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Maria Full of Grace - (2004)
Full of impressive realism and taut dramatic tension,
Maria Full of Grace tells us a story of one woman's transformation from flower plantation worker to Columbian drug mule in a brutal and faithful fashion. This is a film that had me up out of my seat and pacing, and at several instances I had to implore main character Maria Álvarez (Catalina Sandino Moreno) to simply be smart. This is a lady that makes quite a few bad decisions and some terrible life choices - but in the end it's the economic reality of living day to day in Columbia that sends many along this path. Maria constantly courts disaster, and through her ordeal we get to learn all the varied ways Columbian drug smugglers use mules to slip drugs through into the U.S. and the various ways these runs can go bad - but most of all this is about Maria's emotional journey, and the various horrors she submits to for a life-changing paycheck. A real surprise for me, and very much a recommendation for those who haven't seen it.
8/10
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The Wild Geese - (1978)
Combination war film and action movie,
The Wild Geese continued the tradition of
The Guns of Navarone and other adventure-filled film star vehicles. Here we have a squad of geriatric mercenaries with Roger Moore, Richard Burton, Richard Harris and Hardy Krüger banding together to rescue Julius Limbani, fictitious president of a Southern African nation. We get to see an expert military operation that runs flawlessly, and then an improvised disaster as the four men and their 49 hired guns are double-crossed by the wealthy magnate who hired them. I've always thought this film was fun - especially with those four heavyweights together in one movie. The messaging is a bit mixed and garbled, and Krüger's racist character undergoes a change of heart that's both touching and a little ridiculous, so you have to forgive it it's foibles to really enjoy it. You can't deny though that it's well made, and as a whole works really well.
7/10
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Splash - (1984)
Studio comedies were a staple of the 1980s, and Ron Howard cut his directing teeth on a few of these popular yet empty vehicles. They don't age well either. I don't think I'd ever seen
Splash before, or if I had I probably saw it when it came out, nearly 40 years ago, so you can forgive me if I remembered none of it. Not much of it was worth remembering, apart from an early look at Eugene Levy. I don't think Tom Hanks had really grasped what he needed to do to be likeable either, and in this even his talent for comedy never stood a chance with a D.O.A. screenplay. Daryl Hannah is lovely and charms thoroughly though, and John Candy gives it everything, making me miss him still. A real mixed bag - I feel bad for saying negative things about it, but as a comedy it's simply so bereft of laughs.
5/10