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.


















