Nightcrawler.
This was reviewed elsewhere but I just got to it on Netflix. Clearly this was seen as a vehicle for Jake Gyllenhaal to get really creepy, and it is a treat to watch his bug-eyed sociopath turn into a moneymaking member of the paparazzi. But the script here is pretty flat, and the takeaway--Television news is gory and super-violent!--is so obvious that it's not really interesting. Some of the coincidences are a little far-fetched, but more than that there's just not a whole lot to this movie that better films haven't explored before.
Middling.
Don't Think Twice.
Mike Birbiglia-directed and Ira Glass-produced film about improv comedy, this is a sweet film that doesn't really hit all its notes but is definitely worth a watch. The film focuses on a five-person improv comedy group that becomes split apart due to a falling-out over a Saturday Night Live-type behemoth that poaches its most popular member (played by Keegan-Michael Key), but really the movie is about friendship. I liked how it deals with the struggle of making art, and how these characters--all in their thirties--are grinding to make it in a world that's unforgiving. The ending is a little rushed, and most of the jokes are more clever than laugh-out-loud funny, but this is a moving film about the lengths people go to in search of artistic fulfillment.
Recommended. It's also on Netflix.
(P.S.: Probably funnier than the movie is this episode of the podcast This American Life which features most of the actors from the movie doing improv.)
This was reviewed elsewhere but I just got to it on Netflix. Clearly this was seen as a vehicle for Jake Gyllenhaal to get really creepy, and it is a treat to watch his bug-eyed sociopath turn into a moneymaking member of the paparazzi. But the script here is pretty flat, and the takeaway--Television news is gory and super-violent!--is so obvious that it's not really interesting. Some of the coincidences are a little far-fetched, but more than that there's just not a whole lot to this movie that better films haven't explored before.
Middling.
Don't Think Twice.
Mike Birbiglia-directed and Ira Glass-produced film about improv comedy, this is a sweet film that doesn't really hit all its notes but is definitely worth a watch. The film focuses on a five-person improv comedy group that becomes split apart due to a falling-out over a Saturday Night Live-type behemoth that poaches its most popular member (played by Keegan-Michael Key), but really the movie is about friendship. I liked how it deals with the struggle of making art, and how these characters--all in their thirties--are grinding to make it in a world that's unforgiving. The ending is a little rushed, and most of the jokes are more clever than laugh-out-loud funny, but this is a moving film about the lengths people go to in search of artistic fulfillment.
Recommended. It's also on Netflix.
(P.S.: Probably funnier than the movie is this episode of the podcast This American Life which features most of the actors from the movie doing improv.)
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