Theron’s Oscar-worthy performance in ‘Tully’ is profound character study
Before that occurs, there is an unfolding domestic story that begins with wife and mother Marlo (Charlize Theron) on the verge of having her third child. (The dedicated Theron gained nearly 50 pounds for the role!) We witness her daily struggle familiar to anyone who has simultaneously dealt with late stage pregnancy, getting two youngsters off to school, trying to be a good wife, and being the proverbial chief cook and bottle washer. Factor in a mostly distant, non-helpful, arrested development husband, Drew (Ron Livingston). Then there is her kindergartener son, Jonah (Fallica), who is being expelled from school due to his behavior disorders. It is overwhelming for Marlo, and uncomfortable to witness.
Things change for the better when Marlo’s wealthy brother (Mark Duplass) hires a night nanny, Tully, to help relieve the overnight stress of getting up to feed the baby. Tully even neatens up the house and makes treats for the kids. When the baby needs feeding in the middle of the night, Tully brings the child to Marlo at bedside, happily observing the breast feeding. If this seems uncomfortably odd, it is. Yet Marlo and Tully’s bond grows increasingly close. I have to interject that Tully is not a horror movie, even though that admission might be construed as a spoiler. Aptly named ‘Rampage’ supplies gigantic thrills via wild animals gone wilder
Brad Peyton (Cats and Dogs, San Andreas) directs a screenplay (Ryan Engle, Carlton Cuse, Ryan J. Condal and Adam Sztykiel) that is based on a classic and rather cartoonish 1986 computer game series called, appropriately, Rampage. (Warner Bros. acquired the rights when it bought Midway Games.) Peyton chose to use CGI to convert the animated game look into a realistic spectacle in which a chunk of Chicago is destroyed by the U. S. Army battling giant creatures.
In the compelling opening sequence, set in the San Diego Zoo’s Wildlife Sanctuary, we see primatologist Davis Okoye (Dwayne Johnson once again typecast in a jungle-like setting) introducing some young colleagues to George, a rare, albino silverback gorilla. Okoye and George have obviously established great rapport, and communicate with each other by sign language.
Turns out that the experimentation is the nasty work of a greedy chemical corporation, located in Chicago, which sends an electronic signal to summon the three monsters to head for Windy City. Driven by his protective camaraderie for George, Okoye teams with a genetic engineer (Naomie Harris) and the head of a private military group (Joe Manganiello), as they trek to Chicago to overpower the corporate bad guy-scientists and rescue George. Gamers, pop culture fans should love virtual reality of Spielberg’s ‘Ready Player One’
Teenager Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan) lives in a pretty decrepit apartment building, one among many slum castles that dot the downtown. By this time, most of the entire world lives substandard, for reasons we never know. However, the owners of the Oasis corporation corner the riches, and rule its citizens’ escapist desires. Oasis, you see, nearly monopolizes the virtual reality market with software viewed through a VR headset. People wear their headsets at work and play to escape their grim surroundings. This is a step up (or really down) from constantly using one’s cell phone.
This also means that we, the audience, view most of the movie through what various characters are seeing through their headsets. Remember 1982’s Tron, wherein Jeff Bridges is pulled into a computer grid, and has to deal with life or death situations? Ready Player One employs 2018 state of the art graphics, which means vivid color and smooth, lifelike imagery. Now fantasy looks real. The effects are dazzling.
Enter more Easter eggs. This time they are well defined within the plot. The owner/founder of Oasis, James Halliday (Oscar winner Mark Rylance), has died, and willed his company to whoever finds the Easter eggs he has hidden somewhere in his vast VR grid. Anyone wanting to enter the race for the riches has to don a headset to find three keys before anyone else. Our hero Tye is on board as well as gamer Samantha (Olivia Cooke), and dozens more. Stacking the odds against them is the CEO of Innovative Online Industries, Nolan Sorrento (Ben Mendelssohn), who desperately wants to take over Oasis. There we have the central conflict. The predictable plot of typical good guy vs bad guy is handled well.At least that’s something.
‘Black Panther’ visually stuns, but suffers style over substance shortcomings
But for this Rotten Tomatoes critic, Panther turns out to be a mere puddy tat. I truly hate to say such, since I had hoped for so much more than what was delivered. The loyal fan base will no doubt think otherwise.
Based on the popular Marvel comic book character, which in 1966 led the way as the first superhero of African descent in comics, Black Panther is culturally important. Admittedly, I have never read the comic book, so this movie version is my introduction. The comic book’s legion of followers had the edge on me before the film even began. They knew the backstory. I did not. That meant relying solely on the movie to grasp the mystique of T’Challa, Black Panther’s not-so-secret ID.
Black Panther. The drink also gives him cat-like acrobatic abilities. Those attributes are well displayed in an early-on, exciting car chase sequence. The storyline covers T’Challa’s regal lineage in Africa. He heeds his call, and assumes his royal role. Streep, Hanks lead powerhouse cast in solid, fact-based drama, ‘The Post’
Widowed for several years, Graham had no experience in managing a newspaper by 1971. Her late husband, Philip, had tightly helmed The Post for years, leaving her as basically a wifely hostess at cocktail parties. At his passing, she was besieged by company board members and attorneys to relegate her newly inherited power to them. And Graham did so for several years, until Bradlee presses her to publish excerpts from 4,000-plus pages of stolen Defense Department documents aka United States—Vietnam Relations, 1945-67: A Study Prepared by the Department of Defense. Her lawyers warn her of lawsuits by the federal government and the resulting demise of The Post. It is no secret that eventually Graham chose to go to press—at great risk. The Post published the documents in a series of articles.
The ensuing drama is reminiscent of the 1976 movie, All the President’s Men, and there is an overlap here since Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein worked at The Washington Post. (They are not depicted in this film, however.) We hear actual recordings of Nixon talking about The Post as he is supposedly shown in silhouette at his Oval Office window.
But the cinematic takeaway here is a combination of the factual story, the superb supporting cast (Sarah Paulsen, Bob Odenkirk, Carrie Coon, and Tracy Letts among them), and the film’s powerhouse leads, Streep and Hanks. Streep, particularly, gives a nuanced performance that becomes less subtle by the third act.
Her Kay Graham is a lady used to being subservient in a male dominated world. Graham helped change that reality, making The Post a film more than just a recounting of The First Amendment applied to a scandalously unpopular war. Its timeliness serves as a link to today’s Me Too and Time’s Up movements.




















