Starring: Jillian Murray, Dean Geyer, Leigh-Allyn Baker and Grant Godeve
Reviewing media such as games and movies, from a wide variety of genres based on my wildly fluctuating moods and interest. CURRENT FOCUS: Android mobile games. More Roblox reviews coming soon.
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Wednesday, December 29, 2021
A Christmas in the Pines (2021)
Starring: Jillian Murray, Dean Geyer, Leigh-Allyn Baker and Grant Godeve
A California Christmas: City Lights (2021)
Writer(s): Lauren Swickard
Starring: Lauren Swickard, Josh Swickard, Ali Afshar and David Del Rio
There are some things that should just be left alone. And yet, it seems to be human nature to mess with it until it becomes a steaming pile of shit. That extends even into the world of lame rom-coms, although generally to a much lesser extent considering the first one is usually pretty bad on its own. However, recent proof comes in the form of The Princess Switch trilogy, which actually had an entertaining first entry, but has steadily gotten worse with each release.
The latest example of this mystifying phenomenon is A California Christmas: City Lights. The first one was about as close to low-budget sappy romantic perfection as you can get. It came out of nowhere, delivered a solid premise with some likable characters and two perfect, attractive leads with a rare chemistry seen in these movies (it comes as no surprise they are married in real life); it all felt so…effortless. Sure, it was a basic, by-the-numbers premise, but it was executed well.
City Lights, however, doesn’t waste any time in dragging down the potential franchise. This isn’t just “lesser” than the first one, nor is it merely “inferior”; this one falls face first off a cliff. It reduces (or removes) everything that was great about the first one, while simultaneously increasing all the things the first one was missing that made it so good.
Like the story. In the first one, you may recall, Joseph stole the identity of a man named Manny in order to work at a farm he was hoping to acquire for his company. Well, he meets the owner of the land - an attractive girl named Callie who just so happens to be his age - and the two of them start a relationship so strong, that Joseph leaves his successful big city world behind.
But now it’s about to catch up with him. Flash forward a year from the events of the first one: The duo are still in love, living on the same land, where they run both a farm, and a winery. But as we know, things can never be smooth for long: Joseph gets a call from his mother, who runs Van Aston Enterprises - the family business - informing him that she is stepping down, effective immediately. Okay, why should he care? Because he’s next in line to run it, of course!
I love how in these movies no one can ever say no. He’s happy with his current life, and yet - when faced with this sudden thing he has no control over - he can’t just have his mom give the company to someone else? Or given the urgency, find someone to temporarily cover until he can figure out a plan? But no, he has to drop everything and take the first plane out to California, with his wife in tow. And boy does she learn a thing or two about her husband that she - presumably - didn’t already know. Like how he was a playboy, and lived his life in excess. You would think these things would get discussed before marriage, but they never seem to be in the movies.
Anyway, long story short, Joseph lets the big city life get to his head, while Callie starts spending more time with her former fiance’s (who died) brother, who runs a soup kitchen and plays the male lead in a two-person play involving the Virgin Mary (I forget who he plays…Jesus maybe? I don’t know.) The two share a weird connection, where you think it might turn romantic, but it never does…yet that doesn’t stop the two-faced snake Victoria (it’s always a Victoria), Joseph’s former colleague and romantic interest, from attempting to blow it out of proportion in order to get Joseph to leave her. Ho-fucking-hum.
This one is a misguided mess from the outset. When you have two married leads with a believable connection, you would think that’s something your story should focus on. After all, that’s the entire point of the whole romance subgenre. People don’t watch these tired retreads for the stories; they watch them to see two attractive people go through (lighthearted) hell to form some kind of ridiculously over-the-top bond that, presumably, lasts a lifetime. (A great plot for a spoof would be to follow a couple from a previous rom-com, faux-documentary style, as they’re now out of love and washed-up versions of their former selves.) A California Christmas: City Lights makes the unforgivable decision to shy away from the intense attraction the two stars have for each other, instead surrounding them with a bloated story that can’t help but steal the spotlight.
It also makes the mistake of giving the supporting castt nothing meaningful to do. While Manny and Joseph’s limo driver - two excellent, likable characters from the original movie - make a return, they are pretty much expendable. The limo driver is barely in it at all, and while Manny sees an increase in screen time, he literally spends it all trying to capture the attention, and the heart, of a woman who is helping him out on the farm. That’s great he gets a love interest, and the girl he falls for is cute, but it quickly becomes not only repetitive, but completely unnecessary. Especially considering the overblown plot, which gives Joseph and Callie far too much screen time already.
I’m shocked to discover that, like the first one, this mess was written by Lauren Swickard, who plays Callie. One would think she would tailor the story to suit the strengths of those involved, but instead she’s responsible for this one-note mess, which takes the series into a new direction that hopefully leads to no further movies.
- The “stitches” subplot involving Hannah is classically retarded. She’s also a shit actress.
- Speaking of which, what is the point of her anyway? Just to show up in a couple scenes and whine? Yet another example of unnecessary characters added to an overinflated story.
Friday, December 24, 2021
Always and Forever Christmas (2019)
Writer(s): Blaine Chiappetta and Damon Tod Hill
- In the scene where Lucy’s mom gets out of the car at the end, why does she look like she’s in the middle of having a stroke?
- Why is everyone in town so cheery? Even though Lucy comes in simply to shut it down, and even though all of them are sad to see the store go, none of them harbor any ill will towards her. Even Randall, her co-worker, who knows he will be out of a job once the bitch’s deal goes through.
- The side story between Randall and the delivery girl is all sorts of cringe, adding another layer to a story that’s already cringe to begin with.
- Dig the Wix advertisement
- When yet another person questions her decision to create a website with the store closing in less than a month: “Why does everyone keep saying that?”
- How do ideas like this get greenlit?
- Have I mentioned how much I hate Lucy? She has to be one of the worst characters ever written in a holiday movie.
- I swear the director's only direction to all the elderly extras was: "Act as unconvincingly cheery as possible!" No person who's knocking on death's store is going to be filled with that much joy. Plus, we all know old people are entitled know-it-alls to think they deserve the world because they've lived in it for so long.
- That must be a pretty miserable closing sale: Despite their assurances to the contrary, there's a lot of inventory left on those walls.
Thursday, December 23, 2021
Christmas in the Wilds (2021)
Starring: Kaitlyn Leeb, Laura Vandervoort, Victor Zinck Jr., Melinda Shankar
- How in the fuck does Buck keep the meteorite rock that Jessica gives him, which he then eventually proposes with? It’s in the pocket of his coat, which gets soaked in water after he falls in, and that he removes outside in a bid to stay warm. Or maybe it was in his backpack, which gets swept away by a current and is never recovered. Then, he somehow has it in the pocket of the ugly pajamas he puts on. Great awareness saving that fucking worthless rock.
- I didn’t even touch on Buck’s PTSD from fighting in the war, which crops up when Meg starts a snowmobile (something he equates with bombs going off even though he rode one himself earlier), and the howling of wolves (which would remind him of…what, the whistling sound of incoming bombs? I don’t fucking know.)
- Astonishingly, this is a sequel to Romance in the Wilds, in which the same two leads play the same characters, only they get stuck in a forest wildfire. I’m sure there’s plenty of “romance” to go around in that one, too.
- I also haven’t mentioned Roma, a girl apparently named after a tomato, which is Buck’s sister, and whom Jessica entrusts to watch her dog despite Roma’s aversion to dogs. She even gets a sidestory, in which she searches for her one true love: A soldier who went MIA in Afghanistan.
- I'm still at a loss for words how Justin G. Dyck goes from directing several sappy love-fests, to directing the solid horror film Anything for Jackson, and then immediately goes back to directing another series of these insipid gag-fests. That guy clearly has some talent, and it's being squandered on this junk.
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
A Winter Romance (aka Colors of Love) (2021)
Writer(s): Emily Golden
Starring: Jessica Lowndes, Chad Michael Murray, Dennis Andres and Michael Brown
Monday, December 20, 2021
Lonestar Christmas (aka Christmas Forgiveness) (2020)
Director: Lucie Guest
Writer(s): Casie Tabanou and Alison Spuck McNeeley
Starring: Stephanie Bennett, Marco Grazzini, Brent Stait and Colleen Wheeler
It had been a while since a holiday movie got our blood boiling; in fact, you'd have to go back to last year to find one. Usually, it's all-too-common an occurrence for us, when plotlines become almost unbearably ridiculous, or characters become too annoying in their quest to find true love. And while these movies always toe that thin line, none that we've seen this year have crossed that line.
And then came Lonestar Christmas, which is a movie about an irredeemably annoying woman who falls in love with a man that is clearly too good for her.
She is the worst type of person, one that constantly harps on how independent she is, while simultaneously explaining to anyone who will listen about how she’s a single mom raising two kids, because her husband had the gall to go and die on her. Well, she doesn't mention that last part to everyone, but that's what happened.
The woman is Erin. She makes it pretty clear that she doesn’t “need” a man, but of course by the end of the movie she ends up with one anyway. Our story starts when the idiotic heroine straps Christmas presents to the top of her car (?) despite clearly having enough space to fit them inside (Also, why is she bringing so many presents to the house of a man she despises?). It should come as a surprise to no one that the gifts fall off, littering the street with wrapped goodies…and that is when Mateo comes in.
He’s a handsome young man, who owns a tamale shop in his small town that’s widely revered as the best one in the entire state. He happens to be the one to stumble on Erin’s crime scene of presents, and offers to help. Of course, being the “strong” “independent” woman that she is, she initially resists…before realizing that she actually does need some help after all. He helps her load them up, and follows her to her father’s house…where we discover that him and the father, Gary, are good friends.
But Erin doesn’t share that vision of her own father. You see, she harbors some deep resentment towards him for reasons that - at this point - are completely unclear. But whatever it is, it must be a pretty big deal, considering it took a lot of convincing to get her to agree to a visit in the first place. It was only seeing the excited look on her kids’ faces, who have no doubt been deprived of seeing their “Grandee” (which is apparently a stupid term for “Grandpa” that I have heard nowhere else) over a long period of time, that got her to cave.
So what is this terrible crime that he’s guilty of? Murdering her mother? Molesting her as a small child? Punching a handicapped child in the face? I mean, judging from the cold-hearted way she treats him, it has to be something like that. Nope…not being around enough when she was a kid, because he was busy going to school and working a full time job to help support his family. Yes, that’s it. It’s hinted at around the midway point of the movie, which leads you to think there’s more to the story…but there’s not. What’s even more frustrating: She’s planning on doing the exact same fucking thing! Good God.
Sure, not having your grandfather around would be tough, especially for a younger child. But once you grew up, wouldn’t you understand their sacrifice? Apparently not this sack of shit, who spends the entire movie avoiding discussions with her father, and scoffing at anyone who likes the genuinely nice guy.
These scenes are somewhat heartbreaking, because the guy clearly regrets not being there for her. There's even a scene where Erin walks away, scoffing at his latest attempt at redemption, while he stands there with a shattered look on his face, as if he's about to cry. And even despite her hard-headedness, he clearly harbors no hard feelings towards her, which makes Erin’s reluctance to see that so great, that you want to just punch her in the face. Honestly, nothing else in the movie even matters: Her romance with Mateo is just a sidebar to the elephant in the room, which is the terrible relationship with her father that's pretty much entirely her fault.
I’ll admit that my wife and I missed the final 15 or so minutes, because we were…busy doing other things, and we definitely didn’t feel even the slightest need to go back and see what we missed. I’m sure we can fill in the blanks: Somehow she sees what an irredeemable piece of garbage she was, and finally accepts her father's apologies, while getting a man who could do so much better.
This is one of those Christmas movies where no one gets what they deserve.
ENTERTAINMENT RATING: 2/10
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Sunday, December 19, 2021
Mistletoe Mixup (2021)
Director: Andrew Lawrence
Writer(s): Kaylin Richardson
Starring: Danielle C. Ryan, Joey Lawrence, Matthew Lawrence, Andrew Lawrence
Mistletoe Mixup is that perfect example of what not to do with a holiday movie; it has the kind of story that becomes flat-out creepy the more and more you think about it. There are a lot of holiday rom-coms like that, actually, where characters are so full of Christmas cheer you know the only thing actually running through their mind is suicide. This isn’t like that though; it’s a kind of unnerving where it feels like something isn’t quite right underneath the surface. Parts of it would actually make a solid basis for a horror film.
And yet it manages to be just charming enough to not be a complete waste of time; in fact, I’d dare say that it’s “decent” given the circumstances, at least as far as these sappy holiday romances go.
The more popular Lawrence brothers (Joey and Matthew) play Tom and Austin, respectively: two brothers who just so happen to catch the attention of an available blonde named, of all things, Holly. But the catch is, they don’t know they’re both vying for the attention of the same woman. How does that happen? Well sit down, because this is a hilarious tale that I just couldn’t make up.
It all starts out at a Christmas tree farm, where Holly is looking for the perfect tree. Tom spots her and, even though he doesn’t work there, offers her advice on which one to pick, helps her chop it down, and affixes it to her car. But on the way home, the tree flies off, pinning a man under it in the middle of the road. Well would you believe it if I told you that man is none other than Austin, the other brother?! He even unknowingly ends up one-upping his brother by getting invited into her home, accompanying her while she goes shopping for Christmas decorations, and helping her decorate her tree. (And of course he doesn’t even end up with a kiss to show for it.) Isn’t that a little weird? I mean what single woman would not only invite a man she doesn’t know into her home, but also invite him to spend the entire day with her?
Clearly, she is smitten with the young man, but starts to lose interest when he ignores all of her texts. Hmm…I’m sure there’s not a good reason why he’s not responding!
Anyway, Tom is a creepo and basically invites Holly to meet his family within a day or two of meeting her. You know, because that’s normal behavior for someone you haven’t even kissed, let alone spent any sort of one-on-one time with. Even more bewildering: She agrees. Man, if this woman isn’t desperate, I don’t know who is. All of the characters in these sappy love-fests generally come off as women who need a man in order to function, but poor ol’ Holly here takes it to the next level.
Well, of course Tom’s family is also Austin’s…and that’s when the shit really hits the fan. With the three of them under the same roof, they must duke it out with each other to win her heart once and for all. Gee, I wonder if they’ll learn a little something about the importance of family in the process?
This just is all sorts of nope on paper, but thankfully the cast is (mostly attractive) enough to overcome some of the more eerie aspects. I mean, just the basic premise of having two brothers go after the same girl…isn’t that a little bizarre? Of course, most people will immediately go to the intimate possibilities…even kissing the same girl seems a little weird to me. But maybe it’s more morally accepted these days (after all, I have no siblings whatsoever, so I have no personal attachment to that feeling).
Obviously, since this is a Hallmark-style movie, we don’t have to worry about the seedier side of the equation. Instead, we’re still faced with a whole slew of dilemmas: How can she pick one without hurting the other? If things didn’t work out, then would she always wonder if she picked the “right” one? (Oh wait, in this case, the “Wright” one, because of course that’s the brothers’ last name.) If she picks Austin, will Tom stalk her and eventually kill her for rejecting him? Or has the competition heated up so much between the two that they lost sight of what they were even fighting for?
Without giving away spoilers (because we’re always on the edge of our seats to see how these bubbly stories end), let’s just say the ending wraps everything up with a nice little bow, ensuring that no one is left empty-handed, and no one is left sad on Christmas day. Aaah, if only real life was this simple.
I mentioned that parts of the story are unnerving, and exhibit A is Tom’s character, who comes off almost as desperate as Holly. I mentioned he invites her over to his family’s house immediately after meeting her, but he seems a little too intense even beyond that: He's virtually everywhere she is, and is always asking her to accompany him somewhere. He’s never forceful about it, but that’s exactly what makes him so eerie. I mean, after all, Ted Bundy knew how to charm his victims before brutally offing them, and while comparing Tom to Ted might be a little too far-fetched, it doesn’t feel as far off as it should be.
The movie derives much of its humor from watching the ridiculous (and childish) lengths the two brothers will go to win the heart of a girl whom they both just met. Needless to say it gets a little old after a while, even for the desperate Holly, who is so fed-up with their shenanigans that she threatens to leave their family estate, and go home single, where she will probably take a bottleful of sleeping pills to ease the pain of another holiday season spent alone.
Actually, that would be a better ending than the one we’re presented with.
ENTERTAINMENT RATING: 5/10
Guess Who's Coming to Christmas (2013)
Director: Kristoffer Tabori
Writer(s): Tippi Dobrofsky and Neal H. Dobrofsky
Starring: Drew Lachey, MacKenzie Porter, Ellie Harvey and Peter LaCroix
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Ibiza (aka Ibiza: Drunk Love)(2018)
Writer(s): Lauryn Kahn
Starring: Gillian Jacobs, Vanessa Bayer, Phoebe Robinson and Richard Madden
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
A Castle for Christmas (2021)
Writer(s): Ally Carter and Kim Beyer-Johnson
Starring: Brooke Shields, Cary Elwes, Lee Ross and Andi Osho
- Characters crossing over from different Netflix movies into others seems to be a thing these days: Look for Mrs. Donatelli and Frank de Luca, from The Princess Switch franchise, in a small cameo where they check in as guests to the castle. Does this mean that romance has finally blossomed between them?
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Endless Love (2014)
Director: Shana Feste
Writer(s): Feste and Joshua Safran, from a novel by Scott Spencer
Starring: Gabriella Wilde, Alex Pettyfer, Bruce Greenwood and Robert Patrick
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Saturday, December 11, 2021
Seriously Single (2020)
Directors: Katleho Ramaphakela, Rethabile Ramaphakela
Writer(s): Lwazi Mvusi
Starring: Fulu Mugovhani, Tumi Morake, Bohang Moeko and Yonda Thomas
We always knew rom-coms were popular in the United States, but like a typical self-centered American douchebag, I never even stopped to think that there are still close to 200 countries out there, and romance is an ideology in all of them. I mean, who doesn’t love being swept off their feet? Who can’t relate to the feelings of that first blossoming love? Who doesn’t have that special someone they keep letting back into their lives, no matter how much they ruin them? That’s true love. And that means no matter where you go, there are going to be movies about it.
Seriously Single is a South African (?) attempt at the subgenre. There are probably dozens - if not hundreds - of South African rom-coms, but this feels like the first one ever made: Even despite Netflix's backing, it's clumsy and awkward and rough around the edges. It often has the feel of a low-budget movie made by amateurs rather than the gloss of a big studio production. But it does have a certain charm about it, as well as an attractive cast, that helps to reign it in at least a little bit when all else fails.
Dineo is a woman who is desperate to get married. How desperate? So desperate that the local courier stays in business just from delivering her belongings from the house of the latest man to dump her (of course this begs a more serious question; why’d they let her move in in the first place?) At her rock bottom, that's when she meets Lunga, a charming, handsome man who quickly makes her his world. Certain this is the man she’s been waiting for, she falls into old patterns…and achieves the same results. Lunga, as it turns out, is getting married, something Dineo finds out the hard way after stumbling in on his bachelor party (long story).
The antithesis to her obsessively monogamist ways (there always has to be an opposite) is Noni, her best friend and a woman who’s uninterested in long-term commitment. According to her, if you sleep with someone twice, it’s a relationship, so she goes out of her way to make sure her life is a series of string-free one night stands. She tries to get Dineo to embrace her inner self, rather than chasing a string of men who have no interest in settling down.
Then, in the midst of her singleness, Lunga steps back into her life (of course he does), with news that he has gotten divorced. The two get back together, and things are going well for the young couple. But are they really happy? Or has Dineo learned that she doesn't need a man to make her happy?
This is another rom-com that also aims to make the supporting character more "3-D", instead of just one who provides emotional support, by giving Noni a story of her own. After another casual one night stand, she develops a cat-and-mouse relationship with Max, a bar owner who sets his sights on making that wild cat settle down. Of course, she's at first reluctant because it goes against her "morals", but slowly, he starts to whittle down her defenses. Will she keep closing off, or will she learn that life can be improved by having a man?
Similar to Sounds Like Love, this is another “wom-com” where the men only serve as inspiration for the women to find themselves. Well, partially. Thankfully, it's not super preachy, and Tumi Morake is the perfect Noni, injecting some comedy thanks to her carefree ways and sage advice. Her interplay with Dineo is on-point; in fact, the chemistry between them is more believable than it is with any of the men.
In the end, the best I can grant this one is that it's "okay", and it's the worst of the foreign romance movies we’ve seen thus far. It’s just clunky and utterly predictable, deriving its laughs from tired situations and over-the-top scenarios. The cast is attractive - and convincing - enough to maintain interest during the slow parts, and they’re a likable bunch, but even they can’t overcome a weak script, and often poor execution.
ENTERTAINMENT RATING: 5.5/10
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Sounds Like Love (aka Fuimos Canciones) (2021)
Director: Juana Macias
Writer(s): Laura Sarmiento Pallares, based on the novel by Elisabet Benavent
Starring: Maria Valverde, Alex Gonzalez, Elisabet Casanovas and Susana Abaitua
After forcing our way through most of the lame American rom-coms - you know, those B-grade (or worse) flicks that turn predictability and “blah” into an art form - we’ve recently begun focusing our attention to foreign attempts at the subgenre. And, despite their questionably low IMDb scores, we’ve found them to be much more charming - and infinitely better - on the whole.
Sounds Like Love is a Spanish import that follows Maca, a 30-year-old who works as an assistant to a cold-hearted and cruel social media influencer. When she’s not at work, she’s either spending time with her two best friends, Jimena and Adriana, or hooking up with a man named Coque for some casual sex inside her car.
Of course, she has some troubles with love or we wouldn’t be watching a rom-com: Her romantic kryptonite comes in the form of Leo, her ex-lover and the one who got away. The two of them were inseparable, looking to get a house together, before he just up and split, without so much as a goodbye. Well, guess who reappears just as she seems to be getting her life back on track…and guess who’s also dating one of her colleagues?
At first, the two start trading jabs, with the jilted woman attempting to gain some revenge on the lover who did her wrong: she shows up to his college class and calls his itinerary out for being sexist. He, in turn, pretends to seduce her, before suddenly revealing it was just a game. But then, what appear to be hostile feelings between the two, somehow bloom into the possibility of true love.
What separates Sounds Like Love apart from similar movies of its ilk is the narrative structure: Maca constantly breaks the fourth wall, talking to the viewer directly in between scenes to explain things in more elaborate detail; she’s visited by “angel” and “devil” versions of herself in a segment called “Crappy Decisions”; and the story doesn’t just focus on her own love life, but also those of Jimena and Adriana. This at least helps to give it more of a “complexity” missing from similar movies, where the main couple are essentially the only characters we’re supposed to be cheering for.
Honestly, this isn’t a rom-com so much as a vehicle for “female empowerment”. I know, I know, you’re probably groaning at that statement; it’s become a catch-all for all sorts of preachy vehicles that attempt to force the independence of women down our throats. In fact, the rom-com itself might be a thing of the past soon, as female voices rebel against the idea of a woman’s sole purpose in life being in a committed relationship with a member of the opposite sex to begin with.
But before you go casting this aside for that reason, hear me out: This is done in a charming way. It’s about one woman who discovers that she can’t possibly love someone else, until she loves herself first. That idea might sound a little corny, if not cliched, but it presents that angle without ever being too heavy handed.
There are some flaws: For starters, this was based on the "Canciones y Recuerdos" two-book series from author Elisabet Benavent. The books take up 500 pages, of which Sounds Like Love had to cut down into a runtime under two hours. This means there were entire plotlines that had to be excised; it’s a shame Netflix couldn’t turn this into a two-movie deal to fully flesh out the books into movie form.
Another example: The change between Maca and Leo’s previously hostile relationship, into legitimate love is rather forced and unrealistic. The two spend the first half of the movie trading barbs with one another (some of which are actually quite brutal emotionally, especially for Maca), and then all of a sudden Leo becomes a good guy who falls back in love with his former flame. It's done without precedent, and so quickly that it seems like a more elaborate prank.
Despite those cons, I’m actually shocked at Sounds Like Love’s dismissal in reviews as a “predictable” rom-com; it makes me wonder if those people actually watched it. I mean, I guess I can’t really call it unpredictable, but within the realm of these movies, it has a few tricks up its sleeve.
Like the fleshing out of its side characters, Jimena and Adriana. The former is a woman obsessed with her dead lover, who searches for characteristics of him in every man that she dates. The latter is a woman in an unfulfilled marriage, who becomes attracted to the “other” woman in a threesome with her husband. Their stories blend in with Maca’s, and while they lead toward obvious conclusions, they have an element that is both human, and uplifting.
Then there’s Maca’s ending, in which she reveals what the ending would be like “if this were a rom-com”. In a refreshing change of pace, that’s not the way this story ends.
ENTERTAINMENT RATING: 8/10
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Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Good on Paper (2021)
Writer(s): Ilina Schlesinger
Wednesday, December 1, 2021
MARVEL-LESS MARVISTA: Sightless (2020)
Writer(s): Karl
Tuesday, November 30, 2021
Desperados (2020)
Director: LP
Writer(s): Ellen Rapoport
Starring: Nasim Pedrad, Anna Camp, Lamorne Morris and Sarah Burns
You know what? I always complain about how lame most “rom-coms” are, following boring formulas to a “T” while barely interjecting any original ideas of their own. I mean, technically almost every movie (and every book, piece of music, etc.) is a retread of many others - there are so many existing pieces of media that it’s impossible to create something that’s entirely unique - but cheesy rom-coms are almost unwavering in their commitment to tired tropes.
But then I forget about the other side of the equation: Rom-coms that try to be “edgy”. These are almost worse in that they still follow the same cliches of Hallmark-style crapfests, but just throw in a few extra “fucks” or maybe some heightened sexual content, for no reason.
Desperados is a good example of the latter, but it does manage to be slightly better than other such entries thanks to a good cast who work well together, and the occasional humorous moment that lands.
Wesley (yes, she’s a girl) is a mess of a woman whose life is a series of failed relationships. She’s that prototypical “edgy” girl: Promiscuous and willing to do anything in her quest to find true love because, you know, that’s funny. In the opening, she is on a blind date with Sean (Lamorne Morris, that likable dude from "New Girl"), who instantly shuts her down when he sees just how desperate she is.
Rebounding from that, she meets Wes, a man with whom she shares an immediate attraction. She likes him so much that she even makes him wait a month before inviting him into her bedroom…and then doesn’t hear from him for five days. This leads her (and her two best friends) to get drunk and fire off a profanity-laden email in which no target is off limits…including his dead father.
But would you believe it if I told you that there was a good reason for his radio silence? Of course, right after her friends click “send”, she finally receives the call she’s been waiting for, but receives unexpected news: He was in a serious accident while traveling to Mexico and has been recuperating in a hospital.
Once again desperate (see how much of a recurring theme this is in her life) she forces her two friends to accompany her to Mexico, with the idea that they will delete the incriminating message before he can read it. Of course, things do not go that simply. Also an “of course”: Sean happens to be there at the exact same time. Could she possibly find that the man of her dreams isn’t the one that she originally flew to Mexico for?
The comedy here is rather tired, such as a recurring joke involving a mother who thinks Wes is attracted to her 12-year-old son, and the increasingly extreme lengths Wesley will go in order to save a fledgling relationship. Yet the cast is pleasant enough together that it helps offset some of the failed humor and the obligatory fight between the self-centered Wesley and her friends when they realize their friend is so hung up on men, that she has no time to appreciate them.
There really isn’t any form of sexual chemistry between the two eventual lovebirds - which, let’s be honest, is kind of a drag in a movie where we’re supposed to cheer for them to get together - but they do have a platonic compatibility that makes their scenes feel genuine, in a way. Maybe not the way the filmmakers - or us, as the viewers - were hoping, but it’s a small shred of authenticity in a movie otherwise surrounded by unnecessary excess.
ENTERTAINMENT RATING: 5.5/10
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