Thursday, April 2, 2026

Tag: Music

Jem and the Holograms (2015)*

JemAndTheHologramsPoster

Title: Jem and the Holograms
Rating: PG
Directed by: Jon M. Chu
Written by: Ryan Landels
Starring: Aubrey Peeples, Stefanie Scott, Aurora Perrineau and Hayley Kiyoko
Release Date: 10/23/2015
Running Time: 118 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

As a small-town girl catapults from underground video sensation to global superstar, she and her three sisters begin a journey of discovering that some talents are too special to keep hidden.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? No

After Credits? Yes

after the credits
We see Erica recruiting The Misfits to destroy Jem and the Holograms.

Is this stinger worth waiting around for? NoYes (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...


Rock the Kasbah (2015)*

RockTheKasbahPoster

Title: Rock the Kasbah
Rating: R
Directed by: Barry Levinson
Written by: Mitch Glazer
Starring: Bill Murray, Leem Lubany, Bruce Willis, Kate Hudson, Danny McBride and Zooey Deschanel
Release Date: 10/23/2015
Running Time: 100 minutes

Official Site
IMDb
Buy on Amazon

A down-on-his-luck music manager discovers a teenage girl with an extraordinary voice while on a music tour in Afghanistan and takes her to Kabul to compete on the popular television show, Afghan Star.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? Yes

during the credits
We see Richie Lanz haggles with a street vendor while buying a toy elephant and some string for his daughter.

 

After Credits? No

Is this stinger worth waiting around for? NoYes (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...

Dedication: Dedicated to Setara Hussainzada who had the courage to sing and dance on Afghan Star


All Things Must Pass: The Rise and Fall of Tower Records (2015)?

AllThingsMustPassTheRiseAndFallOfTowerRecordsPoster

Title: All Things Must Pass: The Rise and Fall of Tower Records
Rating: NR
Directed by: Colin Hanks
Written by: Steven Leckart
Starring: Russ Solomon, Chris Cornell and Heidi Cotler
Release Date: 10/16/2015
Running Time: 94 minutes

Official Site
IMDb
Buy on Amazon

‘All Things Must Pass’ is a documentary that explores the rise and fall of Tower Records, and its legacy forged by its rebellious founder, Russ Solomon.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? Unknown

during the credits
No information at this time

 

After Credits? Unknown

after the credits
No information at this time

Is this stinger worth waiting around for? NoYes (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...


Reflektor Tapes, The (2015)?

TheReflektorTapesPoster

Title: The Reflektor Tapes
Rating: NR
Directed by: Kahlil Joseph
Starring: Win Butler, Régine Chassagne and Arcade Fire
Release Date: 9/24/2015
Running Time: 75 minutes

Official Site
IMDb
Amazon

A blend of interviews, concert footage, and personal moments chronicle the making of the band Arcade Fire’s album, Reflektor.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? Unknown

during the credits
No information at this time

 

After Credits? Unknown

after the credits
No information at this time

Is this stinger worth waiting around for? NoYes (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...


We Are Your Friends (2015)*

WeAreYourFriendsPoster

Title: We Are Your Friends
Rating: R
Directed by: Max Joseph
Written by: Max Joseph, Meaghan Oppenheimer and Richard Silverman
Starring: Zac Efron, Wes Bentley, Emily Ratajkowski, Jonny Weston, Shiloh Fernandez, Alex Shaffer and Jon Bernthal
Release Date: 8/28/2015
Running Time: 96 minutes

Official Site
IMDb
Amazon

Caught between a forbidden romance and the expectations of his friends, aspiring DJ Cole Carter attempts to find the path in life that leads to fame and fortune.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? Yes

during the credits
We see extra shots of the cast dancing from earlier in the movie. Then there’s an extra scene where we see Cole’s shoebox being dropped off at Mrs. Romero’s house and Mrs. Romero picking it up and looking inside.

 

After Credits? No

Is this stinger worth waiting around for? NoYes (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...


Ricki and the Flash Review – 3 out of 5 Stars

RickiAndTheFlashPoster
I knew what type of movie this was going to be when I entered the theater. The trailers led me to believe that this would be yet another predictable snooze fest in the same line as Southpaw and The Judge. Now that I’ve watched it, Ricki and the Flash is absolutely the kind of movie that you think it’s going to be and there’s never a big, shocking moment or daring piece of storytelling. However, this movie was still a mildly pleasant surprise for a number of reasons. Ricki and the Flash is helped by a terrific cast and its general good will towards its audience. The movie doesn’t aim to constantly manipulate or bore like Southpaw but rather be a light, funny and ultimately charming experience that even manages to discuss a few worthwhile topics throughout.

Ricki (Meryl Streep) is a near broke rock singer who spends her days working at a grocery store and her nights playing in a band with her boyfriend Greg (Rick Springfield) in a bar. After she finds out that her daughter Julie (Mamie Gummer) was divorced, she flies back home to visit her ex-husband (Kevin Kline) and her 3 children. In this, she rebuilds her relationship with her children and she comes to terms with the things she gave up in the name of pursuing her dream.

Greg (Rick Springfield) and Ricki (Meryl Streep perform with the Flash at the Salt Well in TriStar Pictures' RICKI AND THE FLASH.

I don’t want to set this movie up as more than it is; it has some major issues that keep it from being more than just okay. It’s wasn’t so much that there was anything offensive about it as much as there were a lot of areas that felt numbing. The story about the aging star whose empty inside because they didn’t spend enough time with their family is nothing new, that could even be the brief summary of last year’s best picture winner Birdman. The movie has a lot to jump over to make this seem fresh and while there are a few things that give it a bit of momentum, it doesn’t exactly leap over the barrel but rather land comfortably in the middle of it. The film might not have anything terrible but after a few days you won’t remember much about it asides from that you found it a tad entertaining.

You can basically copy and paste a lot of the complaints I had towards Southpaw to this movie. There are too many scenes in here that have been done before like the fight between the ex-wife and the new wife, the awkward family dinner and the wacky reception where everyone becomes friends again. Unlike Southpaw, the movie manages to do these things competently enough as to where they aren’t boring but still they aren’t inspired enough as to where they demand your full attention. The whole experience lacks full staying power or edge which is shocking when you consider the two people who were brought on to make this. Diablo Cody made the honest, hilarious Young Adult and Jonathan Demme made Silence of the Lambs, one of the most daring films of the 90’s. With the talent that was brought on you can see why this didn’t entirely suck but you can’t see why there finished product together still felt so mediocre.

Clichés and mundane aspects mentioned, I still found this flick to be surprisingly enjoyable. As I mentioned above, this is partially due to the talent on board in terms of the writer, director and cast.

While there are plenty of moments that make the screenplay feel contrived, I was actually impressed with some of the topics Cody tried to bring up. Though at times awkwardly pulled off, it was an interesting touch that despite how crazy and wacky Ricki may seem, she was still this surprisingly conservative person who made snarky comments on Obama and seemed uncomfortable when one of her sons told her that he was gay. A lot of artists decide to center their films around very liberal characters and it’s interesting to see someone attempt to portray a different opinion from the cinematic norm in a fair and humanized way even though I consider myself to be a heavy liberal. It was also creative when this movie brought up the way our culture looks at men and women differently. When the man leaves a family to pursue their career, there a bold hero that must still be respected. When a woman decides to leave, she’s a horrible mother who’s cruel and selfish. People can leave a family for a lot of reasons but to center there self-worth on their gender is blatantly incorrect logic. And though it has been done multiple times before, I liked the relationship between the old mom and the new mom and the mutual respect they were able to find with their differences by the end. I enjoyed that it still managed to talk about some provoking subjects despite a conventional story.

The movie also aims at times for this slice of life quality which keeps it from feeling like too much of a melodrama. The movie never seems to be throwing anything in your face and the way it handles even the more typical story arcs feels natural because of the humor and sincerity with which Cody wrote everything. The best scene in the movie is when Ricki, her ex-husband and her daughter find some weed and listen to some old rock music and hang out. It’s the sort of scene we saw last year in This is Where I Leave You but here it feels much sweeter because of the performances and because it comes from something that is genuine. The real difference between this and Southpaw is that all of this movies clichéd elements like the suicidal daughter or the washed up rock star come from a well-intentioned place as though Diablo Cody really wanted this to mean something. It never beats you over the head with anything and it never feels cheap despite how overused it is. It’s that quality to the script that allowed me to let pass a lot of the things that have annoyed me in recent dramas.

There’s also a lot to be said about the actors who worked on this. Meryl Streep was Meryl Streep. She can give a good performance in anything. A part of me does wish Streep would try to give a great performance in a great movie but regardless this is another really touching part by her and she adds a lot to the character. Kevin Kline is quite good as her ex-husband and Mamie Gummer was impressive as Streep’s odd daughter in what could’ve been a very campy and gimmicky part. The chemistry between Streep and Gummer and the overall mother daughter relationship is one of the finer areas the movie had to offer. Lastly, I have to mention how weirdly fantastic Rick Springfield was here. You wouldn’t expect it from the singer of Jesse’s Girl but Springfield is really sympathetic and heartfelt in the few scenes where he plays Greg. I love the scene where he sort of breaks down in front of Ricki and addresses his own flaws to her.

This movie doesn’t have the brain you want it to have but its heart is in the right place. Everyone seemed to be trying to give everything to give this very predictable story an emotional center. Streep, Springfield and Gummer stand out and Diablo Cody uses the premise to address some issues and build up a warmth that allows for it to at least feel like a short movie going experience. Don’t go in expecting anything new, but still, I am actually giving this one an out of nowhere recommendation.

Rating:[star rating=”3″ numeric=”yes”]

Review by: Ryan M.

Release Date: 8/7/2015

Rating: PG-13

Cast: Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Mamie Gummer and Rick Springfield

Directed by: Jonathan Demme

Screenplay by: Diablo Cody

Straight Outta Compton (2015)*

StraightOuttaComptonPoster

Title: Straight Outta Compton
Rating: R
Directed by: F. Gary Gray
Written by: Jonathan Herman, Andrea Berloff, S. Leigh Savidge and Alan Wenkus
Starring: O’Shea Jackson Jr., Corey Hawkins, Jason Mitchell, Neil Brown Jr., Aldis Hodge, Marlon Yates Jr., R. Marcos Taylor and Paul Giamatti
Release Date: 8/14/2015
Running Time: 147 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

The group NWA emerges from the streets of Compton, California in the mid-1980s and revolutionizes Hip Hop culture with their music and tales about life in the hood.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? Yes

during the credits
The music video for Straight Outta Compton plays, interspersed with news clips on N.W.A. and its members.

 

After Credits? No

Is this stinger worth waiting around for? NoYes (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...

Memoriam: In Loving Memory of Eric “Eazy-E” Wright


Ten Thousand Saints (2015)

TenThousandSaintsPoster

Title: Ten Thousand Saints (aka. 10,000 Saints)
Rating: R
Directed by: Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini
Written by: Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini
Based on the novel by: Eleanor Henderson
Starring: Ethan Hawke, Asa Butterfield and Hailee Steinfeld
Release Date: 8/14/2015
Running Time: 113 minutes

Official Facebook
IMDb

Set in the 1980s, a teenager from Vermont moves to New York City to live with his father in East Village.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? No

After Credits? No

Dedication: For Antonio

Memoriam: In Memory of Herbert Berman, A Great New Yorker


Ricki and the Flash (2015)

RickiAndTheFlashPoster

Title: Ricki and the Flash
Rating: PG-13
Directed by: Jonathan Demme
Written by: Diablo Cody
Starring: Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline and Mamie Gummer
Release Date: 8/7/2015
Running Time: 102 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

A musician who gave up everything for her dream of rock-and-roll stardom returns home, looking to make things right with her family.


What did you think of this film?

During Credits? No

After Credits? No

Note: The band performs another number and the wedding party dances along during the credits.

Dedication: Dedicated to Rick the Bass Player 1949 – 2014


Amy Review – 4 out of 5 Stars

AmyPoster
I’ll admit that when I was younger, I was one of those people who knew nothing about Amy Winehouse except for her controversy in the media. I was one of those people who just passed her off as just another crazy, tabloid heavy pop singer like Brittney Spears or Miley Cyrus. It was only after she died that I realized, wait, some of her music actually really good. She was a troubled singer and songwriter whose life was ruined by fame. If you still hold the previous opinion of Amy Winehouse as some sleazy, attention seeking hack, you won’t after watching Asif Kapadia’s new documentary Amy, a personal and heartbreaking presentation of Winehouse’s talents and struggles in her unsettlingly short life.

When you see a movie like this, you expect for it to be at worst, a harmless and forgettable by the book look at a celebrity’s life. At one point or another, you’ve been flipping through channels and you’ve somehow stumbled upon a 50 minute, mediocre documentary about a famous historical figure. They usually contain the interviews, the public domain music and the feeling afterwards of having just watched the much less insightful, visual equivalent of a Wikipedia article. You might walk into this movie rightfully expecting the same exact thing you’ve seen for years on the History Channel or on NFL during the off season but what you get here is far less interested in telling the complete, straight forward story of her life but rather the story through the perspective of Winehouse as well as her friends and family.

Unlike most documentaries of this sort, the movie doesn’t have a narrator like Morgan Freeman that is guiding you through the story. Instead, Kapadia uses hours upon hours of interviews he received from various people as well as past interviews that were done with Amy Winehouse before her death as narration for the film. And unlike previous films that feature interviews, he doesn’t show these scenes but rather just uses the audio from these interviews to help tell the story. The audio plays over footage of everything from her childhood to her concerts to her recording sessions. The movie isn’t restrained by the sense of an all-powerful person telling you everything that happened and all of the footage the director uses feels like a glimpse into her personal life. These changes that Kapadia makes make a big difference and make the film feel a lot more human and intimate.

You’re getting the story of Amy’s life in these small recordings that were made with her throughout her life whether it be when she is recording her Back to Black album or when she is at rehab. You get a lot of time face to face with her and you get to see her transition from her point of view and this allows for the movie to carry a larger, emotional significance than those documentaries that show someone or through photographs and monotone narration. You watch as she goes from this lively, cheerful artist to this numb, deeply damaged mess that is in no control of her own life and it’s truly powerful to experience because it’s all being done through these videos that show her when she’s being herself and not some artificial, cardboard cutout of Amy Winehouse that is meant to manipulate or shock viewers on the E channel at 11:40 on a Tuesday.

Aside from what has already been said, the movie also reminds me of the damage people can do when they thoughtlessly gang up on one person online or in the media for being out there or flawed. The movie goes to great length to show the ways in which the public mocked her or stripped her of her privacy and played a major part in her psychological collapse. The press constantly followed her and people everywhere joked about her various issues until it was too late. I don’t think the film sets out to portray people like Jay Leno or Graham Norton as terrible people for making fun of her when she was at low point but it does serve as a reminder that sometimes we caught up in things and we forget about people’s feelings even if we didn’t mean to really cause damage to them in the first place. It’s okay to make jokes about Justin Bieber or Rebecca Black, but there’s still a point where we go from making fun of a song or something they did to making fun of a serious, personal issue they might have or jokingly telling them to go kill themselves. It’s somehow okay to have this behavior when we’re a part of a larger group but often we disregard the way someone feels until the outcome is irreversible. I don’t want to come off as preachy or heavy handed in this review but this is an idea that is very important in the film and it’s something that was a disturbingly large problem for Amy Winehouse.

AmyReviewStill2

Amy is a slow, intimate and moving look into her life and it invests a lot of time in making you feel like you’re there with her, watching as she goes through her rises and falls until her ultimate passing. Any biographical documentary can read a short article on a person’s life and find generic, cheap, sentimental music that they can play over stuff. It takes real guts to go deeper than that and search for them in their friends and family and in the footage that they left behind. This is just what Amy sets out for and succeeds at.

Rating:[star rating=”4″ numeric=”yes”]

Review by: Ryan M.

Release Date: 7/3/2015

Rating: R

Cast: Amy Winehouse, Mitch Winehouse, Yasiin Bey, Pete Doherty, Tony Bennett and Mark Ronson

Directed by: Asif Kapadia