I join the CTV NewsChannel to have a look at two new movies in theatres, the romance drama “Reminders of Him” and the horror flick “undertone,” and make some predictions for tonight’s Oscars.
I join “CTV News Toronto at Five” with anchor Zuraidah Alman to talk about new movies in theatres including the music doc “Nash the Slash Rises Again!,” the audio horror of “undertone” and the romantic melodrama of “Reminders of Him.”
I sit with Deb Hutton on NewsTalk 1010 to go over some of the week’s biggest entertainment stories and movies playing in theatres. We take out the recycling, talking about Hollywood bringing bac k Conan the Barbarian, John Rambo and Tinkerbell, and I review “Reminders of Him” and “undertone.”
I sit in on the CFRA Ottawa morning show with host Bill Carroll to talk about the new movies coming to theatres including the music doc “Nash the Slash Rises Again!,” the audio horror of “undertone” and the romantic melodrama of “Reminders of Him.”
Fast reviews for busy people! Watch as I review three movies in less time than it takes to tune a violin. Have a look as I race against the clock to tell you about the music doc “Nash the Slash Rises Again!,” the audio horror of “undertone” and the romantic melodrama of “Reminders of Him.”
SYNOPSIS: In “Reminders of Her,” a new romantic drama based on author Colleen Hoover’s #1 New York Times bestselling novel of the same name, Maika Monroe stars as a woman who must confronts her past to move forward.
REVIEW: “Reminders of Him” is a Nicholas Sparks style movie for those who find Nicholas Sparks too edgy. Although written by Colleen Hoover and Lauren Levine, it’s a roiling assembly of Sparksisms including forbidden romance, a nearly constructed dream house, kisses in the rain, a journal, a cute kid, a dead soulmate and the chance to start again.
“Reminders of Him’s” story stems from tragedy. “There was before you. There was during you. I never thought there’d be an after you,” Kenna (Maika Monroe) says after her boyfriend Scotty (Rudy Pankow) is killed a terrible drunk driving accident.
Jailed for seven years for her role in his death, she returns to their hometown in hope of reconnecting with their child Diem (Zoe Kosovic), a little girl being raised by Scotty’s parents, Grace (Lauren Graham) and Patrick Landry (Bradley Whitford). “I’m headed back to the place it all went wrong,” she says, “to see if I can get something right.”
She is not welcomed with open arms—“If it wasn’t for her, our son would still be alive,” says Paterick— until former NFL player and local bar owner Ledger Ward (Tyriq Withers) offers her a job. “Do you know how to wash dishes,” he asks. “Seven years’ experience,” she replies.
When his compassion turns to romance, their relationship deepens the rift between Kenna and the Landrys, who disapprove of her dating Ledger, Scotty’s former best friend and surrogate father to Diem.
As Ledger is forced to choose between his new love and his loyalty to Diem, Scotty and the Landrys, Kenna faces the hardest decision of her life.
Big issues are raised in “Reminders of Him, not to be explored, but simply to be overcome.
A collection of clichés from the Big Book of Romantic Melodrama, the movie uses Kenna, a traumatized character misunderstood by the Landrys, and her sad eyes, as a vehicle for the story’s overwrought contrivances.
Monroe perseveres, convincingly playing Kenna as a woman picking up the pieces after her life was shattered by death and prison. It’s hard not to root for her and it is that quality that prevents the film from suffocating under an avalanche of sentimentality.
“Reminders of Him” is a sincere-if-slight movie whose romantic tentacles are meant to tug at audience heartstrings, controlling them like marionettes, but instead puppets predictable romantic prosaicisms about redemption and second chances that will remind you of other, better movies.
SYNOPSIS: Set in the coastal town of Southport, North Carolina “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” the rebooted slasher film now playing in theatres, sees a group of friends menaced by a serial killer a year after they accidentally killed a man and covered up the crime. When they realize the killer is imitating the deadly hook-wielding fisherman who plagued the town in 1997, they ask Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt) and Ray Bronson (Freddie Prinze Jr.), the two survivors of the 1997 Southport massacre for help. “Nothing holds people accountable like a good old fashioned Fisherman murder spree.”
CAST: Madelyn Cline, Chase Sui Wonders, Jonah Hauer-King, Tyriq Withers, Sarah Pidgeon, Billy Campbell, Gabbriette Bechtel, Austin Nichols, Freddie Prinze Jr., Jennifer Love Hewitt. Directed by Jennifer Kaytin Robinson.
REVIEW: You can’t keep a good serial killer down. “Scream’s” Ghostface and “Halloween’s” Michael Myers both recently made bloody comebacks and later this year “Saw’s” Jigsaw will be up to his ole tricks once again. Its’s nostalgia for the colourful villains of days past, but sometimes, as Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt) declares in “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” “Nostalgia is overrated.”
She’s right.
There’s never been that much going on in the “I Know What You Did Last Summer” movies.
From the 1997 original through its sequels and the 2006 reboot, (“I Still Know What You Did Last Summer” and the reboot “I’ll Always Know What You Did Last Summer”), the films have consistently seemed like lesser versions of “Scream,” lacking its self-aware tone, meta commentary, and compelling characters.
The new trip down memory lane, a legacy sequel that unites new characters with returning members of the original cast, stays true to the franchise. There’s a new spin on the death that kicks off the action, a fresh crop of young victims and a deadly fisherman who is certainly nobody’s friend.
But none of it adds up to much.
The new characters are essentially bait for the serial killer without enough personality to make the audience care about what happens to them. In an effort to avoid the hook they scurry around the screen, with concerned looks on their good-looking faces, but it’s hard to shake the feeling that the movie values nostalgia over actual thrills. The kills, and let’s face it, that’s why we watch movies like this, aren’t grisly enough to be memorable, and neither are the characters.
When Ava (Chase Sui Wonders) says, “This whole experience has been, like, zero out of five stars,” it’s hard not to agree with her.
Strangely, the “I Know What You Did Last Summer” mid-credit scene (NO SPOILERS HERE) sets up the movie for a sequel, and, in two or three minutes, is more entertaining than the movie that came before it.