By IMP Awards, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=60365843
Brightburn - (2019)
Brightburn screws a few things up, but it's premise is so interesting that I forgive it it's missteps and try hard to pretend they don't exist. After all, it clearly defines itself as a kind of horror b-movie and has it's fair share of effective moments. The whole film is basically asking, what if Superman had grown up and been a serial killer instead of an all-around nice guy? Jackson A. Dunn is indeed a creepy kid - there are shades of Damien Thorn about him - and when we notice his character Brandon Breyer keeps weird pictures of human anatomy, organs and surgery with his jerk off material we're scared of him and disgusted. We're pretty sure Clark Kent never touched himself, let alone...
that. When Breyer, a boy from another world raised exactly the same way superman was, finds his powers, he starts doing bad things. What chance will the world have?
Whenever
Brightburn decides to do all-out horror though, it falls flat a bit. Some unimaginative CGI, and asinine ideas made me wish the film stayed away from that unnecessary aspect. Also, one aspect of the plot, that :
WARNING: spoilers below
Brandon is being ordered by his alien heritage and genes to take over the World, kind of makes every other consideration for why he's doing what he's doing moot. He has to. He was always going to.
Brandon is being ordered by his alien heritage and genes to take over the World, kind of makes every other consideration for why he's doing what he's doing moot. He has to. He was always going to.
And yet, despite that, I have such an enjoyment for this movie that I have to give it a high rating. Call it a guilty pleasure, or whatever else, but I'm still a fan. *winces in expectation of being heckled*
8/10
By http://www.teenagepaparazzo.com/the-film/, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28975078
Teenage Paparazzo - (2010)
Adrian Grenier is moderately famous, and as such he has to face the paparazzi to the 'as usual' annoying extent. But occasionally, there'd be a paparazzo that would disarm not only him, but others among the rich and glamorous - a 13 year-old boy, who had just taken it upon himself to be one. Grenier decided he'd be an interesting focus for a movie himself, and set about making this documentary.
Teenage Paparazzo takes a look at fame as a whole, and our obsession with it, from all points of view. What was interesting with this film was the changes that happened to Austin Visschedyk - the by then 14 year-old paparazzo who Genier was making the film about. He'd been interviewed by many news networks by then, and offers were pouring in for reality TV shows and other television series. Fame took an ugly hold of him, to the dismay of his family, and Grenier starts to realise he's doing serious damage here. I'll leave the conclusion for anyone interested enough to watch this. Interesting enough to be worth the time.
6.5/10