Sunday, July 31, 2022

The Roundup with Jeff Stockton (Season 23 Round 9)

 
The award races are starting to kick into high gear and the box office is looking healthy. Here's The Roundup....

3. Film Quality
I honestly don't have enough Top spots this round. All three films were very good, if not great.

2. Booster Gold
It was great to see Booster Gold back on the big screen after the long break. Magnussen and Stevens worked well off of each other, even more so that in #3. I hope Chad Taylor gets around to writing a fifth BG film, or at least that the character comes back for the next Justice League epic.

1. Soundtracks
The first 2/3 of the season didn't really have many soundtrack offerings, and none that really impressed me. But now it appears that the soundtracks are coming fast and furious as the season races to a finish - and they're getting better.


3. N/A
N/A

2. Carpenter Box Office
Carpenter's box office performance wasn't that much of a surprise. I do not envy the marketing department's task on Carpenter. The film is not easily definable, especially not without spoiling the ending of the film. It's still a bummer the film didn't make a profit though since I liked it a lot.

1. Blue Ridge Box Office
I really liked the film and generally well-reviewed thrillers have performed nicely at the box office for the studio. It's hard to figure out exactly where things went wrong, even after discussing it with multiple parties. Did McConaughey's recent political activity alienate Middle American viewers? Are McConaughey and Pattinson not the big box office draws people think they are? It seemed to have everything going for it. Maybe it's poor performance was simply a fluke. Who knows...

On Location (Season 23 Round 9)

 
Blue Ridge
- Asheville, North Carolina, USA



Booster Gold: Back in Time
- Antalya, Turkey
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA



Carpenter
- Shreveport, Louisiana, USA

Saturday, July 30, 2022

Box Office Breakdown (Season 23 Round 9)

 


Blue Ridge
Budget: $49,000,000
Total Box Office: $71,072,164
Total Profit: -$21,000,002











Booster Gold: Back in Time
Budget: $230,000,000
Total Box Office: $1,472,845,507
Total Profit: $633,954,236











Carpenter
Budget: $27,000,000
Total Box Office: $43,869,929
Total Profit: -$9,931,135









Box Office Facts
Blue Ridge
Blue Ridge is the second LRF release for director David Mackenzie and the second film to fail to turn a profit. His first film, Harrelson, just missed out on a profit by only $100,090. Blue Ridge lost a bit more...

Booster Gold: Back in Time
Much has already been made of Booster Gold: Back in Time being one of the highest grossing films in the studio's history. Now the Booster Gold series as a whole have grossed over a combined $5.2 billion over the four films.

Carpenter
Nicolas Cage has now appeared in 8 films for LRF. While Carpenter lost money at the box office, 6 of the previous 8 films did manage to make money.



Genre Rankings
Blue Ridge
Thriller: #66

Booster Gold: Back in Time
Action: #4
Superhero: #4
Comedy: #1

Carpenter
Drama: #180
Mystery: #29



Season 23 Round 9
Total Box Office: $1,587,787,600
Total Profit: $603,023,099

Season 23 Totals
Total Box Office: $7,099,555,016
Total Profit: $1,756,125,916




Season 23 Summary
1. Booster Gold: Back in Time : $1,472,845,507
2. Spider-Man vs. The Sinister Six : $1,212,246,497
3. Task Force X: Chaos and Madness : $620,840,352
4. Uncharted 4 : $575,782,503
5. Jurassic Park: Another Adventure : $495,805,967
6. The Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands : $339,133,482
7. A Boy and His Robot : $299,483,090
8. Grayson : $274,017,920
9. El Dorado : $253,692,802
10. RoboCop Versus The Terminator : $233,214,386
11. Silver Sable : $229,494,611
12. Bringing About Discord : $225,967,860
13. Calvin and Hobbes : $209,766,775
14. Haven : $154,184,761
15. Poison Ivy: Mind Games : $129,396,035
16. The House of Romanov : $125,530,835
17. Berserker : $95,132,719
18. We Were Never Here : $78,544,885
19. Blue Ridge : $73,072,164
20. The Nest : $61,479,814
21. The Oil Slick : $48,760,381
22. The Giver : $42,028,780
23. Final End : $37,830,381
24. Camp Manhood : $29,408,550
25. So This Is What It Feels Like : $29,287,552
26. American Idiot : $26,711,188
27. The Culture : $23,158,772

Release: Carpenter

 

Carpenter
Genre: Drama/Mystery
Director: Richard Kelly
Writer: Roy Horne
Cast: Nicolas Cage, Melissa George, Zackary Arthur, Ever Anderson, Matthew Lillard, Mary McDonnell, Holmes Osborne






Budget: $27,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $20,193,444
Foreign Box Office: $23,676,485
Total Profit: -$9,931,135

Reaction: We suspect this film didn't do much at the box office due to its difficulty to market - especially due to its lack of easy genre definition. At least it wasn't a complete bomb and stayed as a small loss for the studio accounts.



"Much like other films in director Richard Kelly's filmography, Carpenter is not a film that can be easily defined. Anchored by a great performance from Nicolas Cage, the story plays out like a hypnotic dream at times - which Kelly's direction and the Tangerine Dream soundtrack only play deeper into." - Dave Manning, Ridgefield Press






"Take parts of 'Take Shelter' with Richard Kelly's signature style and a quiet and subtly unsettled Cage performance which rivals his from PIG. Overall, you have a calmly disturbed movie. Horne gives the best abstract type story no one has reached since Obsession with a soundtrack that brings pins and needles vibes to a balanced degree."- Blake Bourne, Austin Chronicle



"I enjoyed Carpenter, but it's honestly difficult to describe exactly why that is. Carpenter feels like Noah's Ark through a Donnie Darko lense, which is just as weird as that sounds. Cage is great as a man driven by his obsession, even if he doesn't know why he is obsessed with building a boat. The Biblical imagery and parallels start out subtle, but slowly become more and more deliberate - a decision I have mixed feelings about."- Charlie Sage, HBC-TV







Rated R for language and thematic elements

Friday, July 29, 2022

Last Resort Films Jukebox: Carpenter

 




1. "Overture" - Tangerine Dream


2. "Organ Piece" - Tangerine Dream


3. "Act 2: Zeus" - Tangerine Dream


4. "Fly and Collision of Comas Sola" - Tangerine Dream


5. "Sunrise in the Third System" - Tangerine Dream

Now Showing: Carpenter

 
Carpenter
Genre: Drama/Mystery
Director: Richard Kelly
Writer: Roy Horne
Cast: Nicolas Cage, Melissa George, Zackary Arthur, Ever Anderson, Matthew Lillard, Mary McDonnell, Holmes Osborne

Plot: Spring. Joel Carpenter (Nicolas Cage) wakes up in a sweat from a nightmare where he and his entire family was drowning. He looks over to his wife, Zelda (Melissa George), but she is still fast asleep. He tosses and turns, trying to fall back asleep, to no avail. Finally, Joel gets out of bed and walks out to the garage as if in a trance. He begins collecting every piece of lumber he has and setting it all in the middle of the garage. He hammers two pieces of wood together, calming his mind for a moment. He continues working away in the garage building - something - until the sun starts to rise over the house. The alarm clock in the bedroom begins going off. Zelda wakes up to find the bed empty next to her. She gets out of bed and wakes their two teenage children, Elena (Ever Anderson) and Josh (Zackary Arthur). Joel comes in from the garage, covered in dust and dirt, to join his family at the breakfast table. Zelda asks what he's been up to out in the garage, but Joel is silent. Josh starts talking about a project he's been working on at school about the atomic bomb, but the topic appears to anger Joel. He throws down his fork, pushes back his chair and stands up. He chugs his glass of orange juice and heads back out to the garage. The kids ask Zelda why their father is so bothered. She says she isn't sure, althought perhaps the topic of bombs and wars may have triggered some thoughts about his time in the war.

Joel walks through the yard to the garage when he sees a strange white glow near the garage door. He stands there gazing at it until it slowly vanishes. Joel then enters the garage. Zelda knocks on the garage door to tell Joel he is late for work. Joel doesn't open the door, but yells through it that he took a personal day. Zelda is confused because Joel never misses work. Zelda watches as Joel drives away in his pickup truck around lunch time. He returns after the kids have come home and dinner is about ready with a truck loaded with lumber. Over dinner, the family all wants to know what Joel is building out in the garage. Joel finally confesses that he has decided to build a boat. They are all confused since Joel has never once mentioned any affinity for water or boating and they live hours away from a suitable body of water. Joel quietly eats before finally saying that he knew they wouldn't understand what he's doing.

The boat begins to be too big for the garage, so Joel uses his truck to drag the base of the boat out into the driveway so he can continue building. He takes more and more time off of work to continue working on it. Zelda has her mother Edith (Mary McDonnell) over for tea. The very idea that Joel is neglecting work and family in order to build some gargantuan boat seems appalling to Edith. She volunteers to go out and have a talk with him about it. Zelda doesn't think that's a very good idea, but Edith ignores Zelda and marches out to the driveway where Joel is hard at work. Edith demands to know why the boat is so important to Joel. He isn't able to answer her question though. Edith is frustrated with the lack of response and tells Zelda that she should do something about her crazy husband. After the outburst, Edith leaves and Zelda goes back inside. Joel sits next to the large boat, which is progressing nicely, taking a break.

Summer. The next door neighbor Nick Mullen (Matthew Lillard) walks over with a couple of beers and tells Joel the boat is looking good. Nick hands Joel one of the beers. Nick asks Joel what kind of boat he's building. Joel says he isn't sure exactly. Nick laughs and wishes him luck on the project.

Zelda is excited to see that Joel is dressed for work. She tells him that she is proud of him. The compliment makes him uneasy though. Joel drives to work and sits at his desk processing claims for the insurance company he works for. Once lunch hour hits, all of his co-workers are chatty but he feels disconnected from them. He looks at the clock but begins sweating when he notices that he still has four more hours to work. His phone starts to ring. Joel begins to panic as he looks at the phone. He begins hyperventilating, eventually passing out and falling from his office chair. He hits his head on the corner of his cubicle on his way down. Blood begins to drip from his head. Zelda receives a call from the office that Joel was taken to the hospital. She asks her mother to watch the kids and she rushes to the hospital. There she talks to Dr. Randolph (Holmes Osborne). He tells her that there doesn't appear to be anything seriously wrong with her husband. Joel apparently had a fainting spell of some sort and fell, nothing serious. He suggests that Zelda take him home and help him take it easy for a while.

Joel informs the family that he has officially taken leave from work. Zelda is stunned not only that Joel would request it but that his bosses would allow it as well. Joel says that he thinks they are worried about a lawsuit from his fall so they said he can have as much time as he needs. Elena and Josh ask what he is going to do with his extra time. Joel says he is going to finish the boat before winter. Zelda is upset by this and excuses herself from the dinner table. She heads to the bedroom and begins crying.

Fall. Joel goes into the garage and begins dragging lumber and tools out onto the lawn next to the boat on the driveway. He gazes up at it. It is big and square, like an enormous crate. Twice the height of the one-story house - at least. There is a covered cabin with a big window. He uses a huge ladder to reach the top of the boat and begins tarring it. As he works, Zelda comes out of the house and silently crosses the yard. Joel comes down from the boat and begins looking through his tools for some large nails. Zelda folds her arms and finally asks the question that has been troubling her for months: Why? She asks what the boat is for, why he spends his entire days working on it. Joel murmurs that it's almost done. She demands to know what he plans on doing with it once it is done. She promises to try to understand if he will just try to answer why he's building it. Joel becomes frustrated and begins hammering random nails into the side of the boat. Joel tells Zelda that he can't answer her question because he doesn't know the answer - maybe he's building the boat for no reason at all. Zelda asks Joel to come inside. He refuses, saying he wants to finish the boat. Zelda gives Joel an ultimatum: he needs to give up on the boat and come inside with her or she's going to lock him out of the house from now on. Zelda walks back toward the house, expecting Joel to be following her. As soon as she hears Joel back at work on the boat, Zelda goes inside, locking the door behind her.

Joel is sleeping in the garage now as he comes close to finishing the boat. Josh comes home from school one day and asks his father if he needs any help. Joel smiles at the question and asks Josh to climb aboard and look for any boards on the deck of the boat that aren't nailed down all the way. When it starts getting dark, Zelda calls for Josh to come inside for dinner. Joel gives his son and hug and thanks him for the help. The next day after school, Josh goes right back to checking on the boards. Elena decides to join in by asking her father what color the cabin should be painted. Joel tells her that there are some cans of outdoor paint in the garage, she can pick from the colors that are there. A while later Elena comes back with a can of blue paint. Joel says that you can never go wrong with blue and helps Elena board the boat to paint the cabin. Over dinner, Zelda asks Josh and Elena why they have decided to help their father with the boat now after all these months. Josh tells his mother that they just want to help finish the boat so that their family can go back to normal.

Nick comes over again with beers and starts chatting Joel up about the boat again. Nick asks how the boat will run. Joel seems confused by the question. Nick then points out that there is no motor or a logical place to put one. There are no sails or boilers or turbines. It's impressive in size, but more of a giant wooden box than a real boat. Joel bites his lip, admitting that he never thought of that part. Joel asks Nick to excuse him. Joel goes into the garage and begins tearing the place apart in frustration.

Winter. The boat, or whatever it is, sits in front of the house, complete. Joel is allowed back in the house now, but things are still a little tense between him and Zelda. Joel is uneasy because he still doesn't know why he built the boat or what he is supposed to do with it now. Zelda is just happy that he is done working on it though. Joel gets ready for work as all has more or less returned to normal in the Carpenter household.

A massive storm rolls into town, resulting in a torrential downpour. After several days, the rain has still not let up, resulting in all the roads in the neighborhood being flooded. Joel realizes what the boat was all about now. He tells Zelda about a nightmare he had in the spring - right before he started building the boat - where they all drowned. Zelda rolls her eyes at Joel's claim, but one look in his eyes and she can tell that he is being absolutely serious. She asks him what they need to do. He says they need to begin gathering supplies for the trip. Zelda and the kids walk to the store in water higher than their knees while Joel begins inspecting the boat to make sure there are no leaks from the water on the interior. When Zelda and the kids arrive at the local grocery store, they find it flooded with police on hand to start evacuating citizens to higher ground. Zelda tells Josh and Elena that they need to quickly grab as many canned goods. While they are filling baskets with canned food, Zelda goes to the garden section and begins grabbing packages of seeds. When they three get to the register, they are told they need to leave the store and cannot buy the items. Zelda tells the kids to run home as fast as they can. The family runs through the deepening water. The store manager calls out for the police that they stole the items.

Zelda and the kids arrive back at the house. Joel tells them to climb aboard the boat. Zelda has never been on the boat before and is immediately impressed by the cabin, which Joel has designed to resemble the family's living room. Zelda gives Joel a hug and apologizes for not believing in him earlier. Zelda then remembers that she has to grab one thing. She climbs down from the boat and begins filling buckets with soil from potted plants that are floating in front of the house. Elena asks what she is doing. Zelda says that she got seeds at the store, but if they are going to be able to grow food wherever they end up they will need soil. Joel and Josh help Zelda bring aboard the buckets of soil. Once they have everything aboard, Zelda asks Joel what the plan is. He says that they will stay on the boat. The water will continue to rise, but they will be safe. The family huddles together in the cabin to sleep.

In the morning, Joel wakes up and goes out to the deck of the boat. The rain is somehow coming down even stronger than before. He looks out and sees that the entire neighborhood is now flooded under over 20 feet of water. Only the tops of the taller houses and buildings stick out from the surface of the brown waters. Joel also realizes that the boat is now floating in the water. Zelda joins her husband on the deck and puts her arms around him.


Thursday, July 28, 2022

Top 10 Matthew McConaughey/Robert Pattinson Films

 
Sherman J. Pearson here for another edition of Top 10. While Blue Ridge re-teams writers John Malone and Jimmy Ellis up for the 8th time, it is the first collaboration of its two intense leading men: Matthew McConaughey and Robert Pattinson. In honor of that, I decided to take a look at their filmographies for a combined Top 10 list. Note: This list was made prior to the release of Blue Ridge, which is why it does not appear on the list.

Top 10 Matthew McConaughey/Robert Pattinson Films
10. Easy Money (Pattinson)
9. Spider-Man vs. The Sinister Six (McConaughey)
8. Spider-Man (McConaughey)
7. Stained (McConaughey)
6. Hands on a Hard Body (McConaughey)
5. Bad Education (McConaughey)
4. The Raven (Pattinson)
3. Germinal (Pattinson)
2. True West (McConaughey)
1. Blood Meridian (McConaughey)

Release: Booster Gold: Back in Time


Booster Gold: Back in Time
Genre: Action/Superhero/Comedy
Directors: Phil Lord & Chris Miller
Writer: Chad Taylor
Based on DC Comics characters
Cast: Billy Magnussen, Dan Stevens, Jason Clarke, Camila Mendes, Alexandra Daddario, Julia Roberts, Ralph Ineson, Camille Kostek, Julia Fox, Jake Weary






Budget: $230,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $672,842,495
Foreign Box Office: $800,003,012
Total Profit: $633,954,236

Reaction: Massive numbers for the fourth Booster Gold film, with it becoming the fourth highest grossing film (and second most profitable) in Last Resort Films history!


"This one doesn't reach the same emotional heights as the third entry in the Booster Gold series, but it comes close. Magnussen and Stevens have developed a great chemistry, and it is safe to say that Jason Clarke's Vandal Savage is the best villain in any of the four Booster Gold adventures."- Glenn Magnus, Maxim





"So good soundtrack, introducing an iconic villain, and having amazing chemistry between Magnussen & Stevens, BG 4 delivers a good follow-up to JLU that further delivers Booster's & Rip's lore. The film's good and all, but like Wonder Woman, it looks like the film feels about too much but too late for the Booster Gold series." - Aubrey Jade-Mitchell, The Sun




"Dan Stevens has turned out to be a great addition to the DC Comics Universe as Rip Hunter, even coming close to stealing this film from Billy Magnussen's Booster Gold. This ended up being my favorite Booster Gold film thanks to the strong chemistry of its leads, but more importantly the action sequences - which were the best of any BG film."- Dave Manning, Ridgefield Press







Rated PG-13 for superhero/fantasy violence, language and some innuendo

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Comic to Film: Booster Gold: Back in Time

 
For this edition of Comic to Film, the last of Season 23, we will take a look at the highly anticipated Booster Gold: Back in Time. The same creative team of directors Phil Lord & Chris Miller (Booster Gold: Lost in Time, Super Mario) and writer Chad Taylor (Broadway, Free Spirit) are back behind the scenes of this fourth Boost Gold adventure.