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To Leslie - (2022)
In my opinion, $190,000 is a problematic amount to win in a lottery. You could afford to buy yourself a modest house and car etc - but with little left over to simply enjoy. Of course, I don't think I'd burn through it on drink and drugs like Leslie (Andrea Riseborough) does. It's this massive fall from grace that makes
To Leslie interesting - and just as well, because I've seen my overwhelming share of redemptive alcoholic plot arcs in my lifetime. Riseborough also comes through performance-wise. It's hard watching her rejection by all those who used to love her before they were burned, after she's evicted for non-payment of rent - and this includes her son. During the film's first half we get to see just why she's being rejected - Leslie seems a hopeless case. She lies, steals and does anything she can for a drink. Like I said, we've seen it all before, but there's enough here to admire performance-wise, and I'm fascinated by those people who waste their lottery-winning fortunes, and the misery that brings them (call it lottery schadenfreude.)
7/10
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Side Effects - (2013)
This was a very interesting Steven Soderbergh film that I'd never come across before. Soderbergh seems to be an expert at sneaking films by me. The side effects from medications used to treat depression is an unusual subject to be building a psychological thriller around - and I felt just a tiny bit let down that this had a few twists and turns, sending it to familiar places. Overall though, Jude Law makes for a good psychiatrist (he'd fool me) and Catherine Zeta-Jones, Channing Tatum and Rooney Mara solidify a film that spends a good deal of time showing us what depression wreaks, how doctors promote certain pharmaceutical companies and how the justice system can be played when it comes to mental illness.
7/10
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Miss Sloane - (2016)
I love Jessica Chastain in this, and I love thrillers that involve Washington politics, corruption and heroines with intricate, impossibly brilliant plans. In this Madeline "Elizabeth" Sloane (Chastain), a lobbyist at a high-powered firm, decides to work against her own bosses when it comes to a bill which would make it harder for unbalanced people to buy guns in the U.S. - and she has her work set out for her. Mark Strong, Michael Stuhlbarg, Sam Waterston and John Lithgow round out a first-rate cast. Chastain really gives her character power, charisma and a subtle clue that doing what she does is destroying her from the inside out.
8/10
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Whip It - (2009)
This Drew Barrymore-directed coming of age "sports" film is okay, but not quite my cup of tea. I think the sport of roller derby is too complex, and the film doesn't really land on a method of showing us how points are scored, so we depend on Jimmy Fallon's commentary. I am a fan of Juliette Lewis, and I like Drew Barrymore and the guy who was once Ellen Page - and that made the film enjoyable enough. It's fun seeing such a small lady somehow get involved with such a violent sport - and while not always believable, I'd prefer it to what her mother is trying to hoist on her - beauty pageant queen. It's rowdy and fun, and seems perfect for girls and younger people.
6/10
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Adventureland - (2009)
I'm one of the few people who doesn't really like
Adventureland all that much - I think Jesse Eisenberg is more suited to Mark Zuckerberg/Lex Luthor type roles, and not romantic ones. Sit him next to Ryan Reynolds (which is exactly what this film does) and the differing sex-appeal vibes destroy his character. Perhaps my love for
The Way Way Back and other coming of age, "finds work at a theme park" movies means there was no room in my heart for
Adventureland, but I couldn't get into it without comparing it to all the other films of a similar ilk - and having an absolutely incredible soundtrack just made me feel that this film was trying to coast on the music it had selected.
5/10