The Water Diviner is an Australian historical war drama, which is directed by Russell Crowe. Crowe also plays the lead role of Joshua Connor, an Australian farmer, […]
Tag: movie review
The Longest Ride Review
If you’re a fan of Nicholas Sparks, you’ve liked read all of his books and have taken the time to sit through all of the movie adaptations. […]
The World Made Straight Review
The World Made Straight is a 2015 drama, which is set in the Appalachian mountains. The film boasts some fairly big stars, including The Sixth Sense’s Haley […]
50 Shades of Grey Movie Review
The 50 Shades of Grey movie is based on the book of the same name. The movie follows Anastasia Steele (Dakota Johnson), a literature student, who faces […]
In a Town This Size Review
In A Town This Size is a documentary that debuted in 2011. It is based on the little town of Bartlesville, Oklahoma and the serial, child molester, […]
A Good Marriage Review
A Good Marriage is a thriller film that debuted October 3, 2014 in the United States. When the film opens, Robert “Bob” Anderson (Anthony LaPaglia) and his wife, Darcy (Joan Allen), are celebrating their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. After the party they retire to their bedroom, where they follow-up with their very own private celebration. Petra tries to convince Bob into letting her buy him the 1955 lost penny. Darcy and Bob see their daughter, Petra (Kristen Connelly), and her friend off on a trip, then Bob leaves to continue his work an antique, coin collector. That night Darcy is watching television, when someone knocks on the door, which she does not answer. She is searching through the garage, when she finds Bob’s porn magazines and a little pink box that Petra had given him, which contains the word “DAD” on it, with a lady’s photo identification card inside. She becomes frantic and puts it back where she found it. The phone rings and it is none other than Bob. The television is previewing the New Hampshire serial killer case, which has claimed the lives of a dozen victims. Darcy has suspicions that Bob may be the serial killer and decides to do her own investigation on the Internet. She finds photos of all the victims and one of them is wearing the same pair of earrings that Bob gave Petra as an anniversary gift the night before. Petra has trouble sleeping, after she discovers Bob’s little secret and decides to take a sleeping pill. She becomes delusional and imagines that Bob knows she is on to him. Bob is at a diner, when he sees a beautiful woman putting on her lipstick. He follows her, when she leaves. That night he returns home to question Petra about why she is so upset. He also knows that she has discovered his secret hiding place. Bob convinces Darcy to forget about his little secret because a divorce would ruin their kids. Darcy goes to sleep and wakes up to discover that she had a night terror, which Bob was strangling her. She looks around the house for Bob, but cannot seem to find him. Bob returns home that evening only to pretend like everything was as usual and he was not a killer. Darcy makes him promise that he will never kill again and they would never speak about it again, he readily agrees and also promises to bury Mrs. Margie Duvall’s I.D. card. Petra calls Darcy only to complain about her upcoming wedding arrangements, while Bob is happily digging away in the garden and planting flowers. Darcy goes to have dinner with her friend, Betty Pike (Cara Buono), only to return home to see the update of the serial killer, Beadie on the television. He has now claimed the life of another woman from Portsmouth, which just happened to be, where Bob had attended a coin show that same day. Darcy and Bob attend Petra’s wedding and act as if nothing is going on between them. Darcy continues to have delusional thoughts and dreams about Bob’s killing spree. Bob, just happens to find the long lost 1955 penny and they decide to go out and celebrate. She tells Bob that she will be waiting on him upstairs, but she waits until he ascends the stairs and knocks him over the top bannisters. He just so happens to still be alive and she finishes him off by suffocation, then she cleans up the crime scene, before she calls 911. After the funeral, Darcy is approached by Holt Ramsey (Stephen Lang), who claims to be a detective. He tells her that Beadie stands for Bob and Darcy’s first initial in their names. Darcy visits Holt in the hospital and tells him about Bob’s secret. He tells her that he approves of her decision to kill Bob. Will Darcy be able to live guilt-free after killing Bob and will Holt take her secret to his grave with him or will he turn her into the authorities? Review A Good Marriage is rated as a thriller film, but there is truly nothing suspenseful to the story line. At the beginning of the film maybe, but after the first ten minutes, you pretty much knew what was going to happen. This Stephen King adaptation is certainly different than any I have seen and that is not to say that the film was a flop because I still enjoyed it to a point. None of the actors stood out in the film and the scenes were nothing to brag about. The only thing terrifying about the movie is the movie its self and for that I give it a 6 out of 10. ReelMockeryJay Skelton is a fan of all television shows and movies. He tries his best […]
Gimme Shelter Review
Gimme Shelter is a drama film that debuted on October 17, 2013 at the Heartland Film Festival. When the film opens, we are introduced to Agnes “Apple” Bailey (Vanessa Hudgens), who snips all of her hair off and decides to make a mad dash for freedom. She jumps into a waiting taxi, but is soon thrown out because she does not have enough money to cover the fare. She takes a Greyhound bus to her biological father’s, Tom Fitzpatrick (Brendan Frazier), house, but is soon apprehended by the cops for trespassing. Tom arrives home, just in time to save her from being taken to the police department. He feeds her and she asks him for a place to stay, until she gets a job. Tom’s wife, Joanna (Stephanie Szostak), and his kids are not so accepting of Agnes’s presence. Tom tells her that they are willing to help her, but they need to contact her social worker first. She refuses and gives them a brief history lesson on her life in the federal welfare system. She begins exhibiting signs of morning sickness. June gives her a home pregnancy test, then takes her to the a medical clinic, where it is revealed that she is indeed pregnant. While Agnes is having an ultrasound, June takes off leaving her alone. Tom is willing to help Agnes get on her feet, which Joanna agrees to, as well, but not unless she aborts the baby. June transports her to an abortion clinic, but Agnes becomes so overwhelmed, while waiting for the doctor, she runs away. She ends up on the streets all alone, cold, and hungry. She spends the night in an unlocked car, then she eats food out of a trash dumpster. She is approached by a black man in a SUV, who tries to force her into his vehicle. She hijacks the SUV, but does not get very far, before she crashes into a building. She ends up in a hospital, where she meets Father Frank McCarthy (James Earl Jones), the hospital chaplain. He gives her a pinwheel and some suggestions on how she can get help. Her abusive mother, June (Rosario Dawson), shows up to try to talk Agnes into returning back home with her, but she refuses. She agrees to go with McCarthy to an unwed, pregnant mother’s home. She is forced to share a room with Cassandra “Cassie” (Emily Meade), who likes to break the shelter’s rules. Agnes becomes upset, when she finds out that June refuses to give permission for her to stay at the shelter. The girls decide to go on a search through the home owner’s, Kathy (Ann Dowd), office where they find their personal files, which hold great details about the girl’s history. June continues to show up every so often to try and force Agnes to come back home, she even goes so far as to use physical force, but is still unsuccessful in trying to persuade her into changing her mind. During a christmas celebration Agnes places the pinwheel that Father gave her on the top of the tree. Se finds out, during an examination that she is going to have a girl. Cassie leaves the home, but not before she tries to encourage Agnes to go with her, which she politely refuses. After giving birth, Tom shows up, but she refuses to see him. She receives a letter from Hope’s father, which explains why he cannot be a part of the baby’s life. Will Agnes be able to raise her baby and live a normal life, without the interference of June? Review Gimme Shelter is an all too familiar, heartwarming story about an abused teenager, who is determined to escape the clutches of her abusive mother. I am sure that many young girls can relate this movie. Her father for some reason was not in her life, as a child, but he desperately wanted to make up for lost time by trying to help her, but time was not on their side. Too bad more people are not like Kathy, who tried desperately to help young, unwed mothers from becoming a victim of the dark world of drugs and prostitution, which is exactly what happens to young mothers that do not have any family support. Vanessa Hudgens did very well in her role, but no one else really stood out. The screenplay was well written and held my attention throughout. This film is based on a true story, which makes the story seem too good to be true. I would have liked to seen more scenes that focused on how Agnes made her way to the shelter and her struggle of living on the streets. Gimme Shelter deserves a 7.5 out of 10. ReelMockeryJay Skelton is a fan of all television shows and movies. He tries his best to […]
Jamesy Boy Review
Jamesy Boy is a biographic drama film that debuted in the United States on January 3, 2014. When the show opens, James Burns (Spencer LaFranco) is in prison. He is being beaten by a prison guard because he elbowed another inmate in the nose. Flashing back to when James’s mother, Tracy (Mary Louise Parker), is trying to convince school officials to allow James to attend their school. They do not want him there because he already holds an extensive record and is on house arrest. That night he goes to a nearby convenient store, where he runs into trouble, when a group of teenagers start stealing items from the store. The store owner thinks James is involved in the incident, which prompts him to follow the teenagers. He hangs out with them and smokes some weed, then returns home. Back to Prison, James gets into an argument with another inmate. Lieutenant Falton (James Woods) tries to teach James a lesson, about getting into fights, while being incarcerated, but it falls on deaf ears. James begins a friendship with Crystal (Rosa Salazar) and Drew (Keon Clayton), whom he met at the grocery store the night of the robbery. Tracy warns James of his reckless behavior and tells him that he needs to get his life together, before he totally fails. He ignores her pleas and still continues to dig himself deeper into the criminal world. He ends up going to Crystal’s friend, Roc (Michael Trotter), to request a job to make some quick money. James calls his mom and tells her that he is never coming back home, under any circumstances. Back in prison, James is in the shower, when he is jumped by a couple of inmates. He is severely injured, during a scuffle, but amazingly survives the incident. Falton speaks to him again about his bad choices and tries to get James to rat on the inmates, who jumped him, but he refuses. Roc gives James an important job to do, which involves robbing a drug dealer. The robbery is successful and they visit a strip club to celebrate. James has now earned his place in Roc’s gang and for now on will be known as “Jamesy”. In prison, James starts to have night terrors about the shower attack. While out in the prison yard he notices a prisoner sitting by himself and questions why no one messes with him. James attempts to make conversation with Conrad (Ving Rhames), but he tells him to “shut up”. James and Crystal stop at a convenient store, where he tries to purchase a pack of cigarettes, but the clerk, Sarah (Taissa Farmiga, American Horror Story), refuses. She eventually gives them to him because she does not want any trouble. Jamesy continues to do Roc’s bidding, but he goes father than expected every time he robs from the drug dealers. He befriends Sarah, whose dad owns the store and she prefers to work alone at night, instead of dealing with her drunken father. He begins to hang out with her and her friends. After Tracy visits James in prison, he writes poetry and gives it to Conrad. James questions him about whether or not he truly killed five people. He refuses to answer he, instead quotes a biblical verse. Conrad tells him to keep writing to block out what is going on in prison and he does exactly that. James befriends inmate Chris (Ben Rosenfield, Boardwalk Empire), who he tries to encourage to keep his mouth shut and his head down, until he gets released. James goes to Falton to ask him to put Chris in solitude for his own safety, but he refuses. He is approached by Guillermo (Taboo), who tries to provoke him into hitting him, but he sees Conrad sitting on the bleachers and decides to walk away. James becomes upset, when he finds out that the parole board denies Chris’s release, instead they increase his sentence to a total of six years. Chris hangs himself while everyone watches. James tries to stop him, but he is apprehended by one of the prison guards. He attacks Guillermo, when he is released. Conrad is repulsed by what he sees and walks away from the scene. Flashbacks to the night James and Drew are selling guns that he had stolen from a drug dealer, when the cops scoop in and arrest Crystal and Roc. Drew takes off and James ends up running to Sarah for help, but she refuses. Falton is forced to attend a committee hearing about James, while James is becoming a reckless thug in the prison yards. Conrad jumps in to prevent James from making another wrong decision. James attends the committee hearing, but refuses to try and justify his criminal actions. Will James be able to contain his anger in prison and be a model inmate or will he end up being a lifer? Review Jamesy Boy is a movie about a young man, who always chose to take the wrong road. He finally got his chance to be a normal person, when he met Sarah, but he just could not escape the cruel fate that he created for himself. Although a lot occurred, during the film, it was not played out so that it was easy to follow. I am sure that many young men and women that grew up in the hood and high crime areas can relate to James’s story. Some kids are strong enough to stay clear of gangs, while others get pulled into the gang life and end up in prison. While I feel this story is somewhat exaggerated, I still enjoyed watching it. Some great acting by Ving Rhames and Michael Trotter, but no one else really stood out. I do feel that the story would have been better with less flashbacks and more backstory into the events leading up to James ending up in prison. Jamesy Boy deserves a 6.5 out of 10. ReelMockeryJay Skelton is a fan of all television […]
Crime After Crime Review
Crime After Crime is a documentary that touches on the 2002 law that allows incarcerated domestic violence victims the right to petition the courts to reopen their cases. This film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival on July 1, 2011. Deborah Peagler Wilson was found guilty for assisting with the murder of her husband, Oliver Wilson. When Deborah met Oliver, she was just fifteen years old and a sophomore in high school. He was a charismatic, runway model for men attire and offered her the world, or so she thought. Oliver would buy Deborah whatever she wanted in the beginning of their relationship, but that was short lived. Deborah was soon forced into prostitution by Oliver because he needed money for drugs and his expensive lifestyle. Zabrina, Oliver’s sister, denied having knowledge about Deborah’s abuse, but never said that she was lying, instead said that she was most likely a closeted victim. Zabrina admitted to being a closeted victim because she was sexually abused for years by her father and uncle. Deborah goes on to explain in depth about the abuse that she sustained at the hands of Oliver. If she refused to prostitute, he would beat her with a bullwhip. The beatings escalated, when Oliver started using drugs. He tried to ease up on the beatings, when he found out that Deborah was pregnant, but that was only temporary. In 1982, Deborah got her opportunity to leave Oliver, when they were evicted from their apartment. She agreed to take their kids and move in with her mother, while he moved in with his mother. She thought that she was rid of him for good, until he started threatening and harassing her. He would show up at her mother’s house with guns trying to force Deborah to come back to him, but she continued to refuse. The cops were called and Oliver was arrested, but he was released the next day. Two Crips gang members, Ramone Sibley and Timmy, get word of Oliver and his buddies bringing guns on their turf and threatening one of their people. Ramone and Timmy strangled Oliver to death in an empty field, but Deborah denies being present. In 1983, she is charged with first degree murder and soon pleads guilty to the charges, just to avoid the death penalty. Ramone also plead guilty and was handed down a life sentence, as was Deborah. Timmy refused to admit to his guilt and soon met his fate in prison. Deborah’s daughter, Natasha, says that her father molested her, when she was just six years old. Deborah had received a seventeen thousand dollar payout from Oliver’s life insurance policy. She says that most of it went for Oliver’s funeral and burial expenses. The courts decided to use this against Deborah and called Oliver’s murder a “murder for hire”. A former gang member, Tony “deadman”, testified against Deborah. He had fallen in love with her, while she was separated from Oliver even though he had a wife and kids. She rejected him and he scornfully became the prosecution’s main witness. He wanted to back out of the deal, when he found out that Deborah would face the death penalty, but the prosecutors refused. In 2002, the California Haveas Project got word of Deborah’s case and decided to represent her pro bono. Nadia Costa and Joshua Safran fight to get Deborah freed, but the parole board denies her release in 2003 and 2004. In 2009, she is diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer. Joshua and Nadia continue to fight for her release, but the requests are still denied. Will Deborah survive her fight for release from prison and her fight for her life or will she be forced to spend the rest of her days behind bars? Review Crime After Crime is a very touching film that focuses on one woman’s fight for freedom, after being handed down a life sentence for first degree murder. This film does very well exposing the American “injustice” system. I am a big fan of exoneration documentaries and found this one, just as interesting. Although it did drag out a bit, everyone should take the time to watch it, but only if you are willing to admit that our justice system needs a complete overhaul. It is difficult to see someone fighting for his or her life behind bars and separated from their families, but it is a common occurrence in our penal system. Many prisons now have nursing home type facilities setup for the ailing prisoners and their caretakers are none other than prisoners themselves. I feel that Crime After Crime deserves a 7 out of 10. ReelMockeryJay Skelton is a fan of all television shows and movies. He tries his best […]
The Town that Dreaded Sundown Review
The Town That Dreaded Sundown is a horror film that is a sequel to the 1976 film of the same name. The newer version debuted on October 16, 2014. When the show opens, we meet couple, Jami Lerner (Addison Timlin) and Corey Holland (Spencer Treat Clark), who are at a drive-in, but decide to leave because Jamie admits that she does not like horror films. They decide to go to a Lovers Lane to get to know each other better and make out, but they are suddenly interrupted by a mad man, who makes Corey undress, before killing him with Jami watching. She becomes frightened and takes off in a mad rush, but he catches up with her very quickly. His final words to her are, “this is for Mary, make them remember”, before he lets her escape. Jami ends up in the hospital and the cops question her, about what really happened on Lover’s Lane. She is at home with her grandmother, Lillian (Veronica Cartwright), who tells her about the earlier murders, while reminding her that the movie brought the murders back to life. A young couple are in a motel room having sex. When they are done, Kendra Collins (Morganna Bridgers) sends her boyfriend, Danny (Wes Chatam), out for a vending machine snack. The phantom murders them both. Jami receives a phone call, afterwards from the phantom, who tells her that he will do it again and again, until she makes them remember. Jami decides to do a little investigating, about the sixty-six year old murders, while the town’s folks hold a meeting in the town hall. They blame the emergence of the phantom on the release of the film. Jami is escorted to the records room by Nick Strain (Travis Tope), who is a mysterious character that works at the city hall. Later, Jami meets with the media and Chief Deputy Tillman (Gary Cole). She tells them that she has received an email from the phantom, which contain threats to continue his rampage killing. Nick comes to Lillian’s home and asks Jami if she wants to go with him to a vigil that is being held in remembrance to Corey. They are at the vigil, when it is interrupted by someone dressed like the phantom. Paul Mason (Colby Boothman-Shepard) is shot, but not fatally. The news of the shooting spreads like a wildfire through the town and everyone begins to celebrate, but the happiness is short lived. Two homosexual boys are getting ready to make out in their car, when the phantom appears and once again he takes two more victims. Jami remembers the first time that she heard about the phantom, which was at a birthday party, when she was eight. Nick tries to make out with Jami, but she refuses and makes him get out of her car. The cops trace the email that Jamie received, which was supposed to have come from the phantom, but was actually from Reverend Cartwright (Edward Herrmann), who denies sending it. Nick apologizes to Jami by giving her a gift. She readily accepts his apology and gives him a quick kiss on the cheek. Meanwhile, the phantom is at it again and takes out two more victims. He leaves one victim displayed on a cross for everyone to see. Charles Pierce Jr. (Denis O’Hare) is interviewed by Jamie. He swears he owns the original phantom mask and also thinks he knows who the new phantom is, which he suggests is Hank McCreedy’s grandson. Jamie gets news from her grandmother that they are leaving for California and will be staying with her uncle. She says her goodbyes to Nick by having sex with him. Will Jamie and her grandmother make it out of town alive or will they be forced to stay in Texarkana? Who will solve the phantom mystery and find out who really did the killings? Review The Town That Dreads Sundown is more like a re-hash of the 76′ version than a sequel. The film is very dark and contains a lot of nudity, gruesome killings, and murder scenes, which kind of reminds one of the old Jason Voorhees films. Even though the film is supposed to have taken place in 2013 it still has the 70’s feel. Addison Timlin did very well in her main character role, but some did not do so well. Other actors did not master the southern accent in the film, which is hard to tolerate if you are a true southerner, as I am. I rather enjoyed watching this horror, but it could have done without some of the cheesy, vulgar dialogue that is not worth mentioning. All in all, it does deserve a 6 out of 10. ReelMockeryJay Skelton is a fan of all television shows and movies. He tries his […]