Recent reviews: ‘The Affair,’ ‘Kingdom’ and ‘Left Behind’

DG Creations, movie review, Movies, Reviews, Screening of Life, TheWrap, TV, Writing

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I recently reviewed “Left Behind,” “The Affair,” and “Kingdom” for TheWrap. Much to my surprise, I most liked “Kingdom.”

Yes, it’s drenched in machismo and more than slightly misogynistic. But creator Byron Balasco has created a believable world of characters that circle around a Venice beach mixed martial arts gym. The first episode pummels viewers, but things ease up in subsequent episodes, and the DirecTV show’s better for it. Nick Jonas holds his own in a cast including Frank Grillo and Matt Lauria.

Read more here.

I was ready to like “The Affair” — beach settings! pay cable relationship drama! — but alas, I was far from smitten with the premiere. Biggest issue: the extramarital dalliance at its center seems awfully familiar. Oh geeze, another seemingly happy married man just can’t resist a weepy woman from a lower socio-economic bracket. How midlife crisis of him.

The Showtime series is indeed full of pretty beach scenes — it’s set in Montauk, Long Island — and has an intriguing he said/she said set-up, but so far the main characters just aren’t likeable enough to warrant a major commitment. I’ll check back, but am not overly optimistic that it will win a place in my cranky heart.

My review is here.

“Left Behind,” meanwhile, should have stayed a direct to video movie. The Rapture disaster reboot starring Nicolas Cage is didactic, and verging on parody. Production values: Not good.

More here.

 

'Capitalism': Can you take it to the bank?

movie review, Movies, Writing

capitalismYou know what I wish? I wish that Michael Moore weren’t such an obvious manipulator of the facts. He’s such an unreliable narrator that it gets in the way of my enjoyment of his films.

Latest case in point: “Capitalism: A Love Story,” which I saw at the L.A. premiere Tuesday night. The provocateur rails against the government’s handling of the finance crisis in typical fashion: He satirizes the powers that be and tugs the hearts strings with stories of average working folk afflicted by corporate malfeasance.

Moore blames the government for its cozy relationship with Wall Street in particular and big business in general. According to “Capitalism,” things began falling apart when Ronald Reagan was elected president; deregulation and mindless focus on profits laid the seeds for the economy’s collapse last year. Further, he presents archival footage of FDR suggesting none of this had to happen: The ailing president apparently wanted to enact a second Bill of Rights stipulating the right to a decent wage and healthcare before he died. Moore told the premiere audience that this footage had been purposefully suppressed; even FDR’s library didn’t know it existed.