One of the most fascinating elements in Badlands is that while there is much violence, we see very little of it on screen. For a couple of crazy kids on a murderous crime spree, Badlands keeps things quite clean. The killings of Mr. Sargis and Cato are the only real moments of blood that I can recall. Even those killings are pretty tame, especially compared to how graphic some contemporary films can be.
Saturday, November 15, 2025
Badlands: A Review
One of the most fascinating elements in Badlands is that while there is much violence, we see very little of it on screen. For a couple of crazy kids on a murderous crime spree, Badlands keeps things quite clean. The killings of Mr. Sargis and Cato are the only real moments of blood that I can recall. Even those killings are pretty tame, especially compared to how graphic some contemporary films can be.
Friday, November 14, 2025
Nuremberg: A Review
It is now eighty years since the end of the Second World War. Despite all those decades, the aftereffects of World War II still reverberate through our lives. Nuremberg covers the first of a series of trials where the Nazi high command was judged by the Allies. With strong performances and an engaging story, Nuremberg brings the truth of how true evil can appear so charming.
Nuremberg is two stories that eventually fold into one. In one story, U.S. Army psychiatrist Douglas Kelly (Rami Malek) is brought in to examine the surviving Nazi leadership for evaluation. The highest-ranking Nazi official taken alive is Hermann Goring (Russell Crowe), who willingly surrendered to the Allies. Kelly examines him as well as other Nazi officials such as the fanatically antisemitic propagandist Julius Streicher (Dieter Reisle) and Labor Front director Robert Ley (Tom Keune). Kelly needs Sergeant Howie Triest (Leo Woodall) to translate for him. Kelly, however, realizes something that none of the other Americans do. Goring understands and speaks English. Eventually winning his trust, Goring soon begins if not a friendship at least a less guarded relationship with Kelly.
In exchange for getting the apparently bonkers Rudolf Hess (Andreas Pietschmann) to cooperate with the Allies, Goring asks Kelly to secretly take letters to Goring's wife Emmy (Lotte Verbeek) and daughter Edda (Fleur Bremmer). It is not long before Kelly begins blurring the line between seeing Goring and his family as human and remembering the monstrous acts that Goring oversaw and knew about.
That is the second story. Associate Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson (Michael Shannon) is anticipating that he will be named Chief Justice. He was not anticipating being the American prosecutor at the newly established International Military Tribunal. He initially struggles with the entire concept of this trial, with others pointing out that there is no international law on which to hold the Nazis accountable. He finds that many would prefer that they be shot and be done with it. Jackson, however, soon becomes convinced that this trial is needed. The prosecution and the judges will be made up of the Allies: British, French, Soviets and Americans. Jackson will work with British Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe (Richard E. Grant) as the primary prosecutors.
Kelly begins working with and even bonding with the outwardly charming Goring and his family. He becomes convinced that Goring will manage to beat the rap, Jackson in Kelly's view severely underestimating Goring. Whatever fondness for Goring that Kelly might have is shattered when footage of the various extermination camps is shown. Kelly has talked to too many persuasive lips and is thrown off the case. He still can help guide Jackson in bringing the narcissist Goring to account for the horrors that he and the others committed. Will Kelly and Jackson, with some help and encouragement from Maxwell-Fyfe and even Sergeant Triest, help them unmask the satanic evil of the Nazi regime? Will justice truly be served?
Nuremberg is a long film at close to two and a half hours. Yet for the most part, Nuremberg does not feel long or slow. The film moves remarkably well. It also never short-changes the Kelly/Goring story and the Jackson story. That is a major credit to writer/director James Vanderbilt, who adapted Jack El-Hei's book The Nazi and the Psychiatrist for Nuremberg.
The film has many standout performances. Leading the cast is Russell Crowe as Hermann Goring. He does what all good portrayals of villains do. He rarely if ever rages or appears out of control. Crowe's Goring is cold, calculating, shrewd. He reveals Goring to be terrifying in his charming manner. One can see how Kelly could be metaphorically seduced by Goring's outwardly courtly, if pompous, manner. Kelly quickly deduces that Goring speaks and understands English when Crowe gives him a quick startled look on hearing that some of the Americans call him "Fatso". As their conversations continue, it is unclear if Goring does ultimately see Kelly as a friend or is playing him for a fool. My guess is that it is a mix.
Crowe keeps to a correct German accent. Nuremberg should be recognized for making the situation realistic in terms of languages. Germans speak with a German accent when speaking in English. The Americans require translators. Vanderbilt does not allow for the accents to grow to cartoonish levels. Things are played perfectly straight. It is so nice to see Russell Crowe remind us of how good he can be as an actor.
Another standout is Leo Woodall as Howie Triest. He is called on to speak German and speak with an American accent. That last detail is important for two reasons. First, we get a surprising revelation about how the Detroit Tigers fan speaks flawless German. Second, Woodall himself is British. As such, both the character and the actor have to speak in an accent not their own. Woodall does an exceptional job on a technical level. He also does an exceptional job in terms of his acting. One of his final scenes, where he reveals his past, is deeply moving.As Nuremberg is almost two stories split into one, we had Michael Shannon give an equally strong performance as Justice Jackson. He could be prickly and ambitious. However, he could also use his moral outrage to push none other than then-Pope Pius XII to metaphorically bless the trial. It is one of Nuremberg's flaws however, that Richard E. Grant was given very little to do as Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe. He does have a great moment when interrogating Goring. However, it would have been nice to see him do more than look disdainful and drink tea.
The showdown between Crowe's Goring and Shannon's Jackson is one to watch. We see two actors playing well against each other. It shows Goring's cleverness and Jackson's initial bumbling.
In their smaller roles John Slattery as the firm Colonel Andrus and Colin Hanks as Kelly's less patient fellow psychiatrist Gustave Gilbert did well.
I would say that Rami Malek is the weak link. It was not a terrible performance. However, Malek did purse his lips quite a bit. It soon became a distraction. I will give Malek and Vanderbilt credit in how it did not portray Kelly as saintly or even righteous. He was motivated by the thought of future fame. Kelly dreamed of seeing his work be the basis of a book where he could analyze evil. It helps that Gilbert, we learn, had the same idea. He did change somewhat in his motives.
One of Nuremberg's most effective to downright shocking moments is during the trial itself. As Jackson presents footage from the extermination camps, the film uses actual archival footage rather than hide it or go with reenactments. This footage has been featured in documentaries. However, this is the first time that I can recall it being used in a feature film. I do not think something like Judgment at Nuremberg did such a thing, though to be fair that film did not center around the first trial.I think many people in the audience that I saw Nuremberg with had never seen this footage. The stunned silence, broken by occasional sobs and gasps, had the necessary effect. The use of this footage is a chilling reminder of how demonic the Nazi regime was.
At a time when terms like "genocide" and "Nazi" are tossed about rather casually, seeing the images of Holocaust survivors should stun and horrify viewers. Nuremberg does not shy away from presenting us with these images of man's inhumanity towards man. The film even allows for moments of humanity to seep through. Earlier, Sergeant Triest told Kelly how he plans to mock the monstrous Streicher before he is hanged. When the Americans go to get him to the gallows, Triest sees what a pathetic, cowardly man he is. Whether he is moved to genuine compassion or sees that gloating will not bring him peace, only the viewer can answer.
"It matters. More than you know", Sergeant Howie Triest tells Dr. Douglas Kelly late in the film. Kelly had been thrown out for telling the press via a beautiful reporter that he felt Goring would demolish Jackson. Triest reminds him that remaining silent, even after all that he had seen, would be a betrayal of all those murdered. That, I think, is the theme of Nuremberg. Holding those who do evil in the sight of man and God however you perceive Him, matters.
We cannot forget. We must not forget. We must maintain permanent vigilance, lest we too fall for the charms of someone like a Hermann Goring.
Thursday, November 13, 2025
With Love, Meghan. A Second Overview
WITH LOVE, MEGHAN: A SECOND OVERVIEW
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Henry VIII: The 2003 Television Miniseries
Friday, November 7, 2025
To Each His Own: A Review
To Each His Own is a very daring film for the times. The film centers around an illegitimate birth, a downright scandalous subject in 1946. To Each His Own is sadly not remembered. If it is remembered, it is because Olivia de Havilland won her first of two Best Actress Oscars for it. That is a terrible shame, for To Each His Own is a beautiful and moving film.
The London Blitz has brought together two disparate people as air raid wardens: British Lord Desham (Robert Culver) and American expatriate and businesswoman Jody Norris (de Havilland). She is brittle and aloof. Jody is bossy and does not like being bossed. None of this, however, dissuades Lord Desham from finding her attractive. Jody is cool and dismissive, expressing no excitement at a potential romance. She does show excitement, however, for one thing. Gregory Piersen (John Lund), an Air Force pilot she knows from her hometown, is coming to London. Jody even bumps into Gregoy's fiancée, British girl Liz Lorimer (Virginia Welles), at the train station. Jody remembers Gregory or Griggsy as she nicknamed him, when she was his nanny.
Jody is also his birth mother.
We go into her memories as they wait at the station. Jody was the local beauty, attracting all sorts of attention. She is squired by enthusiastic traveling salesman Mac Tilton (Bill Goodwin) and Alec Piersen (Phillip Terry), scion of the local bigwig. Jody delights in the male attention but won't commit to either. Then along comes Captain Bart Cosgrove (Lund in a dual role). A World War I flying ace, the town makes a big show of having this Lindbergh-like figure here. Bart is instantly attracted to Jody. For once, she reciprocates.
A whirlwind secret romance develops. Captain Cosgrove knows the dangers of early aviation, but that will not dissuade him from the skies. It will not dissuade Jody either. They spend an unseen night of passion, and Jody gets knocked up. She discovers this when she consults a doctor who tells her that she needs surgery, which would cost her the baby. When she learns that Cosgrove has been killed in a flying accident, Jody opts to have her child in secret. She then plans to adopt her own son and tries to pull a fast one with the "baby left on her doorstep" routine. Sadly, her frenemy Corinne Piersen (Mary Anderson) has just lost her own baby. Alec, who had gone on to marry Corrine, pushes Jody to let them have this "unwanted child". Jody manages to see her son on Thursdays and every other Sunday. Eventually, Jody reveals the truth, but Corrine won't give her son up.
Despondent and with her own father dead, Jody moves away and reunites with Mac, who is now a bootlegger using the fictitious Lady Vyvyan Cosmetics as a front. To his surprise, the cops get wise to this scheme. Hurriedly, Jody takes the Lady Vyvyan line and, using her skills, transforms it into a lucrative and legitimate business. She also uses her fortune to try and take Griggsy by force. Jody uses Alec's financial troubles as leverage to try and get Greg back. This blows up in her face, and now facing the truth, sadly lets him go. Now, with Greg facing the same fate as his birth father, will Jody be able to both help and be with her long-lost son?
To Each His Own is a solid weepy, the type that would emotionally move all but the hardest hearts. Right off the bat, To Each His Own indicates that this is a deeply moving film of a mother's love thanks to Victor Young's score. As the film continues, the audience cannot help feeling for Jody's plight.
One thing that is surprising is how Jody's premarital sex and pregnancy are handled. We do have some acknowledgment of the times. After giving birth out-of-town, Jody attempts to pass herself off as a widow. The nurse Daisy Gingras (Victoria Horne) is not fooled. "You've sinned. You'll pay for it all the rest of your life", she tells her. However, what is surprising is that Horne does not deliver this line in a harsh or condemning tone. Instead, Daisy tells Jody this very matter-of-factly, with no sharpness whatsoever. Daisy is clearly an old hand at these "birthing widows", but she does not judge. She merely points out to Jody, not directly but with understanding, that Jody opting to be a single mother has social and moral repercussions.
It is a credit to Charles Brackett's screen story (with a screenplay by Brackett and Jacques Thery) that the issue of illegitimate birth is both in the open and without any sense of sensationalism. It is handled in quite an intelligent way. I cannot remember if the suggestion of abortion was there. My sense is that such a thing would be totally unacceptable due to the Hays Code. However, we know that Jody must either have surgery or keep the baby. This might have been a way to get around the suggestion of abortion.
To Each His Own also does well in not portraying Jody as a longsuffering saint. She joins forces with a bootlegger. That is her lesser crime. A large part of an admittedly long film is her efforts to try and buy Gregory. She uses Alec's dire straits to cajole Corinne into basically selling her child. Jody is so blinded with the idea of having her biological son back that she does not care or think how it will affect him.
As an adopted child, Gregory already feels unwanted. Jody does not think on how Greg has grown up knowing Alec and Corinne as his parents. Jody does not think that both of them have been good parents, loving and nurturing to Gregory. She might not even care. It is only when Jody sees how miserable and despondent Gregory is despite his lavish settings that she realizes how wrong she is.
Jody attempts to justify her actions by pointing out that she is Gregory's mother. "Just bringing a child into the world doesn't make you that!" Corinne angrily replies. Jody sees that painful truth. As much as she may have loved Bart, and may love the idea of being Gregory's mother, she was never in a place to be the latter.
One feels for the unfortunate series of circumstances working against Jody. This is due to Olivia de Havilland's performance. She opens up hard and defensive. However, as To Each His Own continues, we see how Jody was playful, flirtatious and fun. She has great rapport with Griff Barnett as her father Daniel. "Don't let them wait too long", he advises his only child. "What started out as love might wind up as diabetes". De Havilland and Lund have a great scene when he tells her about the reality and danger of flying. Throughout the film, de Havilland makes Jody into someone who loves deeply but not well. Her final scene will be deeply moving to the viewer.
Gregory and Liz are desperate to get married before he goes off to battle again. Unfortunately, his pass gives him no time to fulfill the 15-day waiting period for a marriage license. At the swanky nightclub that Lord Desham takes Jody, Greg and Liz to, His Lordship surprises them with someone ready to marry Greg and Liz. He has used his influence to get Greg and Liz an exemption. This has already moved Jody. However, at the impromptu wedding dance, Gregory asks Jody to dance. It will be hard not to shed at least one tear at this moment.
To Each His Own has many strong performances. I was surprised at how I did not dislike John Lund given that I find him generally stiff and dull. To be fair, his dual roles do not ask much of him. However, he handled both roles well. Mary Anderson was spared from playing the wicked woman stealing Jody's baby. She was at times unsympathetic to downright nasty. However, she was also given moments of tragedy, such as when she is vaguely aware that her own baby had died.
I find it tragic that To Each His Own and Olivia de Havilland's Oscar-winning performance have pretty much been forgotten. It is a terrible shame given that To Each His Own is a solid melodrama. It also went probably further in pushing against the Hays Code than I think has been recognized. A film that should be better known, To Each His Own is one that I think audiences will remember if they ever get a chance to see it.
Thursday, November 6, 2025
With Love, Meghan Episode Eight: Feels Like Home
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Christy: A Review
CHRISTY
When going to a biographical film, more often than not, the viewer knows the subject. I think that many people might not know who Christy Martin, the subject of Christy, is. That will actually work in the viewers' favor. Christy is a well-acted and based film, one that will move the audience.
Christy Salters (Sydney Sweeney) has a humdrum life in West Virginia. She lives with her mother Joyce (Merritt Wever), her father Johnny (Ethan Embry) and her brother Randy (Coleman Pedigo). Almost as a lark, Christy boxes in a local tournament for the small cash prize. She finds that she is a natural boxer and enjoys it, if only as an offbeat hobby.
Her skills soon attract the attention of boxing promoters. They think Christy can be both a breakout star and bring female boxing to the mainstream. They bring her to trainer Jim Martin (Ben Foster). He is efficient. He is cold towards the idea of training a woman. He is also drawn to Christy, enough to propose marriage. He also is fervently against Christy having same-sex relationships.
A few years later, the now Christy Martin continues to trudge on in her boxing career. Jim takes her money and despite endless promises still cannot get her to meet boxing impresario Don King. He also essentially pimps her out to men to box with as a way to get extra cash. Their hand-to-mouth existence finally breaks when others arrange for Don King (Chad Coleman) and Christy to meet. Only in America can a female boxer get signed by such a legendary figure, the first woman King promotes. Christy, who has a trademark look of wearing pink in the ring, now becomes boxing's "the Coal Miner's Daughter".
Christy's professional career goes from strength to strength. Soon, money is coming in. Unfortunately, the hold that Jim has over Christy does not shrink. He grows more controlling and abusive, at least once physically. He also goads her into making comments about her lack of pay. This does not sit well with King, who warns her never to complain publicly about her purses again.
As times goes by, Christy finds it harder and harder to stay on top. She is the rare female fighter who did not form a career as a boxing legend's daughter. She has a bout scheduled with Laila Ali (Naomi Graham), daughter of the Mohammed Ali. This is an insane fight, as Laila is not just taller but younger. Despite her misgivings, Christy goes forth to poor results. Things only get worse when Jim finally crosses the line from merely controlling and into murderous. Will Christy overcome the horrifying attack on her life? Will Lisa Holewyne (Katy O'Brien), a former rival, help her make a comeback?
Sydney Sweeney has built a career almost if not exclusively on her looks. She is a buxom woman who as of now has not been considered a legitimate actress. Christy is Sweeney's first strong effort to downplay her beauty and have us focus on her performance. To coin a phrase, you've come a long way, baby.
Sydney Sweeney gives an incredibly strong performance as Christy Martin. She has a soft manner and vague West Virginia twang that lets the viewer focus on Christy. Even the times when Christy is cocky, she still has a charm to her that is endearing. Sweeney has made great strides in showcasing that she can actually act and is not just a voluptuous beauty. One feels for Christy: her joy, her frustrations, her fears.
The attempted murder of Christy Martin horrifies the viewer. This is because screenwriters Mirrah Foulkes and Christy's director David Michod do what good films should do. They show just enough and leave the rest to the viewers' imagination. Using one shot, we see Jim, in a rage, stab Christy. However, we do not see the knife penetrations. We see him repeatedly thrusting the knife, but the bed blocks our view. We hear Christy's yelps of pain, shock and horror. We also see the aftereffects, which will chill the viewer. I do not think that I have heard such reactions in a screening as I have with Christy.
Sydney Sweeney shows that with the right material and right direction she can turn in a strong acting performance. It takes a lot of skill to be able to stand toe-to-toe with an especially skilled actor like Ben Foster. Under makeup and padding, Foster is also almost equally unrecognizable as Jim Martin. He shows how Jim wormed his way into being Christy's controller. One can see the darkness behind the generally soft manner. He rarely raises his voice, but we see how awful Jim is towards his wife. The film effectively shows how someone who made a living out of punching others could not fight back the same way with someone as cruel and controlling as Jim.Credit should also go to the supporting cast. Merritt Wever exudes antipathy as Joyce. She is harsh, judgmental and unsympathetic. After her daughter is almost murdered by Jim, Joyce orders Christy's female friend out of the room (Christy is unconscious at the time). Later, when Christy asks where her friend is, Joyce in a faux-caring voice says that she told her to leave. Joyce's disapproval of Christy's lesbianism was greater than her daughter coming close to being violently killed.
Ethan Embry is, like Foster, unrecognizable in his small role as John. He seems to want to stay out of things until he comes close to losing his daughter. His genuine pain is well-acted. Katy O'Brien also does fine work as Christy's frenemy Lisa, a rival in the ring, a helper out of it. Though his role is small, Chad Coleman has that mixture of bravado and menace as Don King. He could be the larger-than-life figure who chuckles at the thought that Jim would have any say over him. He could also be quietly menacing, as when he tells Christy to knock off the public comments on what she makes and he takes.
The boxing scenes are well-filmed and get the viewer involved. I do not remember the music, but I do not think it intrudes into scenes.
I noted the audience reaction when watching Christy. People were involved in the story. I think I heard someone call out "BITCH!" when Joyce smugly told Christy that she ordered her potential love interest out. That kind of audience engagement is rare nowadays. I found Christy to be a well-made, well-acted film. Despite its two-hour-and-fifteen-minute runtime, one does not feel it drags.
Christy makes a strong case that behind her bust, Sydney Sweeney has great potential as an actress. Separate from that, Christy is a film that is worth the time to see.
![]() |
| Born 1968 |
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Bugonia: A Review (Review #2065)
They are among us. There are those who believe that there is life outside of our humble planet. A subset of those believers hold that these aliens are not watching us from beyond the stars. Instead, they live among us. At the very least, they built the Pyramids both in Giza and in the Yucatan among other great wonders. Bugonia takes this premise and gives us wild, funny and surprisingly tragic take on the benevolence and malevolence of these things from another world.
Teddy Gatz (Jesse Plemons) is well-versed in various conspiracy theories. His most recent one involves Auxoleth Corporation's CEO Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone). He believes that she is not a 45-year-old woman. She is, rather, an Andromedan, an extraterrestrial who is here for nefarious work on humanity. He gets his intellectually disabled cousin Don (Aidan Delbis) to kidnap Michelle when she returns to her estate.
Teddy and Don have shaved Michelle's head and coated her with antihistamine cream to prevent her from contacting the mothership. Teddy's plan is to use Michelle as a bargaining chip with the Andromedan Emperor who will be coming in four days' time. Teddy insists that Michelle take Teddy and Don onto the mothership to negotiate for humanity. Michelle, finding all of this bonkers, insists that she is not an alien. She also reminds them that due to her position, a major manhunt will take place to find her.
As Bugonia continues, the audience finds many mysteries and layers to the story. Auxoleth, a pharmaceutical corporation, has treated Teddy's mother Sandy (Alicia Silverstone) for her addictions. The drug tests, unfortunately, left Sandy in a comatose state. Teddy works as a packer for Auxoleth, where he secretly delights in seeing news reports of Michelle's disappearance. Michelle soon matches wits with both Teddy and Don.
Teddy soon comes to the conclusion that Michelle is not a mere Andromedan functionary but a member of the Andromedan Royal Family. This grants her some limited privileges, but it still puts her in danger. As the date of the lunar eclipse comes closer, who will win out in this struggle? Will bumbling sheriff Casey (Stavros Halkios), Teddy's former babysitter who probably abused him as a child, stumble upon the truth? Will Michelle manipulate Teddy into literally murdering Sandy albeit unintentionally? Is Michelle what she appears to be? More wild turns take place until the lunar eclipse comes upon Earth. In the end, we are left to ask Where Have All the Flowers Gone? with no one left to answer.
Bugonia is a remake of the South Korean film Save the Green Planet! which I have not seen. Will Tracy's screen adaptation manages to work well in keeping the story going with one turn after another. The film spends the first part giving us Teddy's beliefs and methodical manner in planning this alien abduction. As Bugonia continues, we see how Teddy became so apparently unhinged. He at one point tells Michelle that he has shifted in conspiratorial worldviews. He has gone from alt-right to Marxist beliefs in an apparent attempt to find the truth. We also learn of the various tragedies that have befallen Teddy. His mother is in a coma resulting from Auxoleth's actions. Casey, though not overtly saying so, asks Teddy for forgiveness for what Casey did to him when Teddy was a child.
As such, Bugonia makes a strong case that Teddy's actions and thinking are a result of the various traumas that he has suffered. This is carried by Jesse Plemons' performance. Rarely does Plemons behave as a nutter. For the most part, he is eerily calm and rational for a man whose actions are anything but. There are a few times when his emotions get the best of him. Of particular note is when he becomes violently murderous towards Michelle. His eccentric calmness makes this already frightening scene more effective. His mix of tears and terror when he is attempting to save his mother is a highlight of Plemons' performance.
He is more than matched by Emma Stone. She runs the gamut of emotions. Michelle is many things. She is insincere and prickly in her efforts to make a promotional video. She is removed when first realizing that she has been abducted. We see her briefly via surveillance cameras break down emotionally. Michelle can be curt, pleading, dismissive and ultimately distressed at the end result of the human experience. Stone gives us a sense of tragedy about the human condition.Aidan Delbis and Stavros Halkias did well in their smaller roles. While I would not call them standout performances, both of them were efficient. At certain points, the relationship between Teddy and Don felt reminiscent of the Lenny and George relationship in Of Mice and Men. I do not know if that was intentional or not. I think Halkias was the weakest performance. He seemed nervous in Bugonia, as if he was unsure about his abilities to act. While I grant that Casey tiptoeing around his probable child abuse of Teddy is uncomfortable, he felt pretty much that way even at the end.
As a side note, I was surprised by how relatively small the cast was. It is mainly four people: Teddy, Michelle, Dan and Casey. While there are other characters, they are pretty much irrelevant to the story.
One thing that did surprise me was how sometimes Bugonia was funny. The bumbling abduction and Teddy's final moments were amusing even if the latter was a bit grisly. I would put it down to how director Yorgos Lanthimos filmed it. Credit should also be given to how Lanthimos and Tracy kept the audience in suspense as to where the truth stood. I do not think that what might be a twist turns out the way it did is shocking. At least it was, at least within Bugonia, not totally out of left field.
The film also has a strong Jerskin Fendrix score that keeps to the eccentric tone of Bugonia (no pun intended).
I would quibble with a few elements. While Robbie Ryan's cinematography was strong, I think shifting from color to black-and-white was a bit much. I also question how Teddy's past adventures with Andromedans came to be.
Overall, though, Bugonia is a strong and at times amusing film. There is something of a tragic element to it when it comes to the foolishness of man. It does play with eccentric ideas of alien involvement when it comes to us Tellurians. Strong performances from Jesse Plemons and Emma Stone elevate Bugonia. When will they ever learn? That, sadly, remains to be seen.
Sunday, November 2, 2025
Frankenstein: The True Story. The Television Miniseries
I think the best performance is from Jane Seymour. She had to play two parts. She was first the innocent and sweet Agatha, caught up in an unintentional tragedy. She later had to be Prima, the female creature. She was excellent as the villainous Prima, mocking everyone around her. Her failed efforts at seducing Victor. Her simulation of pregnancy, ridiculing Elizabeth. Seymour had to make the smallest gesture with her face or lip to convey false innocence. It is almost to where one feels for her gruesome end.























