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ADMR – Killers of the Flower Moon is a gorgeous wiff – 2.5/5

Killers of the Flower Moon Movie PosterKillers of the Flower Moon is dark, man

The Average Dude has to admit that I dragged my feet a bit on seeing this movie. Was it the daunting 3.5 hour runtime? Nah, there are superlong movies that the AD loves (Titanic, Return of the King, Endgame). Was it the casting? C’mon, man…DeCaprio and DeNiro. Was it the subject matter? Ah, maybe, a bit. Not that I dislike native americans. Hard to believe but the Average Dude actually has enough native american blood in my veins to qualify to live on the reservation. But if I’m totally honest, there is seriously enough tragedy, skuldugerry and straight out evil in the current day and age that purposefully spending my movie time on more of the same just isn’t appealing. And combining that with an insanely long runtime…well…you get it.

De and De, together again

But because I love doing this so much I knew that I would inevitably do the deed, grab my corn and duds and slide into the pleather recliner (before the coming attractions because Average Dude LOVES the previews) and fade out of the current mud and into the mud of Killers of the Flower Moon. Labors of love are not all sunshine and skittles. Important lesson there.

I might have had a birthday waiting for this movie to end

No way to sugarcoat it…this movie was way too long. Why was Killers of the Flower Moon too long where Lord of the Rings wasn’t? This might get me some unkind responses, but here goes: Martin Scorsese has done everything in the movie industry that a man can do and has earned every accolade. Total legend. Can anyone really blame him if he wants to do a piece that is for himself more than for the viewer? Yeah, we can. But he’s earned the right to do this, too. And that’s what this movie feels like. Killers of the Flower Moon was a movie that Scorsese has wanted to do for a long time. Clearly he put a lot of love into it. Too much love, IMO.

Lilly Gladstone crushing it

The cinematography on Killers of the Flower Moon was top notch, the costumes and sets were amazing. The performances by De x2 (see what I did there?) were excellent as usual, and Lilly Gladstone was Oscar-worthy. I think the failing of this movie (and ultimately, the director) is the writing. Yes, it depicted a very cruel, greedy, amoral time in America’s history with honest, gritty realism. The rub is that it wasn’t depicted equally across the board. Killers of the Flower Moon felt like 3 hours of white on red evil. It depicted the bigotry, jealousy and greed of white people with great clarity. However, the Osage were portrayed as predominantly noble peoples who just wanted to live their lives and enjoy the good fortune that the oil beneath their lands afforded them. And I just don’t think that is an honest portrayal.

Mud on a legend

Killers of the Flower Moon briefly touched on the snare of suddenly injecting great wealth into a poor community. The detrimental excesses to that community would be widespread, exascerbating tensions for both white and Osage alike. There is a real depth of story there that Scorsese wiffed on. Fair or unfair, the wiff feels like it was on purpose, which makes me lose some trust and faith in Scorsese. I might be assigning current Hollywood sensibilities to Scorsese but we can hardly be blamed for that. Taking into account the temperature of society is their job. Too many writers, actors and directors feel they need to tell us how we should feel instead of creating something that appeals to how we actually do feel. And that’s a problem for all of us.

In the same vein, the range of detestable emotions that festered in the white society as they stole, swindled and grifted as much of the Osage wealth as they possibly could was barely mined. Greed overrode vanity as they became servants, drivers or common bootlickers of the people they saw as inferiors, and the internal conflicts of those opposing forces should have been a much bigger part of this movie. Yet, it was used almost as a backdrop for telling the story of Earnest Burkhart and William Hale. Wiff.

Apologies to Mr Scorsese, but…

Not all legends are good

It’s not that the Average Dude doesn’t like a good bio-pic. I do. Ron Howard’s Cinderella Man (2 h 24 m so, not a short one, either) is probably my favorite sports movie (move over, Major League). A Beautiful Mind, Schindler’s List or even Scorsese’s own Raging Bull…all top shelf in my book. So no, that’s not what brings this movie down. At the end of the day, I think it just might be that Scorsese so very much wanted to tell a tragic story that should have been told a hundred years ago but wasn’t. And in the final analysis, probably doesn’t add anything good to the world by telling it now. If feels like it’s just another Hollywood elite telling America that it is bad. And in the telling, somehow separating themselves even further from the unwashed masses. Maybe that’s too harsh, maybe not. I’m open to hearing differently, as always.

What did I like about Killers of the Flower Moon? Visually, it was fantastic, I think I mentioned that. Likewise the actors, across the board. I love it when a director cameos in their movies a la Hitchcock. And to be fair, this movie has Oscar written all over it. I’m not sure that is a compliment, though. To find a movie that won Best Picture that was widely, overwhelmingly considered the Best Picture by audiences of every demographic, you just might need to go back two decades to Return of the King. Not that movies like Slumdog Millionaire weren’t amazing. I mean a movie that appealed to almost everyone, not just the artsy elitests. I’m talking about a genuine crowd-pleaser like Gladiator.

So, with all due respect to Mr Scorsese, I’m giving Killers of the Flower Moon* (an artsy name if ever there was one) a 2.5/5. Are you not entertained?

*worth a note, I couldn’t quite remember the name of this movie as I asked for my ticket. The theater attendant finished the name for me. He had to do the same for the fellow behind me. Apparently, the name isn’t resonating with a lot of us Average Non-Artsy types. Food for thought.

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ADMR – Daryl Dixon Season 1 finally jumps the shark…and I’m totally fine with it 3.5/5

Daryl Dixon Season 1
Walking Dead Primer

Okay, I’ve mentioned it before…the Average Dude’s wife has become a total zombie-fan, and I only have myself to blame. See, I introduced her to The Walking Dead just about a year ago. Since that time we’ve journeyed through 11 seasons of TWD, Fear TWD, Tales of TWD, World Beyond and now…Daryl Dixon (*note – and we both eagerly await The Ones Who Live, the Rick and Michone spinoff). That is a LOT of zombies. I will occassionally stay up after she goes to bed and watch Lower Decks just to cleanse my mental palate.

Zombies…its science!

Daryl the BA
As mentioned, Daryl Dixon is the eleventy skillionth spinoff to the amazing Walking Dead journey. Sure, I know that TWD was probably 2 or 3 seasons too long and we were all kind of ready for humanity to outlive the zombies which just kept unliving in massive herds with nothing to gnosh on, but whatevs. We all pretty much decided to suspend all disbelief when we accepted that the zoms could see, hear, think, ambulate and use their vocal chords to make raspy growls all without the benefit of a working circulatory system.

To be honest, the shock and horror aspects of TWD had pretty much worn off by the end of season 2. What captivated us was the sociological element of the show, which was infinitely more entertaining and, at times, repulsive than rotting corpses hell-bent on chowing down (without a digestive system).

TWD, the Early Days

One of the biggest draws to TWD was knowing that your favorite character could – and probably would – die at any moment. We tuned in to make sure that everyone we had grown to love were still upright, still taking nourishment (and not…you know… BECOMING nourishment…I guess…). My friends and I actually had a pool going on called Next One Dead. A little dark but whatevs. Monday morning we all commiserated at the coffee pot as someone’s emotional avatar bit it. It was both bonding and cathartic.

There were, of course, a precious few characters that would forever be immune to dying, lest the masses revolt and the show tank. Rick Grimes, the titular leader and soul of the post-zompocalypse world. Carol, for reasons I never really understood but accepted anyway. And then there’s Daryl (not to be confused with the other brother Daryl. There’s your obligatory Daryl joke. Lets move on). Daryl Dixon, maybe even moreso than Rick, is beloved by all. Certainly worthy of his own spinoff.

Daryl Dixon is Batman…sort of

Daryl and the other brother Merle
The legend that is Daryl Dixon grew from humble beginnings. His brother Merle (played by the awesome Michael Rooker) was an abusive, bigoted drug abuser, dealer and possum-eater. Short on ethics but long on survival skills. He was an alpha male in the most primal sense (so, not the good kind). And he was intentionally hard on his little brother. Partly because he wanted to make his little brother tough, partly because he was a sadistic douche-hammer. Many of those fine qualities he imparted to Daryl.

But in spite of (or possibly because of) that role model, the intrinsic good guy bad @$$ at his core emerged. In a world where only the hard would survive, Daryl Dixon absolutely became the hero everyone needed. And if he ever got dined up on by the undead, there would be rioting in the streets.

Daryl Dixon goes international

Fast forward to episode 1 of the Daryl Dixon solo adventures. We find DD afloat on the wreckage of a boat, washing up on unfamiliar shores. Within a short time he discovers road signs in French. Daryl has somehow and against all logical odds found himself on a right European holiday. The how of it will be (hopefully) explained during the course of the series.

And now…the shark

Here is where things get interesting. Daryl quickly learns that the European version of walkers have a dangerous new feature. Not only are there the ‘climbers’ (first seen in season 10 or 11 of TWD) but there now appear to be ‘burners’, whose internal goo is acid that burns human skin. Why doesn’t the zombie-goo burn the skin of the zombie? No clue but we are jumping the shark so we are going with it. And the upgrades don’t stop there. It looks like the tribal, tin potentate warlords that always sprout up when society implodes have created a drug that turns average zombies into uber-zombies. The zombies 2.5 are rageful and even more powerful than your standard undead.

*Note: The standard zombies seemed able to shred human skin to find the crimson treasure inside with superhuman ease. I’m waiting to see if the 2.5 version can actually leap tall buildings in a single bound. The point is, the price of survival just went up. That’s inflation, I guess.

Daryl Dixon is also Snake Plissken

Daryl and Snake
Clearly, the writers of TWD ran out of compelling storylines and have switched gears for the Daryl Dixon series. And I’m totally fine with it. Sure, it’s over the top. Way over the top. But we still love Daryl and are not ready to say goodbye. This new series is no longer a study in sociology, it’s now a full-blown sci-fi epic. It was surprisingly easy to slip from one model to the next. Watching DD stab, skewer and swing a morningstar (SOOO cool) in tunnels, castle ruins or dead of night is less cerebral but no less satisfying.

Daryl Dixon Season 2 has already been greenlit and the final episode of season 1 has set the stage for what looks to be a 5 star kick@$$ ride that I for one am really psyched to watch. I’m giving Daryl Dixon Season 1 a 3.5 (knocking off .5 because reading subtitles gets tiresome) and am expecting Season 2 to be even better. And Mrs Average Dude can stave off her zombie withdrawals a little while longer. Makes me happy.

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ADMR – Ahsoka feels like a monumental waste of time – 2/5

Ahsoka

This week’s review is for the first season of Ahsoka (Disney +) But first:

The Average Dude claims to be a movie aficionado. It’s a bold claim that I’ll explain. Someday. Anyway, there’s a lot of content out there, more than any single person could consume, even if they spent their entire life with face in screen. Average Dude has a balanced life. I spend time with my family and friends. I play a variety of sports whenever I can. I watch football all day on Sunday. So no…I don’t spend all my time in the mancave or at my local viewhaus. I am judicious in my choice of what to watch. I have to be.

So saying, I have made time to watch all of the Star Wars content coming out on Disney +. Strike that…all the ‘live action’ Star Wars content. That would be Mandalorian, Book of Boba Fett, Obiwan Kenobi and now the latest offering, Ahsoka. I have not watched the animated Star Wars shows. I could name a few off the top of my head, but a quick Google search showed me just how much there is. And that’s where the problems with Ahsoka begin…

It’s all just too much

Going into Ahsoka, I had a vague knowledge of who she was. I’ve seen her around. She was a jedi that survived Order 66 – the extermination of all Jedi. She had a cool look about her (somebody tell me if those things on her head are actual hair? Tentacles? Does it have a purpose other than looking tribal and cool? Thanks in advance). And when she popped up in the Mandalorian, I was like ‘Okay, this might be cool’. But it wasn’t. It was confusing. And annoying.

Just keeping it real with you

Why was Ahsoka confusing, you might ask? To put it bluntly, it pretty much assumes a deeper knowledge that I do not possess. From the very start, Ahsoka drops characters on us that clearly had a history together. Friendly, adversarial, romantic maybe? It’s all so unclear. What is very clear is that Ahsoka main man Dave Filoni made a series for people who were already invested. And you can all see the inherent problem. How is this supposed to get new viewers – or even the non-new but also not fanatical viewer to be excited for the next episode? It just. Doesn’t. Work.

Dark Side and Friends

You’re all probably saying ‘ I get you, Average Dude. But could we just go and watch the other required viewing and get a better appreciation of the Ahsoka series?’ You could, sure. I personally don’t have that kind of time nor a compelling reason to dig deeper. Which brings me to the second point…

Who’s writing this stuff?

Bohssoka
From the very first episode right through to the last, Ahsoka walked through her scenes with an aloofness and disconnect that bordered on disdain. The way she dealt with everyone and every circumstance exuded a sense of superiority that really put me off. I dont recall much of any range of emotion from her. ‘But Average Dude, the jedi are trained to beware their emotions, lest they control them and open the door for the dark side!’ Okay, sure. But not reject them all like Vulcans. Jedi were okay with love, joy, laughter…widely respected as positive emotions. But not Ahsoka. She was really a one-note character and it was hard to like her, bad@$$ or not.

Am I Blue Dark Side and Friends

Space witches power

And it wasn’t just Ahsoka. Every character seemed to have undergone the Vulcan ceremony of kolinahr (I know I’m mixing space sagas here) and purged all emotions. Grand Admiral Thrawn was as monotone and cold as his blue exterior. Baylan Skoll and his apprentice Shin Hati were of the Dark Side and still showed no emotion. And don’t even get me started on the whole space-witches thing. What the literal, ever-loving shite? Sorry. I’m letting my emotions control me. I don’t give a nanu-nanu.

Nanu Nanu
Girl Bosses unite!

I may be asking for a shite-storm for this, but I think it might be worth mentioning that there seemed to be only three men in any kind of staring roll. The aforementioned Thrawn and Baylan Skoll. Add to that list Ezra Bridger, a dude that the good guys were looking for because…? That part had to be included in the cartoons because I have no earthly idea why. That’s about it, though. Oh, there’s also an episode where a dead Ahsoka does battle with a dead Anakin Skywalker because I guess that’s what happens in the jedi afterlife.

The Jedi Afterlife

My point being that Disney appears to be making a conscious effort to emphasise strong female characters and minimize strong male characters. Now, when the Force and space witches are added to the equation, the debate of whether a girl can physically compete with a man is moot, I get that. But it still begs the question of ‘why do it in the first place?’ If you’re going to tell me it’s to bring in more female viewers, you have to bring me all the receipts. My best guess is that Star Wars is still a male dominated fanbase. Did Rey Skywalker significantly tip the scales? Does Ahsoka? How many male viewers have become uninterested (like the Avereage Dude)? Valid questions.

Rock on, Lucy Maclane

Winstead
Ahsoka wasn’t without its good points. Mary Elizabeth Winstead was one of those. MEW played Rebel General Hera Syndulla. I dug her in Scott Pilgrim vs the World and Live Free or Die Hard (both strong female roles, thank you). Also, the CGI was excellent per usual (Boba Fett’s space Vespa thugs excepted). I might deduct a point because some of the lightsaber choreography was stiff (IMO).

At the end of the day, I’m giving Ahsoka a 2/5 but I’m still hopeful. The Star Wars universe is vast. With the proper writing and directing, it could be magical again. I’ll pop in for season 2 and see if they’ve righted the starship. If not, there’s always something else on.

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ADMR – The Creator was a disappointment that could have easily been a smash hit – 3/5

The Creator Movie Poster

The Creator – Darn that eternal optimist in me

If any of you follow my reviews you probably figured out that I try to be an optimist, realist and truth-seeker. Those things often seem to be irreconcilable these days. It helps to be an over-thinker. So when I saw the amazing previews for The Creator I leaned over to Mrs Average Dude and whispered ‘I’m IN’. I was excited about this movie that seemed to have a spark of originality and some amazing special effects. When, oh when, will I ever learn to temper my expectations. That’s rhetorical. The answer is never. I will never learn.

The Creator was directed by Gareth Edwards, a veteran of grand scale sci-fi movies (Rogue One, Godzilla, The Last Jedi). I loved Rogue One, but Godzilla could have been a lot better. And don’t even get me started on The Last Jedi. So much evidence to the contrary, I still had hope that Edwards was trending in the right direction.

Still waiting for Frisbee: the movie

I’ve long opined that there is really nothing new coming out of Hollywood. Receipts: when they make movies out of the childhood favorite games Battleship (c’mon, man!) and Rock Em Sock Em Robots (Real Steel, which I actually liked a lot) you can’t be faulted for coming to that conclusion. And even though The Creator kind of parallels the movie ‘A.I.’ (an under-rated Spielberg piece) it still felt like a story angle that had not been beaten to death. Maybe it’s more fair to say that it combined elements of A.I./Terminator/The Matrix and then added a dash of Platoon/Commando/Apocalypse Now. Point is, there were a lot of ingredients going into this sci-fi gumbo. And, as I’ve learned, sometimes a good gumbo can be a bit overwhelming.

I’m kind of at a loss to explain why The Creator didn’t quite work. My best analysis says that it had so much really awesome CGI and special effects that it had to sacrifice too much human character development. Or cyborg character development. But it’s more than that. It feels like the message of this movie is that AI Life Matters, which I’m not afraid to say might be the biggest WTF moment since…well, don’t get me started on that, either. Unsure if Edwards truly believes that or if he just found a new MacGuffin. If it was the latter, bravo. That’s some out of the box thinking. If it’s the former…seek help.

A parallel of downfalls

One of the parallels of The Creator and A.I. is that they both wanted to be kind of artsy-fartsy. I like a good artsy-fartsy movie, don’t get me wrong. But sci-fi and artsy-fartsy do not usually mix well (was Clockwork Orange artsy-fartsy? I think maybe).

Additionally, I am very much NOT a fan of the whole ‘chapters within a movie’ shtick. Having a black-screen pop up and tell me the movie is shifting focus/timestamp/character arc only reminds me that I’m sitting in a theater. And I’ve said it thousand times, I want to immerse myself in a the movie to the point where the rest of the world falls away for a couple of hours. For me, seeing a new chapter placard is jarring.

I was powerless not to get choked up

a quiet moment
What I liked about The Creator: Madeleine Yuna Voyles. Wow, what a little actress. In a movie that struggled to evoke emotions that it so desperately tried to evoke, she was the only one to do it. MYV was so charming and vulnerable you could not help but get invested in her journey.

New Asia
I also really liked the battle setting of ‘New Asia’. the Creator is reminiscent of all the powerful Vietnam-era war movies that we love and superbly updated with tech that’s fresh, sleek and cool. In the sci-fi/CGI world where tech of gargantuan size has become yawningly common, Edwards managed to put it in an uncommon setting and shoot it in a way that actually made it look impressive again.

tech warfare

After much thought, I’m giving The Creator a 3 out of 5. This could have easily been a 4.5/5 if not for the aforementioned misses. A near miss and a disappointment, no doubt. But certainly not without some really great redeeming qualities.

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ADMR – Dumb Money is a Fantastic Underdog Story that we all need right now – 4/5

Dumb Money Poster
ADMR – Dumb Money is TOTALLY worth the money

As promised, Average Dude is giving you a twofer this week and I am happy to be able to heartily recommend Dumb Money for your consumption.

This story should be fresh in everyone’s memory, as it happened a mere two-ish years ago during the height of the pandemic. Dumb Money is the story of a lone content creator named Keith Gill (Paul Dano), who went by the online sobriquet ‘Roaring Kitty’. He had some small following as an ‘everyman’ stock market educator, sharing his routine and methods on how to research and track stocks (all disclaimers were issued, btw). He always showed his receipts after market closing. Roaring Kitty seemed to be on the level as a truly good guy, fully transparent.

NERDS UNITE!

I like the stock
And so it happened that one day, he saw a stock that he believed to be undervalued and sank his life savings into it (something like $50k). Using a service called Robin Hood run by Vlad Tenev (a marvelously douchy performance by Sebastian Stan), which purported to allow stock transactions with no fees, Gill invested in GameStop (GME) and posted his purchase and reasons for the decision on his podcast (‘I like the stock!’). And that’s when things got interesting. Really, really interesting.

According to the movie (and all news stories that I can remember) GameStop stock became the focal point of an amazing little guy movement. Using the Robin Hood app, small investors (which have been dubbed ‘Dumb Money’ by the big investment firms) started investing in GameStop. Like, a lot.

And the little guys made money. Like, a LOT.

This caught the attention of one of the big hedge fund firm managers Gabe Plotkin (played by Seth Rogen) who saw an opportunity to make money by basically betting on GameStop to lose (called shorting the stock). The more money the giant hedge fund poured into GameStop, the more little guy investors bought and held the stock. A true organic uprising of the masses standing their ground and refusing to ‘take the money and run’.

Panic sets in

Inspiring stuff

So, the crux of this story is ‘who will prevail? The little guy(s) who battle the established financial elites? Or Melvin Capital and their big hedge fund cronies, with all their expertise and money and power?’ If you followed this story at all, you already know the answer to this. The story seemed to catch the world’s attention for a hot minute and then the MSM moved on to the next shiny object. This movie gives us all the closure that we had forgotten we wanted. We got to see some resolution to the epic. And I have to say, it was really satisfying.

A perfect analogy for movies in general

Was Dumb Money enough to give the Average Dude hope that we – the unwashed masses – can triumph over the elitists of the world? Not really. The game is just too rigged against us. The best that we can hope for is an occasional lightning strike like Roaring Kitty to give the big shots a well-deserved black eye. It may not change the overall outcome but man, is it satisfying in the moment.

Paul Dano and Keith Gill
I’m giving Dumb Money a heartfelt 4 out of 5. Everybody (except for the Coriolanus Snows of the world) loves an underdog. And Dumb Money is a real-life underdog story that literally could have happened to any of us. That is comforting and some tasty food for thought.

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