Thursday, June 25, 2026

Top 10 Cate Blanchett Films

 

Sherman J. Pearson here for another Top 10. Echoes of Red makes film number 11 for star Cate Blanchett, so I figured I might as well look at and rank the previous 10 films on her resume....

Top 10 Cate Blanchett Films
10. Hope, Sadness and Anger
9. The Water Cure
8. Made in Abyss
7. Mass Effect: Cerberus
6. The Queen of the Night
5. For Those Who Don't Read Me
4. The Betrothed
3. An Honest Mistake
2. Guilt
1. Mass Effect 3 - Part 2

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Now Showing: Echoes of Red

 

Echoes of Red
Genre: Thriller / Crime
Director: Emerald Fennell
Writer: Mo Buck
Cast: Cate Blanchett, Jeffrey Wright, Luke Evans, Jessica Barden, Vanessa Kirby, Robin Wright, Mark Strong, Ben Whishaw

Plot: Monday, 8:12 AM

A gated manor sits on top of a hill. A splendid garden, tended by silent employees under the bright Monday sun. Surely the owners of the mansion lead a peaceful, idyllic life, right? The gardeners work in silence, save for the hum of sprinklers and the distant crackle of police radios. Evelyn’s (Cate Blanchett) heels click like a metronome as she descends the steps, a woman keeping time even as her world unravels. She exits through the front door, big sunglasses on her face, pristinely dressed as always. She towers over the police officer following her, Det. Nora Pierce (Jessica Barden). The gardeners follow with their eyes as the squad car carrying their boss exits through the gates. Inside the squad car, Det. Pierce allows Evelyn to contact her lawyer, which she accepts, but not without saying that she’ll live to regret this, it is all a mistake.

As they arrive at the station, Ms. Moreau is taken into interrogation by Pierce. She is joined by her partner and now lead investigator, Lt. James Royce (Jeffrey Wright). Royce tells Ms. Moreau they’ll wait for her counsel to arrive before starting. Evelyn assures them they won’t learn anything she hasn’t already told Pierce, whose diligent notes she has kept in mind. They’re interrupted by Catherine Voss (Robin Wright), Evelyn’s sorority sister, long-time friend and legal counsel. She immediately embraces Evelyn and says she’s sorry for her loss and asks her how she’s holding up. Evelyn says she’s still in shock and can’t believe she has to go through this. Voss analyzes the two detectives and asks if they realize who her client truly is — and warns they’ll regret treating her like a common criminal. Royce calmly reminds her that he’ll be the judge of that. They just want to shed light on the moments before Evelyn’s husband was found dead in the early hours of Monday morning. Royce’s phone buzzes on the table. He glances at the name : Chief Commissioner Delorme. He silences it. Catherine notices, and so does Evelyn.

Hours earlier - Monday, 3:25 AM

Evelyn panics as she sees her husband, Patrick (Luke Evans), collapsed on the floor - blood spreading across the beige carpet like a dark halo. For a second, she’s certain he blinks. Then he doesn’t. She frantically grabs the nearest phone, or maybe she already had it in her hand; she can’t remember. She dials 911, telling the operator she thinks her husband is dead. She starts to cry as she hangs up.

Hours earlier – Sunday, 10:45 PM

Evelyn dines with her husband at the long oak table, enjoying a quiet evening for once. They discuss plans for an upcoming charity gala, promising themselves not to repeat last year’s mistakes. Patrick jokes that the hors d’oeuvres were “criminally bad,” he’ll have a word with the charity coordinator, Vivienne, about that. It draws a laugh from Evelyn — though something in her tone feels off, a half-beat too flat. She notices a shadow moving in the hallway but dismisses it as the wind shifting a curtain. Her phone buzzes, from Catherine. Evelyn had texted her earlier to confirm their Monday morning meeting. The reply startles her: Everything will be fine, for now. Evelyn rereads the message several times, and each read subtly changes its meaning — reassurance, warning, threat. She can’t tell which anymore.

Immediately before the discovery – Monday, 3:05 AM

Evelyn wakes to a faint sound — a floorboard creaking, or maybe the clock ticking louder than usual. She glances at the bedside clock: 3:05 AM. The house feels colder than it should. Patrick’s side of the bed is empty. She slips into her robe and walks down the hallway. A few lights are on. On the desk, she notices two Post-it notes covered in her handwriting, but she doesn’t remember writing them. The words blur when she tries to read them.Patrick’s coat hangs over a chair. She’s sure she saw him in the study earlier — or did she only dream that? She calls his name. No answer. She retraces her steps. The rooms look slightly different than she remembers — as if the house itself is rearranging while she moves through it. She pins the discordance on her sleepiness, it’s the middle of the night after all.

Monday, 9:45 AM

Lt. Royce asks Evelyn to recount the events leading up to the discovery of her husband’s body. She’s pale, but composed. In a slow, deliberate rhythm, she reconstructs her version of the night. She sayd she woke up at 3:30 AM after hearing a loud thud from the study. She claims she called 911 immediately, around 3:31 or 3:32, she can’t quite remember. Nora quietly points out in her notebook that the call was lodged at 3:37. Evelyn continues, she found Patrick lying on the study carpet, she thinks he fell and hit his head. Royce corrects her, Patrick’s body was found in the bedroom, not the study. Catherine interjects, reminding them Evelyn is in shock, that she just lost her husband of ten years. Evelyn nods, a flicker of irritation crossing her eyes, but her attention drifts to the wall clock. It ticks loudly. She glances at her watch, it’s off by a few minutes, maybe, but she says nothing. Luke Morgan (Ben Whishaw), the forensics expert enters the room and gives Royce a folder. He tells Royce the blood pattern analysis is done, and doesn’t line up with a fall. Evelyn tilts her head and asks what fall they’re talking about. Royce says she just told them she believes Patrick fell and hit his head.

Later that morning

Evelyn sits alone in the interrogation room. The mirror reflects her oddly, her expression lagging a half-second behind. She thinks she sees movement behind her, but there’s nothing there. Her gaze keeps returning to the clock. It’s wrong. Or her watch is. She can’t tell anymore, and the uncertainty gnaws at her. Royce and Pierce re-enter, carrying photographs: one of the crime scene, Patrick’s body unmistakably in the bedroom; another showing Evelyn’s hands, faint traces of blood along the creases. She shakes her head. She doesn’t remember any of it. Luke, the forensic expert, steps in behind them, quietly placing a small evidence folder on the table. Preliminary analysis; traces of another person’s blood on the carpet and under the fingernails. Evelyn freezes. She shakes her head again. I don’t remember any of that she stutters. Royce asks her about Catherine, confirming Evelyn received a text from her after dinner. Evelyn insists she did. Royce slides a printout across the table, a screenshot from her phone; the timestamp: 11:58 PM. A beat of panic flashes across Evelyn’s face, but she forces composure. Across the table, Catherine observes Det. Royce, he noticed that flicker too. The detective, calm and almost gentle, might be better at his job that she expected. Royce’s phone vibrates again. He steps outside. Commissioner Delorme (Mark Strong) is on the other line, he tells Royce to stop bothering the Moreau’s. Their foundation financed the new hospital wing, he needs to stop crucifying the poor widow over a domestic tragedy. Royce tells him he suspects it’s not just domestic and Delorme orders him to make it look like it is. Luke lingers near the doorway, glancing back at Evelyn. His eyes are quiet but not neutral — he knows there’s more beneath the surface, even if he can’t yet say it aloud. Evelyn looks up, meeting his gaze for a fraction of a second, and the shadow of guilt she doesn’t fully understand flickers across her face.



Midday

Evelyn is left with Catherine in the interrogation room. The ticking clock seems inconsistent. She tries to concentrate and retells her version of events to Catherine. She remains convinced Patrick was in the study. She recalls a little blood, not the pool shown in the photographs. She begins to question herself, was there really blood ? Was it in the bedroom or the study. She called 911, but when was it ? It is killing her she doesn’t remember exactly. She can’t remember, the details are hazy. Catherine reassures her friend, saying everything will be fine, just like she texted her. She recalls going to see Vivienne (Vanessa Kirby) hours earlier, there was tension, Vivienne wasn’t happy and Patrick was mentioned, she doesn’t remember why. She remembers dinner with Patrick, they ate veal, or was it chicken, she can’t remember either. Pictures were out of place. Someone else had been in the house ? She notices a chipped wine glass. A faint stain on the carpet. Blood ? Or just wine? She doesn’t know for sure. She remembers hearing a laugh, whose was it ? Patrick’s ? Vivienne’s ? She remembers drinking wine. White ? Red? Or was it a rosée ? Catherine puts her hand on Evelyn’s shoulder, urging her to remain calm. Evelyn glances in the mirror, a flicker of guilt on her own face. She whispers to herself, did I ? No… I don’t remember. Catherine whispers that everything will be fine.

Afternoon

Royce and Pierce walk back in with new photographs, Pierce still carrying her notebook. They ask Evelyn to walk them through her memories of Sunday evening again. Catherine says they already did, pointing out the notebook, but Royce wants to do it again to clarify some things. She reminds them about the out of place picture frames, the shadow she thinks she saw, the chipped wine glass, the stain on the carpet, the little bit of blood she saw near Patrick. Royce points out the inconsistencies. Her fingerprints were found on the picture frames and no one else’s. There was no chipped wine glass anywhere in the house. He lifts a photo. You said there was just a little blood here, he says. He taps on the image; that’s a pool, Evelyn he adds. Evelyn denies the accusation Royce is implying and so does Catherine. Pierce breaks from her silence and brings up Vivienne. She notices an uneasy look from Evelyn as she mentions Vivienne. Evelyn recalls meeting with Vivienne earlier that day, there was tension but she couldn’t remember what it was about. Royce asked Pierce if she tried to contact Ms. Vivienne and Pierce says they couldn’t reach her. Evelyn keeps glancing at the clock, again, ticking seems off. She remembers handling the picture frames but doesn’t know why. Catherine tries to soothe Evelyn, saying everything will be fine. Royce receives another call from Delorme, which leaves Pierce alone with Evelyn and Catherine. Catherine smiles and asks Pierce what she writes in that big notebook of hers and she says she’s just keeping track of everything to make sure they don’t miss anything important. Catherine’s brow furrows as she glimpses the notebook. Pierce is only observing Evelyn, nothing more. Catherine wonders if every move her friend makes is being recorded. Pierce catches Catherine looking at her notes and closes it. She leaves the room to meet Royce. Evelyn collapses in her chair. Did I ? She stutters as Catherine tries to sooth her.

Afternoon

When Royce and Pierce come back with new photographs Catherine threatens to call Commissioner Delorme and end this circus. Royce only smiles: Delorme already knows. She wonders aloud if that’s why he keeps calling him. Royce shrugs — Delorme likes to be involved. Royce asks her when’s the last time Evelyn met with Vivienne. Evelyn is uneasy, which is diligently noted by Pierce. The ticking pulls her somewhere else — not the station’s clock this time, but another one, louder, echoing through marble walls.

The Evening of an earlier day

Evelyn is annoyed at the clock ticking in the lobby, it’s so loud, it breaks the dreadful silence of the lobby. She imagines Patrick and Vivienne, sleeping together in her own bed. She wonders if he also thinks the elevator is really slow in that building as she longed for Vivienne and couldn’t wait to get his hands down her blouse. Patrick was asleep at home, he has always been a night owl. She grabbed his phone and found out about his affair with Vivienne, their charity coordinator. She had texted Vivienne, or Viv as he called her to meet tonight, but little did she know that Evelyn would show up, and not Patrick. She gets on the elevator as she wonders how long the affair has been going on. Vivienne has been working at the foundation for five years now. Is it a new thing or has it been going on since she came in their lives ? Evelyn is mad at herself she didn’t notice it earlier, she could see it in his eyes. She’s at her door and knocks, her hand trembling. Vivienne opens the door in a white dress, calm, curious. The words blur in Evelyn’s head — a scream, laughter, a glass shattering, the sharp pop of a frame hitting the floor. A splash of red — wine, or not wine. Her hands gripping something. Silence. Then her own voice: “Don’t look at me like that.”

Afternoon

The ticking slows. The room reforms — Catherine’s hand on her arm, the sterile hum of the lights. Evelyn whispers, I fired her. Catherine shushes her, but Evelyn’s gaze fixes on the mirror. The frames… they weren’t there before,” she murmurs. Royce and Pierce exchange a glance, they sense something, but they can’t name it.

Sunday, or Saturday, Can’t remember

The manor feels too quiet, cold. Evelyn walks down the hall, her hair slightly disheveled, her face pale. She’s holding a towel, or a napkin with a faint reddish stain. She pauses, confused, wine perhaps ? She smells it, it’s clean. She drops it in the chute, uneasy. The ticking clock from earlier returns, faint in the background. On the console table, a picture frame is slightly crooked. She corrects it without thinking about it. Evelyn enters the dining room and she opens the curtains. There are two glasses on the table, one chipped, one isn’t. There are plates on the table, they still have crumbs in them. They did she give a day off to the cleaning lady ? She can’t remember. Did they have dinner here or somewhere else ? Evelyn blinks away, the sound of a glass shattering echoes faintly.

Patrick enters the dining room, asking his wife if she’s okay, she’s been quiet all day. She nods absently. He puts new plates on the table and serves red wine. He throws away the chipped glass and picks up the dirty dishes and brings them to the kitchen. He talks about his work, the foundation, a new donor, the next fundraiser. Evelyn focuses on the wine, red, just like… They finish their dinner, Evelyn walks through the hallway and notices a different framed picture, of her and Patrick at a charity gala. The reflection of a chandelier makes it look like a streak of red runs across their faces. She checks her phone and received a text from Catherine : Rest, don’t dwell on it. You did what you had to. Evelyn stares at it, trying to understand the meaning. She tries to scroll up with the conversation has been deleted. She types I keep thinking about her, but deletes it. She sends thank you instead.

She walks past the mirror at the end of the hall — her reflection seems to move half a second late. She looks into it. The hallway behind her flickers: once with her current self, once with the past — Vivienne’s shadow crossing it. The lights flicker softly as the sound of the clock grows louder again — the same ticking she heard in the interrogation room. Evelyn lies awake in bed beside Patrick, eyes open. His soft breathing contrasts with her restless mind.She stares at the ceiling, then turns toward the bedside clock: 2:37 AM. A faint reflection of red wine flashes across the clock face. The ticking continues — slow, steady, wrong.

Sunday Morning ? Monday Morning ? I don’t know

The bedside clock shows 2:59 AM, the reflection of red wine still pulses faintly on the clock. Evelyn lies awake, Patrick shifts beside her, restless. She hears a dripping sound, she thinks of wine, or blood, but it’s the bathroom tap. She hears movement downstairs, a faint clink, like a glass getting chipped. Her mind flickers to Vivienne’s apartment, the falling frame, the glass shattering. She rises quietly, trying to investigate the noise. She looks around the house, chasing a shadow. She calls for Patrick, once, but her voice sounds wrong and distant. She walks through the corridor, shadows long and cold. Every mirror surface catches her reflection half a beat behind. The clock reads 3:18 AM, but it hasn’t ticked forward since she left the bedroom. She sees a Post it note on a desk, she has to set the clock back to daylight savings time. When was that again ? She calls for Patrick again, but when he doesn’t answer she heads back to the bedroom.

She instead finds Patrick at the base of the stairs, one slipper halfway off, wine from the bottle he carried pooling near his head. A thin trickle of blood spreads beside it, but it’s indistinguishable in color. The composition mirrors her mental image of Vivienne’s death. She gasps and runs to her husband, slipping slightly on the liquid, smearing her hands. She tries to wake him up, but her voice cracks into sobs. For a moment, she sees Vivienne’s face beneath her hands. She blinks, it’s gone. The ticking returns, louder, arrhythmic. She stumbles to the phone and dials 911. Her description is confused. She mentions an apartment, wineglass. She says it was an accident. The dispatcher reminds her that no one has accused her yet. She kneels next to her husband caressing his face, smearing it in blood and wine, putting her prints all over his body. Lights flash against the manor wall. Catherine arrives, she doesn’t remember calling her. Evelyn tells him he fell, she didn’t touch him. Catherine nods, unsure if she believes her. We fade to the clock, 3:25 AM.

Evening

Royce and Pierce return with new photos and evidence. They mention finding a chipped glass in the trash, but it didn’t have any blood on it. They ask Evelyn to retell her version of events. She mentions Patrick was in the study, mentions the little blood she saw, which is inconsistent with the real scene) and recalls details that actually happened on Saturday, where Vivienne died, but she mixed up the days in her mind. Catherine starts to connect the dots herself, noting Evelyn’s memory gaps and emotional cues as Vivienne is mentioned. Royce and Pierce repeat the inconsistencies and Evelyn doubles down. Hints start to appear in evidence : gloves with foreign blood on it, a handbag that doesn’t belong to either Evelyn or Patrick, faint blood that doesn’t match Patrick’s. It makes them curious, but not accusatory yet. They retire from the interrogation room to confer with Luke to go over the evidence one more time. Catherine, who connected the dots, calms Evelyn down, saying we’ll sort this out together, she’s going to leave this place and go back in her room to get some much needed sleep.

Royce receives a call from Delorme, he puts him on speaker phone so Pierce and Morgan can hear it. He reminds him of the political pressure he’s under and to keep the investigation contained. He consults his colleagues and he points out they believe someone else might have been present at the manor.

Evelyn is left alone with Catherine, staring at her reflection: guilt, confusion, and the knowledge of Vivienne’s death, but the police haven’t connected the dots. Pierce tries calling Vivienne again, but it goes straight to voicemail. A police officer tells them the lady they’re trying to reach has been found dead in her apartment. Royce has a sudden look of realization, she didn’t lie, she just moved time.



HISTORY LESSON (SEASON 14)

 

Welcome to History Lesson, where we take a closer look at the movies that dare to tackle real-life events with varying levels of accuracy, drama, and WTF casting choices. These films promise to educate and entertain, but more often than not, they rewrite history with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. We’ll be your guide through the land of miscast biopics, dramatic embellishments, and historical “inspired-by” liberties, breaking down whether these flicks are Golden Reel Award-worthy masterpieces or just a big-budget Wikipedia summary. Either way, it’s more fun than your high school history class—and there’s popcorn.

This time around we will take a look at Season 14's fact-based slate....



HISTORY LESSON: THE YOUNG PRETENDER
The Young Pretender is a lavish, angst-filled chronicle of Charles Edward Stuart (Nicholas Hoult), aka Bonnie Prince Charlie, aka Scotland’s Biggest Mistake. With more wigs, swords, and melodrama than a season of The Crown, the film captures Charles’s quixotic attempt to reclaim the British throne for the Stuart family — because apparently, what the world needed was more monarchy. Hoult struts through the role with princely arrogance, while Anya Taylor-Joy plays Clementina, his lover who spends most of the runtime saying, “Maybe don’t do that,” only for Charles to, of course, do that.

While The Young Pretender nails the visuals (yes, Scotland looks majestic as ever), its grasp on history is shakier than a Highland charge. Charles’s ill-advised invasion of England is as entertainingly chaotic as it was in real life, though the film conveniently glosses over the fact that he was basically ghosted by the French when he begged for help. And yes, he really did flee Scotland disguised as a maid named Betty Burke — though it’s unclear if he nailed it as hard as Hoult does, complete with a sassy apron. The movie trades accuracy for spectacle, but honestly, watching Charles self-destruct while everyone around him rolls their eyes is its own kind of historical truth.




HISTORY LESSON: HARRELSON
David Mackenzie’s Harrelson dives headfirst into the outrageous and chaotic life of Charles Harrelson (Stephen Dorff), a man who transitioned from a charismatic hustler to a hitman with delusions of grandeur. The film opens with Harrelson confessing, during a cocaine-fueled standoff, to killing not just federal judge John Wood but also JFK — because why not? From there, we’re taken on a wild ride through his early cons, his questionable courtroom victories (thanks to David Strathairn’s oily defense attorney Percy Foreman), and his eventual unraveling as a coked-up outlaw whose biggest crime might just be oversharing.

The film's razor-sharp script finds humor in Harrelson’s blend of confidence and incompetence. From paying witnesses who conveniently vanish to leaving a murder trial thinking he’s untouchable, Dorff perfectly captures a man too reckless for his own schemes. Highlights include Giovanni Ribisi as sleazy gambler Pete Scamardo and Harrelson’s botched assassination plot against Judge Wood, which spirals into absurdity when he brags about it to an entire bar. Mackenzie masterfully balances the dark humor of Harrelson’s antics with the grim reality of his downfall, painting a portrait of a man too impulsive to realize he was his own worst enemy.




HISTORY LESSON: SUNNY DAYS
Sunny Days takes some liberties with historical accuracy, but hey, that’s showbiz. Did Tammy Sytch’s rise to fame include this much melodrama and scandal? Absolutely. Did every wrestler and promoter around her speak in perfectly scripted dialogue that conveniently moves the story forward? Probably not. The film tries to capture the chaos of the ‘90s wrestling scene, but at times it feels more like a TMZ reenactment than a true-to-life biography. And let’s not even talk about how sanitized the film handles Tammy’s later life struggles — she’s portrayed as messy but still redeemable, which is a bold choice considering the real-world headlines about her post-wrestling career.

Now, Jack Black as Tom Prichard? Inspired and hilariously off-the-wall. Sure, the real Prichard probably wasn’t cracking jokes like he’s in a School of Rock sequel, but Black brings a surprising amount of heart to the role. His chemistry with Lucas Till’s Chris Candido is one of the movie’s bright spots, even if it feels like they’re in an entirely different, far funnier movie. Meanwhile, Bradley Cooper as Vince McMahon continues to baffle — it’s as if they cast him hoping he’d charm audiences into forgetting that Vince is an intimidating, growly-voiced control freak. For a film set in the sweaty, chaotic world of professional wrestling, Sunny Days feels oddly polished, like a WrestleMania match that’s gone through one too many rewrites.




HISTORY LESSON: THE TEMPTATIONS
The Temptations struts onto the screen with sequins, soul, and just enough sanitized drama to make you wonder if Berry Gordy was peeking over Clint Eastwood’s shoulder the whole time. Credit where it’s due: this is a glossy, energetic tribute with killer music and an impressively committed ensemble—Corey Hawkins’ David Ruffin is appropriately magnetic and exhausting in equal measure, and Lakeith Stanfield’s Otis Williams makes stoicism feel (almost) cinematic. The musical numbers? Top-notch. The suits? Even better. But for all its smooth grooves, this Motown saga plays more like a well-rehearsed PR tour than a deep dive into one of music’s most volatile ensembles.

Historical accuracy takes a backseat to nostalgia here. Ruffin’s coke-fueled meltdowns and Paul’s tragic descent into alcoholism are present, but filtered through a PG-13 lens—like we’re watching the version you’d show in a high school music history class. The film keeps the timeline moving so fast it practically blurs major milestones (the group went through more lineup changes than the Avengers, but don’t expect too much clarity on who’s who after Act Two). And while the Motown politics are acknowledged, Berry Gordy’s depiction is suspiciously gentle—because of course the man who’s been mythologized for half a century comes off like a slightly irritable uncle instead of a calculating mogul. Still, despite the sanded edges and the faint scent of authorized biography, The Temptations is a toe-tapping, respectably reverent crowd-pleaser. Just don’t expect much more than what’s already in the liner notes.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

PRESS X: METAL GEAR SOLID

 

I'm Alex Kirby and welcome to another outing of Press X. This time around we are moving on to the stealthy Metal Gear Solid. Here, we don’t just ask if the latest video game adaptation is faithful — we ask if it levels up, glitches out, or just needs a hard reset.




Many modern gamers may have only been introduced to Metal Gear Solid when it debuted on Playstation back in 1998, but it was actually the third game to a franchise that debuted a decade prior. Created by Hideo Kojima and developed by Konami, Metal Gear is one of the games that pioneered and popularized stealth and cinematic video games. Like my parents, Sega and Nintendo were too busy fighting with each other to notice the young child of Playstation growing up, becoming a formidable opponent in the Console War, and Metal Gear Solid was one of the weapons they had to keep their head above water in its infancy.

Now with a franchise across all platforms, the franchise is still alive and well, although new entries to the series has slowed down and all we see are ports and remakes. Fans hold debates over which Metal Gear Solid is the best, but most of us can all agree the first MGS is what made us fans.
Players control 'Solid Snake,' a soldier who infiltrates a nuclear weapons facility to neutralized a terrorist threat from FOXHOUND, a renegade special forces unit. Snake must free hostages and stop terrorists from launching a nuclear strike. The game's cinematic cutscenes were mind-blowing for the time, especially when you confront Psycho Mantis and he tells you(the Player) what other games you like to play by reading your memory card. I once thought my game was haunted when Psycho Mantis told me I played Castlevania: Symphony of the Night. Yep, needed a new controller after that night.

This is all why fans had been asking for a Metal Gear Solid movie. We wondered "Is Psycho Mantis going to tell us we saw The Avengers Endgame?" And in Season 3, we were going to find out. Written by Mark Newton and directed by Joseph Kosinski with Chris Evans as Snake, the film already had some big ambitions, much like the game of which it was based on.

The film plot itself, is basically the equivalent of the video game on the big screen, streamlined into a two-hour sci-fi action thrill-ride. A retired soldier, Solid Snake, is sent to infiltrate a remote Alaskan facility seized by the rogue FOXHOUND unit, who threaten nuclear annihilation using the walking tank Metal Gear REX. As he fights through deadly operatives and old allies turned enemies, Snake uncovers a conspiracy tying him to the project’s mastermind, the legacy of Big Boss, and a lethal virus hidden in his own body. What begins as a rescue mission becomes a battle for identity, survival, and the truth behind his creation.

While many fans may have liked it for its familiarity to the plot, making it less likely to ruin anything, the movie alienated fans who have already played the game and knew exactly what was going to happen.

Critics felt this sentiment, those who panned it said it did little more than give characters things to say and action scenes to perform. Critics who praised it loved Chris Evans' Solid Snake and Joseph Kosinski's direction.

For me personally, I'm happy we got a Metal Gear Solid film. It's narrative lends itself well to a movie adaptation, but I do think it relied too heavily on the game, hitting too many moments that happened in the game that made me think "I could have saved the price of admission and popped this into my Playstation and it wouldn't have been any different except for famous actors in the parts."

Despite my opinion, audiences still showed up in masses. A combined 428M with a heavy budget of 142M. It made 108M in profit. Clearly the studio took a gamble on it it, and it still paid off. It would go on to earn a Most Wanted Sequel nomination, and in a few seasons, we would certainly see Solid Snake again.
Since Metal Gear Solid, Mark Newton has become a career "big movie" writer, penning Marvel, Masters of the Universe and even Pompeii. Joseph Kosinski would be given director duties for the Batman franchise in LRF, and I can definitely see shades of a future Batman director when I watched Metal Gear Solid.

While Metal Gear Solid didn't try anything new with the franchise, it still came up as a winner. The cast and crew won, the studio won, even half of the fans won. The other half who wanted a fresh story? Not so much. 


RELEASE: 1016 WEST MONROE

 

1016 West Monroe
Genre: Drama/Musical
Director: Barry Jenkins
Writer: Meirad Tako
Cast: Quintessa Swindell, Lewis Pullman, Diana Silvers

Budget: $18,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $7,902,004
Foreign Box Office: $5,090,085
Total Profit: -$22,124,357

Reaction: This one just couldn't find an audience. Could it be the lack of star power? The genres? Or was it because Google directed everyone looking for a showing to a Chicago condominium? 



"This is a highly ambitious, atmospheric film that nails the jazz-soaked grit of 1950s Chicago. Its distinct style is refreshing, the music is ever-present, and the film clearly understands the culture it’s romanticizing. Where it stumbles is in its supporting characters: Bianca’s villainy escalates a little too quickly, while Lawrence feels underdeveloped for how central he’s meant to be. Barbara remains an engaging lead, though her character is loaded with so much symbolism that she occasionally feels more thematic than human. Still, it’s a well-made musical that actually likes music, and honestly, that alone earns it points." - Tim Durand, San Francisco Chronicle


"1016 West Monroe is a soulful, lyrical character piece that unfolds like a jazz composition—fluid, intimate, and emotionally resonant. Barry Jenkins directs with patience and precision, while Quintessa Swindell delivers a magnetic performance that carries the film’s quiet intensity. It’s a story of ambition and sacrifice that lingers well beyond its final note." - George Ryan, Philadelphia Inquirer 



"Despite its visual polish, 1016 West Monroe struggles to translate style into compelling drama. The film drifts through loosely connected moments, with conflicts that feel underdeveloped and repetitive. Quintessa Swindell, while occasionally effective, lacks the commanding presence needed to anchor a film this dependent on its lead, leaving key emotional beats feeling distant rather than immersive. Diana Silvers fares better, bringing sharper definition to Bianca, but the story around them feels meandering and self-indulgent. It’s a film that wants to feel like jazz, but too often just wanders off-tempo." - Dave Manning, Ridgefield Press






Rated R for language, some sexual content, and thematic material.





Monday, June 22, 2026

LAST RESORT FILMS JUKEBOX: 1016 WEST MONROE

 


NOW SHOWING: 1016 WEST MONROE

 

1016 West Monroe
Genre: Drama/Musical
Director: Barry Jenkins
Writer: Meirad Tako
Cast: Quintessa Swindell, Lewis Pullman, Diana Silvers

Plot: PART I: OPENING NOTES

Chicago, Autumn 1956

The Greyhound hissed to a halt with a stuttering sigh, as if exhausted from carrying the dreams of too many nobodies across the Midwest. Barbara Coltrane stepped onto the wet pavement, her heels clicking against the gum-spotted sidewalk like a drum intro nobody expected to matter.

She stood still for a moment. The skyline cut the gray sky like sheet music carved in silhouette. Steel bridges and smoke-stained buildings, pigeons scattering like notes too quick to catch. Chicago.

Barbara carried two suitcases—one full of cast iron and spices, the other of sheet music and secondhand dresses. She wore a wool coat with the collar flipped up and a scarf tied around her hair in a red ribbon, fluttering like defiance in the wind. Her breath steamed out in soft clouds, but her eyes held fire.

She was twenty-seven, from Lafayette, Louisiana, with a voice richer than bourbon and a gumbo recipe older than the state line. She hadn’t spoken to her family in three years—not since she left the church choir for a nightclub job in Baton Rouge and refused to marry the dentist her aunt set her up with. She wasn’t looking for salvation. She was looking for a stage.

The cabdriver didn't speak much, but his radio was tuned to a jazz station. Clifford Brown’s trumpet played soft and sad, like it knew the inside of her chest. Barbara smiled.

“Keep it on,” she said.

They passed South Side stoops and neon-lit diners, smoky windows behind which men talked baseball and women poured coffee. They turned onto Halsted, then Monroe. The buildings thinned. The color shifted. Here, the corners were scraped raw from time, dotted with pawn shops, grocers, and clubs where trumpet players blew their guts out for five dollars and a beer.

There it was: 1016 West Monroe Street. A tired brick building on a corner lot, its windows shuttered, its awning torn. The paint peeled in layers—mint green beneath dull brown. A broken neon sign hung above the door: Maxwell Lunchette. A name out of time.

Barbara stepped out of the cab, ignoring the driver’s glance that asked you sure, lady? She paid him with crisp bills, then stood before the door like a priestess before a temple. She exhaled and whispered, “This’ll do.”

Inside, the space smelled like mildew and regret. Dust floated in sunbeams slicing through the boarded windows. There were twenty-three tables, mismatched chairs, a grease-blackened kitchen, and—most importantly—a small, upright piano in the corner, covered in spiderwebs. She lifted the cover. Middle C still worked. Out of tune, but alive.

By dusk, she’d unpacked her pans and knives. She scrubbed counters while humming Dinah Washington. The radiator knocked like a jazz drummer’s solo. She poured herself black coffee from a metal thermos and drank it while staring out the window.

Tomorrow she would meet Mr. Gannon. She had the first month’s rent in an envelope and plans for Barbara’s: a restaurant, a supper club, a stage for every girl who’d ever been told to stay behind the curtain. She envisioned white linen and candlelight, a three-piece band, and her voice melting across the room like sugar in bourbon.

There would be gumbo with smoked duck and crawfish étouffée, sweet potato pie and music that made the walls breathe.

But tonight she sat alone in a cracked vinyl booth, watching the streetlights flicker on, one by one. She lit a cigarette with trembling fingers.

This was it. Her new life. The overture.

Somewhere outside, a saxophone wailed from an open window. The city crooned her welcome, off-key but honest.

Barbara took one last drag, crushed the cigarette, and said to no one, “Let the bastards try and stop me.”

PART II: THE LEASE AND THE LION

Three days later

Barbara had just finished laying down the new black-and-white checkered floor tiles—some still drying crookedly—when the bell above the front door gave its first sharp jingle. It was not a customer. Not yet.

The man who entered didn’t belong to this part of town. He wore a camel-colored overcoat, too clean for the grime that clung to the windows. His leather gloves were unscuffed. His shoes clicked like a verdict.

He paused just inside the doorway, letting the city wind die behind him. His eyes flicked up to the stained ceiling, then across to Barbara, who was standing by the bar counter with her sleeves rolled up, dust on her cheeks and a hammer still in her hand.

He didn’t introduce himself.
“You signed this?” he asked, holding a folded lease agreement as if it might be diseased.

Barbara tilted her head. “You must be Lawrence.”

He stared, momentarily thrown.
“Your name’s on the documents,” she said, unbothered, walking past him toward a folding table where her coffee thermos waited. She poured herself a cup without offering him any. “Your father owns the property. But it’s your signature that counts.”

Lawrence gave a dry laugh, more bark than humor.
“That building’s zoned for a diner or a deli. Not a cabaret.”

Barbara took a sip. “It’s not a cabaret. It’s a supper club. There’s a difference.”

He stepped forward, shaking the paper in her direction.
“This is a serious mistake.”

She set her coffee down and crossed her arms. “You think I made a mistake, or you did?”

He ignored the question, already pacing. “I don’t know what game you’re playing, but this neighborhood doesn’t want candlelit catfish and someone howling show tunes over a trumpet solo. It wants cheap corned beef and a jukebox that doesn’t break.”

Barbara’s face didn’t flinch. “I’m not here to feed a neighborhood’s expectations. I’m here to raise them.”

Lawrence stopped pacing. The silence stretched between them, thick as gravy.

She continued. “You ever hear of Mahalia Jackson?”

“What’s that got to do with anything?”

“She sang gospel like fire. They told her to stay in churches. She said she’d sing where the walls trembled. That’s what I want this place to be—trembling walls.”

Lawrence scoffed. “It’ll fail in a month. Maybe less. The world’s full of dreamers who don’t know how to budget.”

“And full of men who mistake bitterness for realism,” she shot back.

He blinked. First time. Just once. Then slowly walked to the back wall and inspected a sconce Barbara had rehung. He tapped it once. Crooked.

“I grew up in this building,” he said suddenly, voice lower. “Used to sit behind the counter when my mother ran the lunch crowd. Ham sandwiches and egg salad. She didn’t have live bands. But she made a profit.”

Barbara softened. A little. “What happened to her?”

“She died,” he said. Flat.

A beat passed. Barbara nodded once. “Mine too. Cancer. Didn’t stop me cooking.”

They stood there in a kind of standoff—not anger now, just presence.

Lawrence walked over to the piano in the corner. He tapped a key. Then another. Out of tune.
“You know this thing’s going to need a full restringing?” he muttered.

Barbara smiled. “You offering?”

He snorted, heading for the door. “You want a restaurant? Fine. Just don’t expect help from me when it all burns down.”

She called after him, voice cool.
“If it does, I’ll build again. And if you play the piano, come back when you’re not trying to be your father.”

He stopped, halfway out the door.

“I don’t play anymore.”

“Shame,” she said. “Your hands say otherwise.”

And then he left. The bell jingled once, sharp like a cymbal crash.

Barbara took another sip of coffee.
So that was the lion in the lease—Lawrence Gannon, heir to buildings and bitterness.

She turned back to her work. The tiles still needed settling, and the paint fumes were thick. But her hands were steady. She started humming a melody—a new one. Maybe in A minor. Something unfinished, but rising.

PART III: FIRST BRIDGE – JAZZ

Two weeks later

Barbara found the piano unlocked one rainy night.

The supper club was still a mess of sawdust and possibility. Half the tables were covered in tarps, the chairs unpainted, and the light fixtures hung at awkward angles like hesitant dancers. But the piano—old, walnut-stained, dusty with disuse—had been left open.

She didn’t remember unlocking it.

She approached it cautiously, wiping a streak across the lid with her sleeve. On the music stand, a single page had been left behind. Not sheet music—ledger paper. Scribbled in pencil:
“F7 – C#dim – Bm7 – E9 – F7.”

A jazz progression. Not for amateurs.

From behind the kitchen pass window, a note sounded. Soft. Deliberate.
She froze.

There, seated at the keys, sleeves rolled up, tie loosened, was Lawrence Gannon. His fingers danced across the ivory like they’d never stopped. The tune was "'Round Midnight"—not quite Monk, not quite Miles—somewhere between rigid control and aching memory.

Barbara didn’t speak. She watched.

Lawrence played like a man exorcising something—his eyes fixed on the chipped keys, his jaw tight. The notes weren’t pretty. They were honest. And that was worse.

When he reached the final bar, she whispered, “I thought you didn’t play anymore.”

He looked up slowly. “I don’t. Not really.”

“Could’ve fooled me.”

He gave a half-shrug. “I used to sneak down here when I was a kid. After lunch rush. My mother didn’t mind. My father hated it. Said music was for waiters and fools.”

“And now?”

“Now I balance rent books and call plumbers.”

Barbara moved toward the piano. “Mind if I sit?”

Lawrence hesitated. Then slid over, making room on the worn bench. She smoothed her skirt and lowered herself beside him. Their knees brushed. Neither moved.

She placed her fingers gently on the keys and began to sing. No accompaniment—just voice.

Soft, sultry, soulful:
“It begins to tell… 'round midnight, 'round midnight…”

He didn’t speak. Didn’t nod. Just started playing under her. Quietly, his left hand pulsing like a heartbeat, his right weaving silver webs. Their chemistry was instant. Not rehearsed. Organic.

Barbara’s voice rose as the chords darkened. She leaned in—not toward him, but toward the music between them.

When the song ended, the air between them pulsed with something unspoken.

Lawrence exhaled. “You’re good.”

“I’m better with a full band,” she said.

He gave a sideways glance. “You got one?”

“Not yet.”

He stood, brushing off his slacks. “You planning a full set for opening?”

“I’m planning to give this city something it doesn’t know it needs.”

A pause.

Lawrence nodded. Just once. Then walked to the bar, poured himself a glass of tap water, and leaned against the counter. “You’re not like the others my father rents to.”

Barbara folded her arms. “Because I’m a woman?”

“Because you’re serious.”

Silence again. The rain outside picked up, tapping the windows like a snare drum.

“Let me help you fix the piano,” he said at last. “It’s the only part of this place I remember fondly.”

Barbara gave him a long look. “Why the change of heart?”

He shrugged. “Maybe I remembered I used to believe in something, too.”

Barbara turned away, but a smile tugged at the corner of her mouth.

“Then bring a wrench tomorrow. And don’t wear that tie.”

PART IV: BIANCALATTE

Four days later

Mornings on Monroe Street were quieter than the night jazz that danced through its alleys. The fog hung low, pooling like breath in a cold chapel. Across from Barbara’s half-born supper club stood a coffee shop called Biancalatte, painted pale mint with gold leaf lettering and a curved window like the eye of an old European cathedral.

Inside, Bianca Rosetti crafted cappuccinos with obsessive precision.
She steamed the milk herself—no apprentices. Frothed exactly to 140°F, never scorched. The beans were from Guatemala, the grinder cleaned nightly, the machines wiped with silent vengeance. The music overhead was soft Italian jazz—never American, never vocal. The aroma was elegance, the mood: control.

She watched the supper club from behind the espresso machine like a hawk in red lipstick.

A bell jingled.

Lawrence entered with his collar open, coat unbuttoned, and eyes tired. He looked out of place here now, like a jazz musician in a symphony pit.

Bianca’s face lit up. “You’re late.”

“I stayed to help Barbara fix the wiring above the stage.”

That word. Barbara.
Bianca’s smile twitched like a string pulled too tight.

“Stage?” she asked, voice light. “So it’s a theatre now?”

Lawrence stepped forward, kissing her cheek. She didn’t lean in.
“She’s putting together a band. Wants to open in a month.”

“And you’re… what? Her handyman now?” Bianca asked, with a voice so smooth it could cut glass.

“I’m not working for her. I’m just—she needed help.”

Bianca walked around the counter, wiping her hands slowly on a towel. “You don’t owe her anything, Lawrence.”

“I know.”

“You’ve got your own business. Your own future. We’ve got plans.”

Lawrence nodded, but his eyes were far away. On the other side of the street. On a piano and a woman who sang Thelonious Monk in the key of midnight.

Bianca tilted her head. “Come to dinner tonight. My father’s bringing the final investment agreement. After that—no more buildings, no more leases. Just us. Naples by August, remember?”

“I remember.”

She placed a porcelain demitasse in front of him. Perfect crema.

“Then act like it,” she whispered.

He looked down. Stirred the espresso. Didn’t drink it.

Outside, the clouds cracked open and rain began to fall.

That night.

Bianca sat in her studio apartment above the café, a glass of red wine untouched. Jazz leaked from a nearby record—Chet Baker, muted and blue. On her nightstand, a photograph: Bianca and Lawrence at the lake last summer, laughing. She looked at it as one might look at a page torn from a novel.

She opened a drawer. Inside: a folded map of Naples, three letters from her father about wedding logistics, and a single newspaper clipping—tiny, half-torn.

“Southern Woman Brings Jazz-Inspired Supper Club to West Monroe.”

She circled Barbara Coltrane in ink. Hard.

The next morning.

Barbara arrived at Barbara’s early. She found the front door already unlocked. She frowned. Inside, nothing was broken—only rearranged. Not vandalism. Precision.

The piano bench had been moved. A wine glass left on top. A faint perfume hung in the air—sandalwood and cinnamon.

On the bar counter: a note, typed, unsigned.

“Jazz is for dreamers. Monroe Street needs coffee and clocks. Do what smart girls do: walk away.”

Barbara read it twice. Then crumpled it slowly.

She went to the piano. Sat.

Her fingers hovered over the keys.

Then she played. Loud. Angry. Dissonant chords. Not for the crowd, but for herself. Jazz not as entertainment, but confrontation.

That night, Lawrence returned. Barbara didn’t mention the note.

She simply played. A new melody. Not romantic—restless.

He watched her hands. Then asked, “What key is that?”

She looked up.
“Bianca minor.”

Lawrence froze.

Barbara leaned in, her voice soft. “You’ve got to pick a side, Lawrence. Music or mirrors. Real or pretty.”

He said nothing.

But he stayed. All night.

PART V: DISSONANCE AND DINNER SERVICE

One week before opening night

Barbara’s supper club no longer resembled a ruin. It smelled like varnish and ambition. The stage, though small, was finally lit. Red velvet curtains hung in pleats, the walls painted a warm gold that caught the shadows just right. Tables were set with secondhand silverware polished to a shine. She named the place Blue Moon, after her mother’s favorite flower and Billie Holiday’s saddest song.

Lawrence stood at the piano, tuning in silence. Barbara stood center-stage, clipboard in hand, rattling off names.

“Clyde on trumpet. Marta on double bass. We’re still short a drummer.”

Lawrence nodded. “I know a guy. But he drinks.”

“They all drink,” Barbara muttered, crossing off a note.

Lawrence glanced up. “You think we’re ready?”

She hesitated, then smiled. “No. But jazz was never about being ready.”

They shared a look—one of those unspoken beats that stretched just a second too long. Then—

The door opened.

Bianca. In heels. Wearing white.

Her eyes swept the room like a queen returning to a usurped throne.

Barbara’s voice tightened. “Can I help you?”

Bianca didn’t blink. “I came to see what he’s been building.”

Lawrence stepped forward. “Bianca—”

She silenced him with a touch on the arm. “I’m speaking to her.”

Barbara folded her arms. “Then speak.”

Bianca smiled—cold, calculated. “You think this is about music. But it’s not. It’s about men watching women who suffer beautifully. That’s what jazz has always sold.”

Barbara tilted her head. “No, darling. That’s opera. Jazz is what happens when you survive.”

Bianca walked the room slowly, trailing fingers across a tablecloth. “He’s mine, you know.”

Lawrence stepped forward. “Bianca, please—”

“No,” Barbara said, eyes locked with hers. “He’s his own. And maybe that’s the real problem.”

Bianca gave a tight laugh. “Enjoy opening night, Miss Coltrane. I’ll be in the front row.”

With that, she left.

Lawrence looked gutted. “She’s never come here before.”

Barbara didn’t look at him. “She has. You just weren’t here to see it.”

That night, Barbara walked alone.

Jazz poured from her soul like rain off a rooftop—messy, unresolved, brilliant. She found herself at an old club in Tremé, where the drummer Lawrence warned her about played snare like it was his own heartbeat. She offered him two nights a week and a bottle of bourbon. He agreed.

Back at the club, Barbara lay alone on the floor, staring up at the dusty ceiling. She hummed a melody—half lullaby, half funeral march.

Her phone rang.

It was Marta.
“Barbara. We have a problem.”

Next morning

The liquor distributor pulled out. The city inspector declared the stove “non-compliant.” Her trumpet player was seen at Biancalatte signing a check Barbara never wrote.

Sabotage. Quiet, bureaucratic, precise. Bianca-style.

Barbara stood in the kitchen, fists on stainless steel, breathing like a boxer in round twelve.

Lawrence arrived late. Saw the damage in her eyes.

“She’s doing this,” Barbara said.

“I didn’t ask her to.”

“You didn’t stop her.”

That landed. Hard.

“I thought she was bluffing,” Lawrence said quietly. “I didn’t know she still had that much power.”

“She doesn’t. You gave it to her.”

He stepped forward. “Barbara—”

“No,” she said, stepping back. “You want to help? Pick a side. Not in theory. In practice. Music or money. Me or her.”

He didn’t answer.

Barbara nodded. “Then you already have.”

She walked out.

Opening night: Blue Moon, two hours before curtain

Rain. Again. Always rain.

Barbara stood in front of the mirror backstage. Red dress. Hair curled. Eyes unreadable. She put on lipstick like war paint.

The house was half-full. The drummer showed. Marta showed. The trumpet player didn’t.

No Lawrence.

She stood center stage and tested the mic. The buzz of the crowd quieted like a room bracing for confession.

Backstage, Marta whispered, “He’s not coming.”

Barbara nodded. “Then he never was.”

She stepped into the spotlight.

One breath. One beat.

Then she sang:

“Goodbye”

“Goodbye… no use leading with our chins / This is where our story ends...”

Her voice was velvet and ash. Each lyric poured out like a last cigarette at midnight. The band followed with haunting delicacy—brushes on snare, a moaning upright bass, soft piano shadows. Barbara didn’t cry, but every note did.

“So you say this is goodbye, dear / Well, there’s no use to try, dear...”

The audience held their breath. A man in the second row wiped his eye.

Halfway through the bridge, Lawrence entered. He stood at the back, hands in his pockets, eyes wet.
Beside him—Bianca, like a statue made of perfume and porcelain. Smiling.

Barbara saw him.
She didn’t flinch.
Her voice lifted—stronger.

“All our dreams, all our schemes / Have ended in dust...”

The final phrase hovered in the air like the last ember of a fire.

When she finished, silence. Then applause—sustained, thunderous, grateful.

Barbara nodded once. No bow.

She walked off stage. The spotlight dimmed behind her.

PART VI: CODA – SMOKE AND SALT

Three weeks later

Blue Moon reopened every night except Sunday. The band stayed. The trumpet was replaced. The seats filled, sometimes too fast for the tiny kitchen to keep pace. People came for the food—but they stayed for Barbara. She never repeated a setlist. She sang standards like secrets. Sometimes she’d break the fourth wall and talk to the crowd, her voice dry as gin, laced with ghost notes.

Lawrence never came back.

But she saw him—once. From the window. Walking past. Alone. No Bianca. No suit. No tie. Just hands in his coat, as if he were afraid of what they’d do if they were free.

Barbara didn’t wave.

At Biancalatte

The coffee shop changed. Subtly. Bianca installed a new espresso bar, hired two young baristas who looked like dancers. The jazz playing overhead grew louder. Bolder. American.

But she smiled less.

In her office, framed on the wall, was the cover of Chicago Dining Weekly:
“Barbara Coltrane’s Blue Moon Hits All the Right Notes”
Beneath it, someone had scrawled in pen: Even when they don’t stay for breakfast.

Bianca didn’t know who wrote it.

But she left it there.

Two months later

Lawrence moved into a room above an old vinyl shop. He gave up managing properties. Started giving piano lessons to kids. Played backup in a trio on Thursday nights at The Spindle Room—just ten blocks from Blue Moon.

He never played there.
But he always listened. From outside.

On one of those nights, he saw Barbara stepping out for a smoke between sets.
She saw him too.

For a moment, he walked toward her. She didn’t move. He was just five feet away.

Then Bianca’s voice echoed from the alley.

“Lawrence.”

He turned.

Barbara stubbed her cigarette. Walked back inside.

He never followed.

Final night: Winter, first snow, almost Christmas

Blue Moon prepared for a special holiday show—Barbara’s first themed set. The place was packed. The decorations were modest, tasteful. A wreath above the piano. String lights like notes on a staff.

Barbara wore black velvet. Her voice was hoarse. A head cold, maybe. Or heartbreak.

She opened with I’ll Be Seeing You.

“In all the old familiar places…”

The room melted into silence.

Halfway through the second song, a waiter whispered in her ear. Barbara stopped playing.

She stood. Quiet. Walked off stage. The audience held their breath, confused.

She didn’t return.

Two hours later

Barbara sat alone in her apartment above Blue Moon. Her heels were off. Her hair down. A storm rattled the windows.

She read the letter again. The one Lawrence sent through Marta.
Six lines. All handwritten. No grand gestures.

I was afraid of hurting her.
And I hurt you instead.

I played for Bianca’s future.
But you taught me music is the present.

I’m sorry.

—L



She folded it carefully. Placed it in her piano bench. Sat. Began to play.

Not jazz. Not now.

Chopin.
No lyrics. Just longing.

The snow fell like static on a broken screen.

Six months later

A new jazz singer headlined Blue Moon. Her voice lacked Barbara’s gravity but offered joy instead. Barbara had sold the club and vanished. No forwarding address. Marta said she’d gone to New York. Others said she left music for painting. No one knew for sure.

Lawrence still played Thursdays. Always background. Never lead.

One night, he played Goodbye.
The audience didn’t notice.

But the bartender swore he saw tears hit the keys.

Last scene:

A record spins. Static crackles.
Barbara sings Solitude by Duke Ellington.
But it’s not a live show. It’s an old demo. Raw. Imperfect. Beautiful.

Camera pans across a quiet kitchen. A closed menu. A single lily in a vase.

Fade to black.