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OPPENHEIMER (2023)

February 23, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In OPPENHEIMER (2023), brilliant physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer is recruited by Lt. General Leslie Groves to build the Manhattan Project, which produced the atom bomb and forever changed history. Directed by Christopher Nolan and featuring an enormous cast of recognizable and quality actors delivering excellent performances, it’s a powerful film that largely follows history, reveals Oppenheimer’s life with brisk pacing in multiple timelines, and has real importance.

One thing is for sure: History, and a single man’s life, are complex and messy affairs that often defy simple narratives and occupy grayer shades of morality. That the film portrays both without oversimplifying or overt moralizing–especially about the Left’s flirtation with communism in the 1930s-1940s, the Right’s Red hysteria and blacklisting in the 50s, and the morality and meaning of the Bomb itself–is a testament of good storytelling. As for Oppenheimer himself, he is portrayed as overwhelmingly vain, but it is this vanity and drive that enabled him to harness his and other scientists’ genius to create a modern Wonder of the World. He pursues the Bomb because he wants to build it, only to be consumed by doubt and regret.

The performances are excellent, including Cillian Murphy, Matt Damon, Florence Pugh, Robert Downey Jr., and many others. The historical context is terrific–the war against Nazi Germany, which actually started the war ahead of the Allies in terms of basic research towards the Bomb, the revolution in physics started by Einstein and challenged by the likes of Niels Bohr, and the question whether the USSR, an ally during the war, was just another enemy in waiting.

The dropping of the Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and whether it did indeed result in the capitulation of Japan, saving thousands of American lives in the process, continues to be debated. Either way, it was considered both the final act of WW2 and the first act of the Cold War that would redefine the global order and place all of humanity at the perpetual brink of extinction. The majority of people alive today grew up in the shadow of the Cold War nuclear arms race and the possibility of complete destruction, making it one of those rare topics most people know little about but also everything about.

Overall, OPPENHEIMER is a brilliant movie, a biopic that doesn’t lionize or over-moralize its subject, a historical film that sticks with history’s messiness, and a morality tale about a man driven by vanity to tamper with nature, only to create a horrific monster he couldn’t control. The Bomb truly is one of those inventions that permanently changed the world; OPPENHEIMER achieves its own importance by respecting this while being honest about the man who oversaw its creation.

Filed Under: HISTORY, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, Submarines & WW2, The Blog

Enter Goodreads Giveaway for HOW TO MAKE A HORROR MOVIE AND SURVIVE

February 21, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Enter for a chance to win an eARC of HOW TO MAKE A HORROR MOVIE AND SURVIVE, my new horror novel coming out from Hachette Book Group June 18, 2024.

A hundred copies will be given away at Goodreads. U.S. only, 18+ in age. No purchase necessary. Goodreads rules apply. You can enter anytime up until March 18.

About the novel: “A slasher film director wants to make a horror movie using a cursed camera that kills anyone he cares about. The scream queen he loves wants to survive the night.”

Click here to enter the Goodreads Giveaway!

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Books, CRAIG'S WORK, How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, The Blog

TRUE DETECTIVE, Season 4

February 19, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In the fourth season of TRUE DETECTIVE, two Alaska cops find themselves embroiled in trying to crack a case with supernatural overtones. Despite some flaws, notably in what’s missing, it’s the best season since the first, making me love the franchise again.

This time, the detective noir is also Arctic noir, as the researchers at a biotech station in Alaska die under extremely odd and mysterious circumstances. On the case are local small town police chief Liz Danvers (Jodie Foster) and state trooper Evangeline Navarro (Kali Reis). These two have history, don’t like each other much, and had a big parting of the ways over the unsolved murder of an activist some years back, a torch Navarro still carries. Along the way, they have to contend with the local mining interest, natives and locals angry at mining pollution killing their children, and the Alaska state police, who want to take over the case. Oddness, heavy atmosphere, and supernatural overtones bring back the creepy vibe so beautifully created in the first season.

What I liked, though it’s loved, actually: two strong female characters. Not perfect, they’re heavily flawed actually, and loaded with old baggage, but they’re smart, driven, and tough–everything we expect and hope for in the detective noir genre. Their personal lives are a mess, and they can be nasty to the people who love them, but they’re capable. The other characters we’re shown are all well drawn and terrific. The acting is terrific across the board, particularly by Foster and Reis. Billie Eilish’s 2019 song “Bury a Friend” sets the mood at the start of each episode.

I also loved the core mystery. The Dyatlov Pass-style disappearance of the scientists, the organism they were pursuing in the permafrost, the weird recurring symbol, it all added to the thick atmosphere of dread and mystery and put me on a hook.

What I didn’t like: I felt like with only six episodes, the story was a bit rushed, especially in the last act. We don’t get to see the two do a whole lot of detective work. The last episode, particularly, contains a lot of plot gifts to help them solve everything to the point of being contrived. Most of the supernatural elements are kind of explained but overall left a bit hanging. The final explanation of what happened and why made total sense and it fit what they were going for with this season, but it wasn’t surprising or even provocative. And there were references to Season 1 that at times felt shoehorned and so out of place they took me out of the story.

The love way outbalanced any reservations I had–this is TRUE DETECTIVE at its finest, way better than the weirdly bad second season and the meh third. I didn’t love it as much as that mindblowing first season–not even close, and I’m not sure it could ever be replicated–but the fourth season is great, and it brought me back to rooting for the franchise again. I hope the show gets another season, as I’m curious what they’ll do next. I just hope they’re regain the confidence to do 10 episodes and flesh it out.

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

RED WARNING by Phil Halton

February 3, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In Phil Halton’s RED WARNING, a corrupt Kabul policeman investigates a murder against the backdrop of the impending 1978 communist coup. Halton tackles his subject with the usual tension and realism, putting you in another culture and making it immediately feel relevant to offer a story that is simultaneously exotic and familiar.

I’d first discovered Halton at a local bookstore when I picked up THIS SHALL BE A HOUSE OF PEACE, about the founding of the Taliban, and then sought out EVERY ARM OUTSTRETCHED, about a Sandinista guerilla fighter seeking to topple the Somoza dictatorship in Nicaragua. Two ambitious topics, given old Cold War and newer War on Terror taboos. As a warrior himself–as a Canadian Forces officer, he served in hot spots around the world–Halton did each justice, hooking me with exotic stories that feel lived-in and are engaging.

In RED WARNING, we’re introduced to Lieutenant Mohammed Mirwais Ahmadzai, a police investigator. At first glance, he appears to be fairly mercenary, but really it’s about personal survival, while hopefully being able to do his job. Over the course of the story, we see him relentlessly pursue and hunt down his quarry, only to be frustrated by how Afghanistan works, whether it’s the secret police, political pressure from the Americans, corruption, and the stubborn independence of the Pashtun tribes in the countryside, who only want the national government to leave them alone.

This is a country that is difficult to police and where the police are largely just another tribe requiring tribute, but in 1978 as it was when the Taliban recently retook the country, it was not all one stereotype, it’s a nation of intricate feuds, alliances, and political aspirations. At the time, communism appeared to offer the best bet to modernize the country into the twentieth century.

In short, RED WARNING is a lot of fun. The story is engaging and real, the protagonist flawed but likeable, the lived-in cultural setting fascinating, and the dialogue sharp.

Filed Under: Books, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, The Blog

WAR SAILOR

February 2, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In the Norwegian miniseries WAR SAILOR (Netflix), merchant sailors at sea when Germany invades Norway are drafted into the Allied war effort, suffering the horrors of the Battle of the Atlantic. Harrowing and relentlessly anti-war, it’s a horrific depiction of this little-known part of history, the merchant sailors who helped save England and win the war.

Originally a movie fleshed out with unused footage into a compact miniseries, WAR SAILOR chronicles WW2 through the eyes of close friends Alfred and Sigbjorn, merchant sailors, and Alfred’s wife and children back in Norway living through the German occupation and Allied bombings.

Watching the trailer, I thought I’d be watching a Hollywood-style production about men caught in war who step up with heroism and save the day. I was happy to be totally wrong. You get the heroism–the quiet, desperate, personal, I-have-no-choice kind–but the story is relentlessly bleak, with even the happy endings being their own brand of sad, almost absent of much-desired catharsis.

The filmmaker interviewed numerous merchant sailors and their families to incorporate as much realism into his tale, and it shows. During the war, 1,100 commercial ships were drafted into the Atlantic supply chain keeping England and the USSR in the war, and around 4,000 died at sea due to plane and submarine attacks. This is their story, and again it’s not a happy one.

The actors are all terrific, the characters human and likable. There are skips in time right into slice-of-life action that are a little jarring, and there are slow moments showing the characters waiting–presenting war’s tedium–but then everything gets torn apart in an action scene that is frankly horrifying. In one scene, the churn of the ship’s engine becomes a soundtrack building tension until the startling moment the SHTF and everything goes sideways.

At the end, you see the quiet desperation of a man who was broken by what happened to him, no longer the man he was, unable to talk about it. There’s a incredible moment when he sees a comrade from the war after many years, and they fall into a teary silence as seeing the other man triggers a flood of memories. So much drama packed in a single minute between two men sitting without dialogue.

Overall, I loved WAR SAILOR and would happily recommend it, though note it becomes steadily more bleak to the point of helpless frustration–which is the series’ point.

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

ANDOR

January 31, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

I was late to the ANDOR party, but I’m glad I had the chance to remedy that. A gritty political thriller set in the STAR WARS universe, ANDOR goes far deeper in terms of ideas than pretty much the rest of the STAR WARS franchise, producing something strong and different enough that it really doesn’t need its source material.

The show is really about empire and rebellion, fascism and the the desire to resist it, and how resistance requires sacrifice and often resorting to tactics that mirror the evils of the oppressive regime. In this show, we primarily follow Andor, an orphan looking for a shortcut to a comfortable life who through circumstance winds up pushed to radicalism, one man’s journey to rebellion. While he simply wants to be left alone, the police state will not allow it, pushing him and others until they put their lives on the line to resist. For them, there’s little inspirational talk about democracy and way more base resistance to being dominated, used, and destroyed.

Speaking of the show’s themes, apparently, ANDOR was responsible for quite a few domestic arguments among viewers. I have to wonder who the hell watches STAR WARS and roots for the fascists enough to argue about it.

Anyway, back to the show: Connecting to Andor through a wider web, we have agents of Empire, from bureaucrats trying to get ahead to minor police wanting to prove themselves to gain approval from an authority figure, and the rebel network itself, made up of sympathizers, leaders, and hardcore operatives. In this early rebellion, it’s hard to know who to trust–as you’re doing so with your life and the cause–and you often don’t know what the big plan is. There’s a terrific speech by a rebel leader about sacrifice, how he will only know suffering and won’t survive to see the final victory. The methods and tactics used on both sides are fairly realistic, such as the Rebels provoking a brutal reaction by the Empire to further inflame the populace against it.

The show took a while to get rolling for me, but once it did, it fired on all cylinders, and I was fairly gripped.

The actors are all solid, notably Diego Luna as Andor and Stellan Skarsgård as Luthen Rael (the aforementioned rebel leader). The sets and effects are fairly good, notably the prison, while Andor’s hometown appears to be recycled from several scenes in THE MANDALORIAN, so striking I’m wondering if it’s intentional, as THE MANDALORIAN is set in ANDOR’s future. Otherwise, there’s the usual STAR WARS set design where people seem to have to walk miles to get to work and everything either looks blank, bright white, and uncomfortable or stuck in a futuristic Middle Ages.

Overall, ANDOR takes on the rebellion against the Empire as a concept and takes it seriously, going way beyond the usual superficial to offer a story that is gritty, real, dramatic, and compelling.

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

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