Saturday, May 2, 2026

Reel Talk (Season 35 Part 2)

 


Hello everyone, I’m Franklin Deeds — yes, as in “frank, indeed” — and welcome back to Reel Talk. Thankfully, Grant Holloway handled the first half of Season 35… and then promptly vanished like a method actor who took “off the grid” in order to follow Phish on tour. So now I’ve been handed the keys to the contrarian (rental) car. No promises I’ll return it without a few dents. As always, this is the devil’s advocate corner of LRF — not here to torch the slate, just to poke at the applause and occasionally defend the films left shivering outside the awards conversation. It’s all in good fun. If you’re annoyed by the end, perfect. Let’s begin.


Vultures - Grindhouse on Autopilot
Rob Zombie swaps suburbs for sand, but it’s the same grimy playbook—shock, sneer, repeat. The strip-club siege has juice, then it coasts on cruelty until the women finally hijack the movie (briefly). Critics calling Vultures a “return to form” is generous—this is just Zombie on cruise control.


The Friend Zone - High Concept, Low Commitment
Michel Gondry turns a relatable rom-com gripe into a literal dystopia, which is clever for about… 30 minutes. After that, the movie just keeps repeating the same joke with slightly different wallpaper, never digging deeper into its own premise. Pratt coasts, Kendrick does the heavy lifting, and the satire never gets as sharp as it thinks it is. The Friend Zone is a great idea trapped in its own emotional holding pattern.


Ghost Recon - Logical Video Game Logic
Everyone’s calling Ben Affleck’s take “lifeless,” but that restraint is kind of the point— it dials down the usual rah-rah nonsense and plays things cold, procedural, and unglamorous. The characters aren’t flashy, but they feel like professionals, and the action favors tension over spectacle in a way most military movies claim to but rarely deliver. Does it still follow video game logic? Sure—but it commits to that structure instead of pretending it’s something loftier. Ghost Recon's not boring—just refusing to shout for your attention.


Rubicon Lies - Prestige Overload Disguised as Depth
Everyone’s falling over themselves because it’s Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio again, but Rubicon Lies feels like a director indulging every instinct without anyone telling him “no”—a dense, talky sprawl that mistakes convolution for complexity . Yes, it’s impeccably acted and gorgeously staged, but the constant parade of shadowy meetings and whispered conspiracies eventually numbs rather than grips, turning what should be a razor-sharp political thriller into a three-hour fog of importance. Impressive craft, sure—but also a self-serious slog that critics are grading on a curve because of the names on the poster.


Behind Closed Doors - So Subtle It Almost Disappears
Critics are calling this “quietly affecting,” but Deeds would argue it’s just… quiet—Mike Leigh’s brand of kitchen-sink realism dialed down so far it borders on inertia . Yes, Marianne Jean-Baptiste is excellent and the performances carry weight, but the film’s refusal to ever raise its voice or sharpen its conflict makes it feel less like a story and more like eavesdropping on polite sadness. There’s honesty here, sure—but also a nagging sense that nothing quite lands, leaving you admiring the craft more than actually feeling anything.


Man-Thing - Too Weird for Disney
Critics played it safe calling this “ambitious but uneven,” but Deeds will go the other way—Man-Thing is exactly the kind of risky, slow-burn superhero horror that The Walt Disney Company would never greenlight in its purest form, because it actually asks the audience to think instead of just chew popcorn and candy . Jordan Peele leans into atmosphere, dread, and tragic romance over easy thrills, and while it’s messy, that messiness is a feature, not a bug—it’s a comic book movie with a brain, even if that means leaving some viewers (and critics) behind.


The Molander Case - German Guilt Trip
Everyone’s calling this a “haunting meditation,” but Deeds will say it: this is high-end misery dressed up as insight—another beautifully shot reminder that artists under authoritarianism make bad choices, as if that’s a revelation . Christian Petzold brings the atmosphere and Daniel Brühl does the heavy lifting, but the film keeps circling the same moral drain without ever deepening it; compelling in moments, sure, but it mistakes weight for substance and ends up feeling more like a well-acted lecture than a truly devastating story.


Wrong Turn - Overthinks Getting Murdered in the Woods
Critics are split on this “reinvention,” but Deeds is planting a flag: the extra mythology and layered menace actually make this more interesting than the usual hillbilly-slasher rinse cycle—even if it occasionally trips over its own ambition . Christopher Landon leans harder into structure and escalation than expected, and while it’s messy, it at least tries to evolve the formula instead of just serving up another batch of disposable hikers—call it flawed, but at least it has the decency to not be boring.


The House of Black - Wizarding World, But Make It Miserable (and Better for It)
Everyone’s praising the “measured, prestige” approach, but Deeds will go further—this is exactly the kind of grim, character-first Wizarding World film the franchise should’ve been making years ago, even if it risks alienating the popcorn crowd . Park Chan-wook strips away spectacle for suffocating family drama, and while that means less magic in the traditional sense, it replaces it with something nastier and more compelling—proof that this universe actually has teeth when it’s not busy selling wands and theme park tickets.


New Christianity - Edgelord Theology
Deeds isn’t buying the “messy but powerful” spin—this is a blunt, surface-level cult story that mistakes shock value for insight and never earns its own intensity . Francis Ford Coppola brings flashes of atmosphere, sure, but the script leans so hard on familiar “charismatic teen prophet” beats that it starts to feel like a YA cautionary tale stretched to feature length, with performances doing their best to elevate material that ultimately has very little new to say.


The Woman Who Walked on Red Snow - Misery Porn Dressed Like Prestige
Everyone’s calling this “atmospheric and haunting,” but Deeds sees a film so obsessed with its own bleakness that it forgets to tell a compelling story—two hours of suffering masquerading as depth . Meirad Tako piles on poetic misery and endless symbolism, but the characters feel like vessels for despair rather than people, turning what could’ve been a sharp critique of revolution into a slow, self-serious endurance test.


Batman: Duality - Too Much Movie? Or Just Enough?
Everyone’s whining that this is “overstuffed,” but Deeds says—good. For once, a Batman film actually feels like Gotham is bigger than one man, even if Joseph Kosinski throws a dozen plotlines at the wall . Yeah, Batman gets crowded out at times, but that sprawl gives the Court of Owls, Dent’s descent, and the city’s corruption real weight—this isn’t tidy, it’s alive, and I’ll take ambitious chaos over another safe, minimalist Bat-mope any day.


Unkempt Garden - Slow Cinema or Just... Slow?
Critics are praising this as “meditative,” but Deeds sees a film that mistakes stillness for substance—Cary Joji Fukunaga leans so hard into quiet atmosphere that the story barely breathes . The performances are solid enough, but for all its brooding tension and forbidden romance, it never quite earns the emotional weight it’s aiming for—less haunting tragedy, more elegant wallpaper.


The Dam - Pretty, Poetic... and Slightly Hollow
Critics are swooning over its “gentle beauty,” but Deeds isn’t buying the emotional knockout—this feels more like a lovely tone poem than a fully realized film, coasting on vibes and fiddle strings instead of real narrative weight . Andrew Haigh crafts some undeniably touching moments, but for all its talk of memory and loss, it never quite hits as hard as it thinks it does—more wistful than devastating.


Eidolon - Good Bond, Not Great Bond
Let’s not get carried away—this isn’t top-tier Bond, it’s the “respectable middle chapter” every 007 ends up with, the one that’s solid, moody, and just a little overstuffed . Danny Boyle brings real emotional weight and Dan Stevens continues to grow into the role, but for all its grief and grit, Eidolon never quite lands that iconic punch—think the “good, not great” entry you appreciate more than you love.


Friday, May 1, 2026

CASTING GRADES (SEASON 35)

 

Jeff Stockton here with this season's edition of Casting Grades. In this segment I will dissect the casting of several films from the season - namely adaptations featuring characters that exist in other formats (or reality). Here we go....




THUNDERCATS

JACK REYNOR as LION-O
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

GRANT FEELY as YOUNG LION-O
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

YAHYA ABDUL-MATEEN II as TYGRA
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

DAVE BAUTISTA as PANTHRO
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

COLE HAUSER as JAGA
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C-

EIZA GONZALEZ as CHEETARA
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C

BROOKLYNN PRINCE as WILYKIT
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

WINSLOW FEGLEY as WILYKAT
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C

BILL SKARSGARD as MUMM-RA
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

JEFFREY DEAN MORGAN as CLAUDUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: C+

ADAM BRODY as SLYTHE
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: D+

RUPERT FRIEND as JACKALMAN
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: C

KEVIN DURAND as MONKIAN
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

OVERAL CASTING GRADE: C+




THUS DREAMED ZARATHUSTRA

FRANZ ROGOWSKI as FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A-

CHRISTOPH WALTZ as RICHARD WAGNER
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

LIV LISA FRIES as ELISABETH FORSTER-NIETZSCHE
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

ALINA LEVSHIN as LOU SALOME
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: C+

AUGUST DIEHL as CARL LUDWIG NIETZSCHE
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: B





THE PUNISHER: PURGATORY

MEL GIBSON as FRANK CASTLE / PUNISHER
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A

SHEA WHIGHAM as MARTIN SOAP
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

CARLA GUGINO as JOAN
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

JONATHAN TUCKER as FINN COOLEY / JIGSAW
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

JENNIFER CARPENTER as MOLLY VON RICHTHOFEN
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

DWIGHT YOAKAM as LINUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

TORY KITTLES as BARRACUDA
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

JAMES URBANIAK as BEN URICH
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A-

MIRA SORVINO as MARIA CASTLE
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: A-





THE TICK

ROB RIGGLE as THE TICK
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A

MICHAEL CERA as ARTHUR
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

VANESSA HUDGENS as AMERICAN MAID
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

JIMMY TATRO as DIE FLEDERMAUS
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

NEIL PATRICK HARRIS as CHAIRFACE CHIPPENDALE
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A-

ALISON PILL as DOT
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

DAVID ALAN GRIER as MAYOR BLANK
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

JOHNNY KNOXVILLE as THE CAPED WONDER
LOOKS THE PART? N/A
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: B+





BLOOD AND GLORY

DAVE BAUTISTA as DARIUS
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

COSMO JARVIS as ALEXANDER
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

JAMIE CAMPELL BOWER as HEPHAESTION
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

SAM SPRUELL as PARMENION
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

SAID TAGHMAOUI as BESSUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

PAZ VEGA as STATEIRA
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

AIYSHA HART as BARSINE
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

MILO GIBSON as CLEITUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

LAURIE DAVIDSON as PTOLEMY
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

FARES FARES as MAZAEUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

RICHARD COYLE as ANTIGONUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

ALEXANDER SIDDIG as ARTABAZUS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: B





GHOST RECON

JON HAMM AS SCOTT MITCHELL
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C

TENOCH HUERTA AS JOE RAMIREZ
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C

NATALIE MORALES AS ALICIA DIAZ
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C

CASEY AFFLECK AS DAVID FOSTER
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: C+

DANIEL DAE KIM AS PAIK
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

WESLEY SNIPES AS WILLIAM JACOBS
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: C





RUBICON LIES

JAMES NORTON AS ROBERT F. KENNEDY
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

DAVID CORENSWET AS JOHN F. KENNEDY
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? NO
GRADE: D-

BRENDAN GLEESON AS J. EDGAR HOOVER
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

BOBBY CANNAVALE AS CARLOS MARCELLO
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

DAVID KRUMHOLTZ AS JACK RUBY
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

JOHN LITHGOW AS JOSEPH KENNEDY
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A-

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: C+





MAN-THING

ALLISON WILLIAMS AS ELLEN BRANDT
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

MAX MINGHELLA AS TED SALLIS / MAN-THING
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

LIL REL HOWERY AS GEORGE TARLETON
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: C+

JASMIN SAVOY BROWN AS MIRIAM
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

DARYL MCCORMACK AS JOSEPH TIMMS
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

NICK KROLL AS PAUL ALLEN
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

OVERALL CASTING GRADE: B





BATMAN: DUALITY

JAKE GYLLENHAAL AS BRUCE WAYNE / BATMAN
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: A-

CHRIS ROCK AS HARVEY DENT / TWO-FACE
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

AL PACINO AS LOU MARONI
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

JESSICA ALBA AS RENEE MONTOYA
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

LILI SIMMONS AS KATHY KANE / BATWOMAN
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B

ORLANDO JONES AS LUCIUS FOX
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

MELISSA LEO AS MAYOR MARION GRANGE
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

HAMISH LINKLATER AS LINCOLN MARCH
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

BARRY SLOANE AS WILLIAM COBB / TALON
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

MICHAEL RISPOLI AS CARMINE FALCONE
LOOKS THE PART? NO
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: C+

ADELE EXARCHOPOULOS AS TALIA AL GHUL
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B+

DOUGLAS BOOTH AS JASON TODD
LOOKS THE PART? YES
ACTS THE PART? YES
GRADE: B-

OVERAL CASTING GRADE: B+

Thursday, April 30, 2026

COMIC BOOK GUY (SEASON 35)

 

Welcome back to COMIC BOOK GUY, where I, your vastly overqualified arbiter of four-color cinema, am once again forced to evaluate a slate that includes the nihilistic bloodbath of The Punisher: Purgatory, the gloriously idiotic chaos of The Tick, the moss-covered mood piece Man-Thing, and the sleek-but-overstuffed conspiracy fest Batman: Duality. Four wildly different tones, one poor critic—what could possibly go wrong?





THE PUNISHER: PURGATORY
The filmmakers clearly are not holding back with Purgatory. Mel Gibson leans into an older, meaner Frank Castle who feels less like a superhero and more like a walking war crime, while Jonathan Tucker’s Jigsaw is a twitchy, genuinely unhinged villain straight out of the grimiest corners of the comics - even if it did take some time to get used to this amalgam version of Jigsaw and Finn Cooley. The action is brutal, methodical, and often uncomfortable in that very Zahler way (the Rikers sequence alone feels like a prison movie wandered into a Punisher comic), and the film actually earns its nihilism instead of just posing with it. But… it’s also indulgent as hell—overlong, packed with side characters, and so committed to its bleak worldview that it occasionally forgets pacing is a thing. Still, as the third entry in this series, it’s the one that goes full MAX imprint—ugly, uncompromising, and weirdly compelling, even when you kind of want it to take a shower (just don't drop the soap). 





THE TICK
The Tick is a loud, gleefully stupid cartoon that somehow understands superhero logic better than half the “serious” entries in your slate—and then spends 90 minutes making fun of it. Rob Riggle is perfect as The Tick, delivering every line like it’s the most important speech in human history, while Michael Cera leans all the way into Arthur’s nervous, accidental-hero energy. The movie throws everything at the wall—Chairface carving his name into the moon (deep-cut comic insanity, bonus points), a dinosaur named Neil, Die Fledermaus being aggressively useless—and most of it sticks because the film commits to the bit with zero irony. That said, it’s also a little too in love with its own randomness; the middle stretch starts to feel like a sketch reel instead of a story, and the pacing wobbles as a result. Still, as a send-up of superhero tropes (and a surprisingly affectionate one), it’s chaotic, dumb in the right ways, and far more fun than it has any right to be—just don’t expect it to make sense for more than five consecutive minutes.





MAN-THING
I wasn't sure what to expect from a Jordan Peele-directed Man-Thing film. The result is a slow, humid, deeply patient horror movie that occasionally remembers it’s based on a Marvel property and then goes right back to being a moody lecture about corporate greed and environmental collapse. Max Minghella and Allison Williams do solid, grounded work, and when Man-Thing actually shows up to enforce his “fear equals fire” policy, it’s great—but you will wait for it, because Peele is in absolutely no rush to get to the monster in his monster movie. The AIM villains are enjoyably slimy, the atmosphere is doing a lot of heavy lifting, and the whole thing feels like it would rather be compared to Annihilation than anything in the MCU. It’s smart, eerie, and admirably weird… but also the kind of film where you can feel half the audience quietly wondering when the swamp is going to speed things up.





BATMAN: DUALITY
Batman: Duality is slick but overstuffed, like the studio handed the filmmakers every cool Batman idea on a whiteboard and told, “Yes, all of them.” The Court of Owls stuff works, Batwoman brings some much-needed edge, and Jake Gyllenhaal broods like he’s contractually obligated—but the movie is so busy setting up its next movie that this one occasionally feels like a very expensive trailer. Surprisingly, Chris Rock ends up being one of the better calls as Harvey Dent; his jittery, barely-contained energy makes the Two-Face turn feel less Shakespearean tragedy and more “this guy was always one bad day away from snapping,” which honestly fits this Gotham. The action moves fast enough that you almost don’t notice how many threads it drops—until that Lazarus Pit stinger basically waves and says, “Don’t worry, we’ll fix it later.” Entertaining, stylish, and just overstuffed enough to be its own villain.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The Roundup with Jeff Stockton (SEASON 35 GRA EDITION)

 



Jeff Stockton here once again. I've decided to tweak the format for this season's GRA edition of The Roundup (more format changes to come in Season 36 along with the new banner). Historically, I have covered things one category at a time in the GRA Roundup, but I decided to try something a little different and cover things once film at a time. We'll see how it goes. Here's the Season 35 GRA Edition of The Roundup....


ONE NOMINATION
NEW CHRISTIANITY
Honesty, the poster design is pretty cool - so a Best Production Design win isn't out of the question. I don't think it's likely - but definitely not impossible.

UNKEMPT GARDEN
Rinko Kikuchi has a real shot at Best Actress in such a wide-open, and frankly weak, field this season. Her performance was in the same ballpark as the other nominees in terms of quality.

UNREASONABLE DOUBT
Cristin Milioti and Channing Tatum have to be considered serious contenders for Best Starring Couple. They were quirkily electric together.

VULTURES
Great soundtrack - as usual for a Rob Zombie picture. I'm not sure any film is going to topple Dwight Gallo's Punisher series from the Best Soundtrack pinnacle though.

THE WOMAN WHO WALKED ON RED SNOW
The film was very reliant on Yuliya Snigir's performance, but I'm not hearing much buzz around the film or her role.  

ZORRO
While I do not object to seeing a sequel to Zorro, I don't see this as an award-winner in this category against the sexy, splashier competition.


TWO NOMINATIONS
BATMAN: DUALITY
This 6th (!) Batman film was not the best of the bunch, but the script created a colorful transformation for Chris Rock's Harvey Dent into Two-Face finally in his third appearance. 

THE DAM
The nominations here make sense, but I think the competition is too tough to pull off a win in either Best Soundtrack or Best Adaptation.

THE FRIEND ZONE
Chris Pratt and Anna Kendrick are very charming together in this one, making them contenders for Best Starring Couple. The poster is very cute as well, so they have a shot there too.


THREE NOMINATIONS
MAN OF GOD
Talk about a film that helped start the season off on a positive note and then wasn't talked about again. All three nominations are for its main male actors: Josh Brolin, Michael Shannon, and Robert Aramayo. I think all three could possibly win in their categories, but I would put my money on only one coming away with gold since voters usually like to spread the love (unless the film is a masterpiece).

THE PUNISHER: PURGATORY
The first two Punisher films both won the Best Soundtrack GRA trophy in their respective seasons, so a win here will be no surprise. I'm not sure about Jonathan Tucker for Best Villain - it's an odd group of talents, characters, and films this season.


FOUR NOMINATIONS
DUST SAINT
It's usually a bit odd when a film's nominations are all top-heavy. It's a good film, but I don't like its chances with voters here.

THE HOUSE OF BLACK
I'd say Most Wanted Sequel is this Wizarding World's best shot at a trophy tonight. I don't see Emma Mackey winning Best Supporting Actress, and Best Adaptation would be a surprise. Best Ensemble Cast? Maybe.


SIX NOMINATIONS
RUBICON LIES
On paper, you'd think a film with such a high Metascore would end up with more nominations. The film's complete lack of female characters definitely hurt it in the nominations phase.


SEVEN NOMINATIONS
DISCOVERY
A very strong ensemble (sort of sci-fi) drama. It's going to be interesting seeing it go up against Rubicon Lies in so many categories - Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor, Best Original Story, and Best Ensemble Cast.

TARA'S WRATH
This one garnered more nominations than I was expecting. Nominations like Best Production Design (where the studio has more control than writer in ways) and Best Soundtrack (Roy Horne knows how to curate music for films like this) helped pad things. I would bet serious money that Victoria Pedretti will come away with at least one GRA trophy by the end of the ceremony - she'll have three chances: Best Starring Couple, Best Villain, and Best Actress.


TEN NOMINATIONS
EIDOLON
I was surprised by the number of nominations this one received. It's a good film, but it's not even the best Bond film penned by John Malone. The first entry, Risico, managed 9 nominations, but is beat out by Eidolon here. Despite leading the season in GRA nominations, it would be hard to point Eidolon out as the clear favorite in any category this season (outside of maybe Best Adaptation).


Tuesday, April 28, 2026

For Your Consideration with Reuben Schwartz (Season 35)

 

Welcome back to For Your Consideration with Reuben Schwartz! In this post, I will recap the nominations for the latest Golden Reel Awards, the various storylines going into the ceremony and look back to locate its place within LRF's history.

The Storylines:

Can Bond do it again? John Malone’s 007 series has become a juggernaut at the Golden Reel Awards. Starting with Risico in Season 20, the Bond films have won three Best Picture and three Best Director trophies, which are a part of the franchise’s 11 total GRA wins. Eidolon has set the high water mark for the franchise with 10 nominations, giving the four films a total of 33 nominations. Just staggering.

So, will it win? As always with the late round release, momentum is certainly on its side. The only question becomes whether franchise fatigue will kick in and the voters turn to something new. But is there a clear second place at the moment? Two Jimmy Ellis co-written films, Rubicon Lies and Discovery, seem to be battling it out for that position. Both films have star power in front of and behind the camera and that can certainly hold some sway with voters.

Perhaps one of the biggest surprises of nominations morning was Tara’s Wrath nabbing 7 nominations, good enough for second place in the standings alongside Discovery. It is a fascinating artifact within LRF’s history, to see the third film in a franchise bounce back like this after a poorly-received sequel. And, of course, the fact that it was picked up by a new writer makes it even more of an LRF curio. While it didn’t find itself into the Best Picture race, it could still have a shot in a fairly even Best Original Story race.

Another storyline this season has been a strong international flavor within various categories. Of the four acting categories and Best Director, 12 of 20 nominees hail from outside of the United States. For a studio with a bustling stable of writers from all around the globe, it is great to see this reflected across the 35th GRAs.

And finally, the big question remains: who will win the prestigious Golden Reel of Achievement? Only handed out once every five seasons, past recipients include Tom Cruise, Mo Buck, Chad Taylor & John Malone, Christina Hendricks, APJ, and Alden Ehrenreich.


Returning Winners:

VICTORIA PEDRETTI - Tara’s Web was a revelation for Pedretti back in Season 26, amassing noms for Best Villain, Best Starring Couple, and a win for Best Actress. She now aims to join Sydney Sweeney in becoming the only actresses to win Best Actress twice for the same character.

DAN STEVENS - Stevens got his first taste of GRA gold for his supporting performance in Elysian. He has yet to win Best Actor for his turn as James Bond, with Eidolon marking his third nomination for the part.

JOSH BROLIN - Brolin was the first person to win Best Actor for Jonestown back in Season 1. He won again for The Void in Season 21 and is now vying to become the third actor to win Best Actor three or more times…

LEONARDO DICAPRIO - …speaking of, Leo still holds a firm lead at most Best Actor trophies with five. A win here would further distance himself from Tom Hardy in second with three wins.

Returning Nominees:

MICHAEL SHANNON - Shannon could slot in as a former winner as he previously won Best Villain for David Lynch’s Obsession. He has yet to win Best Supporting Actor after being previously nominated for Hated: The Ballad of GG Allin and Heavy Rain.

EMMA MACKEY - The sole nominee in the Best Supporting Actress crop to have been nominated before, Mackey was previously seen at the GRAs for her performance in Time Out!

JACOB ELORDI - While Elordi won Best Starring Couple for The Lone Ranger, he is still waiting for his first Best Actor win after two previous nominations (Starkweather, American Gigolo).

DAMIEN CHAZELLE - This marks the third Best Director nomination for Chazelle after Spider-Man and Oklahoma!, all collaborations with writer Chad Taylor.

DANNY BOYLE - Eidolon is Boyle’s second Best Director nomination after Open Hearts. He is vying to become the fourth straight James Bond director to win this award after Christopher Nolan, Denis Villeneuve, and Joe Wright won for the first three entries.

Newcomers:

JULIA ROBERTS - The 90s megastar earns her first GRA nomination after six appearances, with her LRF career starting in Season 21.

CHRIS ROCK - Rock has been nominated for the first time for his third appearance as Harvey Dent, a rare occurrence in LRF lore. Those three performances make up the comedian’s entire filmography at the studio.

HOLDEN ABBOTT - Dust Saint marks the first GRA writing nomination for Abbott for only their second film for the studio. The film’s Best Picture nomination also marks a high achievement for a relatively new screenwriter.

GEORGIA WATTS - In the Best Adaptation category, Watts pulls off the rare feat of being nominated for their first screenplay at LRF.

ROSE GLASS - The Dust Saint director debuted in Season 29 with The Woman Upstairs and now becomes just the fourth woman to be nominated for the GRA for Best Director.

JESSIE BUCKLEY - Buckley has been a part of five Best Ensemble-nominated casts (four of them X-Men films), but Dust Saint is her first individual nomination.

RENATE REINSVE and LUPITA NYONG’O - Buckley’s fellow Supporting Actress nominees have also been nominated for ensemble casts in the past and are now getting their first individual nod. An added wrinkle, per the LRF Trivia Tidbits, is that Nyongo’o turned down the role in Discovery that Reinsve would later take over.

JOSH O’CONNOR - The Discovery actor has landed his first GRA nomination for his second LRF film, after previously starring as Chuck Mitchell in Songbird.

RINKO KIKUCHI - After steadily building up her LRF resume since Season 6’s Shōgun, Kikuchi is making her GRA debut for her sixth film at the studio.

YULIYA SNIGIR - Snigir is aiming to become Meirad Tako’s third Best Actress winner in the last eight seasons after Dafne Keen for Who Do You Trust When the World is At War? and Yuki Kato for Klitih: A Way of Life.

Monday, April 27, 2026

SEASON 35 GOLDEN REEL AWARDS VOTING

 

The highly competitive nomination phase is over and you, the voters, have decided who will be nominated for the Season 35 Golden Reel Awards. You may now vote to see which nominees will come out victorious at this season's upcoming award ceremony....   




















Friday, April 24, 2026

SEASON 35 GRA NOMINATIONS POLL

 

The first step of any awards show is to determine the nominees. The choices will be announced in less than 72 hours, so vote soon.

In each category, please select your top FIVE choices. All of the categories are below, so just keep scrolling and vote.