red-blooded Texan family man enraged the government seized his land to run a pipeline through it, a pair of punks who want to break the system, and others. Together, they decide to build bombs and blow up an oil pipeline. The entire movie is them carrying out their plan.

The movie is based on a book by Andreas Malm, a manifesto that declares that as peaceful protest cannot curb carbon emissions, all people have a moral obligation to take other measures, even violent measures, to protect the environment they rely on to survive. This idea is put to the test as they question themselves and how others might see their action, and we’re given backstories so we understand what exactly brought them to this. The result for many viewers I think will be, “I can see why they’re doing it, but there has to be a better way. Is there?” The filmmakers leave it up to the viewer to decide the morality, which I appreciated, though they also don’t shy away from implied endorsement. Honestly, I was amazed this movie got made at all.

In the end, I loved this one–boldly original, immensely provocative, straightforward and never preachy or show-offy, and thrilling and troubling in equal measure. While watching it, my partner and I paused it several times for long discussions about the ethical and moral issues involved. One thing I concluded is that right now capitalism and governments have a chance to solve the climate crisis. If it doesn’t, a growing number of people may take matters into their own hands, and this kind of thing may stop being fiction.

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, Movies & TV, POLITICAL, Politics, The Blog

SUFFER THE CHILDREN Optioned for TV

May 11, 2023 by Craig DiLouie 10 Comments

I’m proud today to announce my horror novel SUFFER THE CHILDREN has been optioned by Perro Azul for potential adaptation for Netflix, Vix, or another venue.

Perro Azul is a Mexican production house with a solid track record developing Spanish-language TV series and movies. Their work ranges from zombie series to cop dramas to political dark comedies.

Published in 2014 by Gallery Books, SUFFER THE CHILDREN is about a disease that kills the world’s children only to bring them back requiring blood to stay alive a little while longer. The kids are vampires, but the true monsters may be the parents who will do anything to keep their children alive. As the blood supply wanes, their only source may be each other…

This book has been optioned before but failed the funding test due to its grimdark material. I’m hoping this time will be different and this story will finally be brought to life on a screen. Fingers crossed!

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Craig at Work, CRAIG'S WORK, Film Shorts/TV, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, Movies & TV, Suffer the Children, The Blog, WRITING LIFE

THE POWER

May 11, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Based on the fascinating book by Naomi Alderman, THE POWER is an Amazon Prime series about an evolutionary change in humanity that threatens to dramatically alter the balance of power between the sexes. The result is reaction, struggle, and possibly a new natural order. This is stunning sci-fi at its best.

The story follows a woman who is the mayor of Seattle, her family, a reporter in Nigeria, a teenager connected to a minor British crime family, a teenager on the run for murder who is taken in by a home run by nuns, and the wife of the dictator of an Eastern European country infamous for sex trafficking. Each provides a lens and focal point for a bizarre twist in evolutionary history: young women everywhere have been born with an organ that like an eel allows emission of electrical discharge.

Suddenly, their hands now able to become literal weapons, women gain an incredible power, which some learn to tune in many ways both curative and lethal. This proves disruptive in countless ways and may just threaten the existing order. As men increasingly feel threatened and unsafe, however, a major conflict may be brewing…

I read THE POWER some years back and found it a powerful work of speculative fiction. At first, I was hesitant: was this going to be good fiction or a thinly veiled social statement? Happily, it’s very much the former with the right amount of the latter. Alderman holds nothing back, both regarding the routine fears and injustices women face that can now be corrected, but also the inherent tendency of power to create injustice. She even dares to say that maybe if women ruled the world, it might not look that different than the way it does now, which I think took courage.

The only criticism I had of Alderman’s book was she didn’t have the space to go very deep with a concept that honestly had so many facets. The show didn’t have that problem. In fact, I’d expected this to be a miniseries, but where it ended left a ton of the book on the table; the show is not finished, and I hope it will be renewed so we can get more. The show takes its time and goes quite deep and expansive with ideas, and it all feels realistic. In particular, I also enjoyed how even-handed it is about the way things are and why they’re that way, and while the focus of the story here is on women, all the men get their say and they’re not always wrong. And the cast is terrific, notably Toni Collette and John Leguizamo.

Overall, I loved THE POWER and I’m looking forward to another season. As an author, I’m envious at the loving and lavish treatment Alderman’s book received, though it certainly deserved it. Again, this is sci-fi at its best, the kind of story that makes you think and feel something new.

Filed Under: MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, The Blog

SWARM

May 11, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Created by Donald Glover and Janine Nabers, SWARM (Amazon Prime) is about a young woman pushed to the brink and who decides to take vengeance on anyone who besmirches the pop star she idolizes. Roughly inspired by separate true events, it’s a strangely compelling if bleak watch, a dark comedy that never had me laughing.

Dre is a young woman living in a big city. It’s obvious she’s both a troubled soul and that she idolizes Ni’Jah, a pop star roughly modeled on Beyoncee. Tragedy forces her onto the road, where she decides to kill people who insulted Ni’Jah online. What follows is a road trip of sorts to various cities and towns, providing glimpses into weirder aspects of American life, long moments of contemplation, and sporadic bursts of artistic violence.

I’m really torn about this one. I liked it, I couldn’t stop watching, but it was hard at times and I’m not sure what it added up to. Artistically, it wallows but it’s good and it meanders but it’s good, and every episode has an artistic but almost documentarian feel to it, like this is a work of hyper social realism. Unfortunately, the show’s commentary on superfandom is so subtle that it comes across as really a sad tale of unchecked mental illness. (Though it’s interesting how everyone who meets the honestly vapid Dre regards her as a blank slate to project their own desires, the opposite of Ni’Jah, who presents a perfect life.) The separate events the story is based on provides its own sharp commentary on society’s many hairline fractures, however, and this ultimately proves far more effective.

Overall, again, I liked this one. Maybe even loved it a bit. Even if in the end I wasn’t totally satisfied with what I’d just experienced. Recommended if you’re looking for something offbeat and where you can enjoy the strange dark art of the parts without worrying too much about their sum.

Filed Under: MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, The Blog

CHIMP EMPIRE

May 11, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Usually, nature documentaries for me are like a trip to the zoo–something I’m usually happy to put off, though I love that they’re there and available. So it was surprising when I checked out Netflix’s CHIMP EMPIRE on a lark and found it utterly enthralling. Who knew nature could write Shakespeare?

Welcome to the Ngogo rainforest in Uganda, where scientists discovered the largest known group of chimpanzees living in the wild. Humans have been studying them so long that the chimps just sort of roll with people being around. This provided the filmmakers the opportunity to capture incredible footage of their daily lives and shape them into a narrative about family and power.

Some time ago, the group split apart into the larger Central Group dominated by alpha male Jackson and his lieutenant Miles, and the Western Group. The Western Group is smaller, under tougher stress to get food, and therefore they are far more collaborative. The Central Group is beginning to become stressed by restless chimps who want to become king and have begun testing the waters. Sensing weakness, the Western Group decides it’s time to see if they can expand their turf–and maybe settle their old feud with Jackson once and for all.

The chimpanzees are beautiful to watch, especially the highly expressive children, and they all come across as individuals with distinct personalities. The jungle feels like another world, one that deserves protecting. Narrated by Mahershala Ali, the storylines are dramatic and compelling–a bit anthropomorphic in the telling, but as chimpanzees are humans’ closest living relative in the animal kingdom, it’s entirely forgivable. Again, in its brute simplicity and impact, this is Shakespeare as nature might write it.

In short, I’ve never been so riveted by a nature documentary. I loved it, and I hope they’ll do a season 2 so I can keep up with the chimps’ never-ending story.

Filed Under: MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, The Blog

DAISY JONES AND THE SIX

April 7, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Based pretty faithfully on the excellent epistolary novel by Taylor Jenkins Reid, DAISY JONES AND THE SIX (Amazon Prime) is about a fictional 1970s rock super band that rocketed to stardom and then suddenly called it quits at their last concert, with the band years later finally telling the inside story. The adaptation was done with obvious love and it grew on me, though it veered into TV tropes when it shouldn’t have.

The story focuses on Billy Dunne, the front man of a hardworking rock band that is starting to go somewhere when Billy takes some time off to go to rehab to clean up his act, coming out of it an artist afraid to take risks. Seeing big potential, an enterprising producer convinces him to join forces with Daisy Jones, a young woman with arresting charisma and brimming with raw, unbridled creativity. Their personalities clash until the two discover they perfectly complement each other to make great music, resulting in tension both within the band and in Billy’s marriage.

The show leans on the unrealized romance angle of the book to the point of trying to convince viewers to get behind it, but I found their relationship utterly toxic. Daisy’s kind of a spoiled and nasty person in pretty big ways, while Billy’s flaws are out there while appearing more tempered. Honestly, the subplot of the romance between the guitarist and the keyboardist struck me as far more compelling and fun to watch. Otherwise, the show writers veered off the book–at least how I remember it now–to make a few of the characters do some really over the top stuff, like a wife suspecting her husband might be cheating going out and cheating on him, and this is presented as empowering for her. Uh, good job?

The acting and direction are terrific, with energetic performances by Riley Keogh (channeling Steve Nix as Daisy), Sam Claflin (Billy), and the rest. The concert scenes are packed with energy but not overdone. The only drawback on this side of things is the original music produced for the show is fine if not good, though hardly super band material. (You just have to run with it.)

Overall, I was impressed with the adaptation, which was pretty faithful, had a terrific energy, portrayed the 1970s as a real time real people lived in, and overall showed a lot of heart.

Filed Under: MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, The Blog

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