Thursday, January 25, 2018

Last Resort Films Jukebox: The Informers


1. "Blue Monday" - New Order

2."All We Ever Wanted Was Everything" - Bauhaus

3. "New Gold Dreams (81-82-83-84)" - Simple Minds

4. "The More You Live, The More You Love" - A Flock of Seagulls

5. "Never Tear Us Apart" - INXS

6. "I Got You" - Split Enz

7. "More Than This" - Roxy Music

8. "Mad World" - Tears For Fears

9. "Enjoy the Silence" - Depeche Mode

10. "Falling Down" - Duran Duran (featuring Justin Timberlake)

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Now Showing: The Informers

The Informers
Genre: Drama
Director: Elizabeth Wood
Writer: Lon Charles
Based on a book by Bret Easton Ellis
Cast: Connie Britton, Kyle Chandler, Brady Corbet, Dane DeHaan, Blake Jenner, Logan Lerman, Jane Levy, Dora Madison Burge, Ezra Miller, Nicola Peltz, Glen Powell, Shane West, Michael Shannon

Plot: Tim (Logan Lerman) and his friends Dirk (Dane DeHaan) and Graham (Blake Jenner) gather at Mario's restaurant, where Graham recalls that it is the one-year-anniversary of the death of Jamie, a mutual acquaintance of the boys'. Emotions run high as Dirk denies remembering that it is the anniversary, ultimately breaking down and recalling Jamie's death in graphic detail: Dirk was following Jamie's car through the desert when Jamie crashed it, and Dirk pulled Jamie's body from the wreck and waited with it until help arrived. Graham becomes upset by the story and retreats to the bathroom to cry, where Tim goes to calm him down. Tim tells him that Jamie considered him a good friend, which cheers Graham up.

Laura (Connie Britton) has a dream about being pushed out the window by her much younger lover Martin (Glen Powell). She then awakens and wanders about the house in a daze of Valium. She tries to make conversation with her son and daughter, but fails as they either ignore her, or change the subject. She then eats lunch with Martin, then goes back to his apartment and has sex with him, after which she gives him a pith helmet as a gift.

Laura sits by the pool observing the pool cleaner. The pool cleaner then finds two dead rats and starts talking to Laura, who becomes flustered by the conversation. Laura then has lunch with her friends. That night Laura dreams of drowning rats and pool boys, then wakes up and has more Valium before calling Martin.

Next Laura meets with her psychiatrist so she can get her prescriptions filled. She then follows her son Graham and watches him score drugs. She then talks with Martin about how she is friends with his mother, then loans him money to pay for Billy Idol tickets.

Les Price (Kyle Chandler), Tim's father, is watching Tim and Graham stand in line for a movie through the mirrored window in his office. While he watches the two boys, he begins to see signs that the two boys he thinks are friends, may have a more physical relationship. Les gets a phone call from his ex-wife Elena, who informs him that Tim does not want to go to on the trip to Mauna Kea with him. The next day, Les picks up Tim in his limousine and, after Les makes some attempts to talk to him and fails, they go to the airport.

After Tim and his father arrive in Hawaii, they eat at the Mauna Kea restaurant and his father once again tries unsuccessfully to make conversation with Tim. Once dinner ends, they go walking around the hotel until they meet two ladies from Chicago at the bar. Les tries unsuccessfully to pick up on the two ladies, and Tim gets upset at his father's actions and leaves. They play tennis and Les wins every set, which Tim shrugs off. They go to the beach and relax in the sun, until Tim meets a girl his age, named Rachel (Jane Levy). Later that evening, Tim and his father have dinner with Rachel. Les tries to pick up Rachel during the dinner, at which point Tim freaks out and leaves. Tim's dad finds him up in their room smoking marijuana, causing him to attempt in vain to apologize. Les has been crying, possibly motivated by guilt. Les wanders around the hotel and once again meets Rachel. Les talks with her about manta rays and Tim. Tim and Les sit on the beach staring at the ocean.

Burned out rock star Bryan Metro (Shane West) travels to Japan on his world tour, where he beats up groupies, rapes hotel maids, has sex with underage girls, and engages in drug-induced acts of self-mutilation. Bryan makes unsuccessful attempts to reconcile via phone with his ex-wife and son, and meditates on the suicide of one of his former bandmates, an event left out of a well-received documentary film about the events leading to the band's dissolution. Bryan ultimately completes the tour after a disastrous show during which he forgets the words to his own songs and prepares to head back to America.

Graham lives in an apartment with his girlfriend, Christie (Nicola Peltz), and Martin, who is having an affair with Graham's mother and with whom Graham is also having sex. Graham is further convinced that Christie and Martin are having sex, but does not care.

Graham visits Martin at a building where Martin is filming a music video for the English Prices, whose stoned lead singer proves difficult to work with. Later he has lunch with Christie, who tells him that a friend of theirs has been found dead in Mexico, severely mutilated and drained of blood. The two argue about their relationship, ultimately concluding that neither cares if the other has sex with different people.

One morning Graham goes downstairs to discover that a hostage situation is unfolding across the street involving numerous police officers. Graham dismissively watches it unfold along with the doorman, Tommy (Brady Corbet), who wants to be introduced to Martin so that he can get into music videos. Graham ultimately goes back upstairs, ignoring the outcome of the hostage situation. Later, he receives word that his father has been killed in a plane crash, and travels out to Las Vegas to see the body and visit the accident site. Afterwards he gambles most of his money away at different Casinos, and ultimately loses most of his father's ashes after betting them on a game of Blackjack.

Jamie (Ezra Miller) is a sexist, racist young playboy fond of making jokes about Ethiopians. Jamie believes himself to be a vampire. He sleeps in a coffin outfitted with cable television and survives on raw filet mignon and by drinking the blood of teenage girls during sex. He is part of an apparent secret society of other "vampires," including his friend, Dirk, who has taken vampirism to the extreme by killing his victims rather than simply draining and drinking their blood.

Visiting Dirk, Jamie discovers various mutilated body parts that indicate him as a serial killer. Jamie and Dirk uncomfortably recall the fate of Roderick, who disappeared at the same time a pile of ashes were found at the bottom of his pool, near a wooden stake and Lawry's garlic powder. The next time Jamie picks up a girl he discovers that she is more perceptive to his racism and lifestyle than his other conquests, which causes him to snap and murder her.

Jamie goes to visit his psychiatrist, whom he asks for more Darvocet. Jamie then threatens to kill his psychiatrist's daughter, spurring him to write the prescription. Before leaving, Jamie claims to be the biblical demon Legion.

Tommy gets a call from an old acquaintance of his, Peter (Michael Shannon), who wants to stay at his place while he visits the city. Tommy agrees, and Peter shows up later along with his girlfriend, a heroin addict named Mary (Dora Madison Burge) who takes to sleeping on a mattress on the floor of Tommy's room. One afternoon, however, Tommy comes home to discover a ten-year-old boy tied up in the bathtub. Peter explains that he owes money to a drug dealer, and explains that the child, whom he and Mary kidnapped from the mall, is part of a plan to raise money to pay off the debt. Tommy initially protests, prompting Peter to assault him. Tommy quickly grows too apathetic to intervene, and simply takes to urinating in his kitchen sink and defecating at a nearby gas station as a way to avoid the bathroom.

As time goes on it becomes apparent that Peter has no real plan to use the child as a means of income as he never makes ransom demands from the child's parents, and only briefly considers selling him to the vampires in Los Angeles, before deciding to use the boy as his own personal sex slave. The sight of the child's bloody body after being raped by Peter only causes Tommy to become more apathetic.

One night, left alone with Mary, Tommy attempts to have sex with her. Mary tells him that the last time the couple found themselves in a similar situation, she had sex with their host, prompting Peter to shoot him in the eye and castrate him. Nevertheless, Tommy still attempts to have sex with her, an effort that fails when she passes out from heroin.

After the drug dealer shows up and threatens Tommy, Peter decides to flee to Las Vegas, and asks Tommy to come along with. Before they leave, he encourages Tommy to murder the child to tie up loose ends. Tommy initially refuses, but is too apathetic to keep up his protest, and obligingly stabs the boy to death. The trio flee into the desert, where Peter reminds Tommy that the child's death is on his hands, and not Peter's. When Tommy brings up the man that Peter shot and castrated, Peter is genuinely confused, and indicates he does not know what Tommy is talking about.


Premiere Magazine #23


Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Release: Into Thin Air








Into Thin Air
Genre: Sci-Fi/Thriller
Director: Alex Garland
Writer: James Morgan
Cast: Viggo Mortensen, Domhnall Gleeson, Tim Roth, Morgan Freeman, Ian McShane, Winona Ryder, Michelle Dockery


Budget: $75,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $109,323,031
Foreign Box Office: $125,817,180
Total Profit: $31,956,926

Reaction: This adult-oriented sci-fi thriller cost a little more than we would have liked given the less than A-list stature of the cast, but we stuck by the filmmakers' vision and ultimately it resulted in a nice profitable film. We always love it when smart films do well at the box office.


"It's nice to see a science fiction film that doesn't rely on big budget special effects to keep people interested. James Morgan's script focuses on plot and the characters, and it paid off." - Dave Cone, New York Post


"Most of the cast is filled by seasoned veteran actors, long ago AARP-eligible, but there are some definite performance issues in this film. The scenes away from Roth and Gleeson struggle due to some sleepwalking performances from Mortensen and Freeman, and don't even get me started on Winona Ryder's overacting." - Clark Davis, JoBlo.com



"Alex Garland has become the go-to-guy for smart and thoughtful science fiction films - and he continues his run with this mostly enjoyable, albeit flawed, time travel thriller." - Desmond Rogers, TIME Magazine

In Development

Welcome to Paradise: Director Richard Linklater has officially dropped out of writer Billy Armstrong's teen punk drama Welcome to Paradise. Ethan Hawke (The Magnificent Seven, Predestination) who was originally talking to the producers about playing a small role as Angourie Rice's father, will now also step in to direct the film as well. Max Records (I Am Not a Serial Killer, The Sitter), David Mazouz ("Gotham", Incarnate) and pop star Harry Styles (Dunkirk) have also all joined the film as teenage runaways who bond over punk music.

Femme Fatale: David Strathairn (Godzilla, Hiroshima), Sebastian Stan (Captain America: The Winter Soldier, I, Tonya) and Jeremy Irvine (War Horse, Siren) have signed on to join Derek Cianfrance and Lon Charles' Edie Sedgwick biopic. Strathairn will play Sedgwick's domineering father, Stan will play her friend/modeling promoter, and Irvine will play Rene Ricard, a regular in Andy Warhol's film projects.

Mass Effect: Last Resort Films has reached a deal to produce a film based on the Mass Effect video game series. Christopher Nolan (Interstellar, The Prisoner) was the first choice to direct, but he opted to work on The Prisoner instead, so Rian Johnson (Looper, Star Wars: The Last Jedi) was hired to direct instead. When the offer was out to Nolan, Christian Bale was offered the lead role, but without Nolan at the helm, he opted to sign on to a different upcoming project. Henry Cavill (Justice League, The Man from U.N.C.L.E.) has been hired to star as Jack Shepard instead.

Blood Countess: Jessica Chastain (The Prisoner, Molly's Game) has reached a deal to star in Blood Countess from directior Jennifer Kent (The Babadook) and writer Clive Steinbeck (Eclipse, The Secret History). The film will depict the horrifying true story of Hungarian countess Elizabeth Bathory who killed and bathed in the blood of young women to stay young.

Pudd'nhead Wilson: Jack Ryder (Trigger, Animus) has penned a scipt based on Mark Twain's novel Pudd'nhead Wilson with Ava DuVernay (Selma, A Wrinkle in Time) lined up to direct. The story is about two men switched at birth, one born into slavery due to his 1/32 African heritage, the other born to be master of the house. Henry Cavill was originally offered one of the lead roles, but he opted to star in Mass Effect instead. Ashton Kutcher (Jobs, "The Ranch") has been hired to fill that role, while Matt Bomer ("The Last Tycoon", Magic Mike XXL) has been cast in the other lead role. Martin Freeman (Captain America: Civil War, Sherlock") will play the title character, a supporting role of a lawyer.

V: Before he becomes Batman, Jake Gyllenhaal (Maria, Stronger) will star in a film adaptation of the 1980s television series V from director Duncan Jones (Warcraft, Source Code) and writer John Malone (The Prisoner, Flicker) . The film will depict an alien invasion by a seemingly benevolent alien species. Gyllenhaal will play a journalist who becomes part of a resistance movement. He will be joined by Olivia Wilde (Love the Coopers, Meadowland) and Willem Dafoe (The Florida Project, Death Note) who will play the alien leaders.

Monday, January 22, 2018

Now Showing: Into Thin Air

Into Thin Air
Genre: Sci-Fi/Thriller
Director: Alex Garland
Writer: James Morgan
Cast: Viggo Mortensen, Domhnall Gleeson, Tim Roth, Morgan Freeman, Ian McShane, Winona Ryder, Michelle Dockery

Plot: On a snowy January night, Andrew Carlssin (Tim Roth) decided to rob the 7/11 on the corner of the surprisingly quiet New York street. Wearing a hoodie and a mask to make sure he wasn't recognized, Carlssin entered the small store at 10 pm sharp, with his small pocket knife in hand. He quickly asked the clerk for the register. A hero, an old black man, tried to tackle him down and Carlssin had to choice but to force his Swiss Army knife into the man's body. Carlssin managed to escape unarmed, with $800 in his pockets. The dead man didn't bother Carlssin, he showed absolutely no remorse. Heading back home, somehow, nobody noticed the blood stain on the pale hoodie he was wearing, even the guy who bumped into him.

On the same night, once brilliant journalist James Hampstead (Ian McShane) was once again trying to forget his problems by abusing of his precious alcohol. Living in his office for the past few days, Hampstead was never the same after his wife and his only son died in a car accident a few years back. Once a brilliant journalist, he was now relegated to minor news that nobody cares about, especially since his new boss, the pretentious Sandy Hearst (Michelle Dockery),  inherited the newspaper from her deceased father. Hampstead despises Hearst, but he doesn't walk away from his job, because he knows that nobody would hire him elsewhere. He tried to complete his current assignment, but the booze got the better of him and fell asleep on his keyboard, just like yesterday and the day before.

When Carlssin got back to his flat, a small studio just two blocks away of the 7/11 he robbed just moments ago. He saw the blood on his hoodie, but he's not worried about it. In fact, Carlssin has this don't care attitude, nothing bothers him at all. He even stopped at the ATM on his way home. He wasted no time, looked at his notes and started to speculate on the stock market.

Two weeks later...

FBI Agent Danny Hawkes (Viggo Mortensen) couldn't believe what he was seeing. He got up of his chair and went directly to his superior, the respectable Samuel Towns (Morgan Freeman). He couldn't believe what he saw either. A man known as Andrew Carlssin turned $800 into $350,000,000 in two weeks. Hawkes immediately asked for the go ahead to arrest the newly rich man.

James Hampstead left the office for the first time in a week to refill his stock of alcohol when he saw the FBI vans stopping right in front of him with armed men quickly entering the apartment complex. At this moment, Hampstead became the brilliant journalist he once was and he decided that he wanted to cover the story. The FBI came out a couple of minutes later, Carlssin in handcuffs. Hampstead approached Hawkes, who appeared to be in charge, but he rapidly denied him. Luckily for him, Hampstead was the only witness of the scene and he was able to take some pictures.

Back at the FBI headquarters, Hawkes arrived with Carlssin and they locked him up in an interrogation cell. A rare particularity for an evident case of insider trading, the famous Samuel Towns requested to lead the interrogation alongside Hawkes. What many people don't know about Towns is, despite the fact that he looks so gentle and quiet, that he's the most ruthless and aggressive man on Earth when he's interrogating a suspect. Carlssin is suspiciously cooperative at the start, but he soon saw Towns' dark side after he claimed that he traveled back in time and that he was actually a man from 2256 who came back to become rich. He then asked for his lawyer.

Ellie Stuart (Winona Ryder), a struggling lawyer, was drinking her eighth coffee of the day when her phone rang. On the other end of the line, a man who was detained by the FBI, begged her for help and she gladly agreed to do so, but only because of the upcoming paycheck that will result of this. She packed a couple of snacks in her immense purse and immediatly left for the FBI and realised when she was going down the stairs that she didn't asked for his name.

James Hampstead still had his coat on when he burst into his boss' office. Sandy Hearst feels a feeling of absolute disgust every time she lays eyes on Hampstead. She faked being busy, just because she'll not have to listen to a washed up journalist stinking of alcohol. Only this time, Hampstead kept insisting. He then told her what he saw in the morning. She instructed him to do whatever he wants as long as he walks out of her office. Hampstead then leaves and went to his office and started to write.

Waiting for Carlssin's lawyer, Hawkes and Towns were talking about the possibility of time travel. None of them thought it was possible, just something you see in movies and novels, not in real life. Hawkes was skeptical on the matter, but the veteran Towns was certain Carlssin was bullshitting them. Hawkes then reasoned him that it could be possible after all, when he looked into Carlssin's personal history and saw nothing prior to his deposit at the ATM.

Ellie Stuart arrived at the FBI headquarters in a hurry, almost forgetting to pay the cab who brought her there. She ran inside and that's when she realized she didn't even know who she was there to see. After a shouting match with a security guard she was finally escorted to her new client. She got into his cell and he proceeded to tell her his story, omitting to tell her his name once again.

After the shocking revelation, even the great Samuel Towns started to think that Carlssin may not be a world-class bullshitter after all. Determined to find an answer to this complex situation, he called reclusive scientist Alec McDonald (Domhnall Gleeson) to help them on the matter. Once a renowned scientist acclaimed all over the world, McDonald spent the last 10 years hiding in his house that he turned into laboratory, deep in the forest. McDonald made the choice to go into hiding after he was laughed at by his peers when he talked about the possibility of time travel. McDonald then vowed to come out of hiding after he found a way to travel in time. Hawkes and Towns was uncertain how McDonald would react to the possibility of someone finding the way to time travel before him, he was good a scientist as he is unstable. Hawkes called him and he explained the situation to McDonald. He didn't say a word for the entirety of the conversation and replied saying I'm coming and hanged up immediately after.

Stuart was fascinated by Carlssin's story and swore to defend him no matter what happens to him. He promised her a substantial amount of money for her trouble and it was a decisive factor in her accepting his offer. Hawkes and Towns went back in the interrogation room and told Carlssin and Stuart that he needs to stay in detention for further interrogation, well, until McDonald shows up. Stuart vehemently disagrees with the proposition, claiming her new client doesn't represent a threat for society. It was Carlssin himself who ended the argument, admitting that he robbed a store, without mentioning the murder he committed.

The following morning, James Hampstead was thrilled to see his article was on page 5, the closer he'd been from the cover page in a couple years. He was sitting in his office, drinking from a glass of whiskey that he kept for special occasions only and they were pretty rare. He was interrupted by FBI agents, entering his office. When he asked what they wanted, they answered that they want to bring him in for questioning. A small crowd gathered around Hampstead's office and it got the attention of Sandy Hearst. They all let her through and she orders Hampstead to go with them and that he's suspended until he sorts things out with them.

Alec McDonald arrived at the FBI headquarters a day after he was summoned. He brought a van with him and what was in the back was going to revolutionized science as we know it. Hawkes asked McDonald what the huge machine was and the scientist became irritated that he called his unique invention just a bland machine. It was called a portal. Samuel Towns didn't believe what he was seeing, he didn't think it was possible to travel through time, he was dead certain about the matter. McDonald told them we managed to make animals vanish, sending them back in the past, but he couldn't know if they were really sent in the past, there was no way to verify. He was also able to bring them back, sometimes. Danny Hawkes, who absolutely wanted to know if Carlssin was telling the truth, told McDonald that he was willing to try it. Towns didn't agree about this, but after some arguing, he decided to let go and let him try. McDonald set up his machine on the correct time, the exact time Carlssin told them he was robbing a store, and the correct place to appear, an empty apartment right in front of the store. Hawkes entered the portal and just like that he was gone.

James Hampstead was pretty pissed about this absolutely unwanted interrogation, all he could think about was his job and how he's going to convince Hearst to keep his old job, because he knew suspended meant "fired" for her. They agents asked him to tell them exactly all he knew about the Andrew Carlssin, and it wasn't much. They ordered him to stop writing about that, as it was still an ongoing investigation and it was for the best that he simply forget about all that. They agreed to release him and declined their offer to escort him out of the building, he knew how to get out by himself.

Danny Hawkes woke up in a sleeping bag in a shitty, small and unfurnished apartment. He was still dressed up with the clothes he had when he "left", his favorite checkered shirt and his parka.  He simply couldn't believe it, he traveled back in time and he was still alive! He remembered why he was sent back in time and looked across the street, in the department store. He saw a masked man come in, but he couldn't identify him. He saw him threatening the cashier and it was at this moment Hawkes decided to run downstairs and confront the guy. He rushed out in front of the store and bumped into Carlssin, with a blood stain on his hoodie and a knife in his hands. Hawkes didn't try to arrest him, he didn't have any weapon on him. Carlssin turned the corner and Danny faded.

Hawkes was brought back in the present by McDonald. Samuel couldn't believe it he actually sent one of his agents in the past to gather evidence. He decided he wanted to see for himself and asked McDonald to send him at the exact same spot and the exact same time he sent Hawkes just minutes ago. Still in awe that his invention worked for real, he vehemently accepted. Hawkes went back in his office and told McDonald to come and fetch him when Towns will be back. For a couple of minutes now, James Hampstead, who just happened to be passing by, was silently observing the portal from an air vent from the confined space of a toilet cabin, in the room adjacent to the empty storage room where they put the portal. When Hawkes left, Hampstead entered the room and begged McDonald to make him disappear from all his problems, threatening to beat him if he didn't accept, and McDonald proceeded. When he tried to bring back Towns, he only managed to bring Hampstead back, leaving Samuel Towns in the past for good. Hampstead then told McDonald that he saw Towns being killed in the 7/11.

McDonald went to tell Hawkes about the incident and he was absolutely shocked by it. He told McDonald that he did a great job and he informed Hampstead that he will have to testify at Carlssin's trial, because they were accusing him of fraud and now of murder and Hampstead will be the primary witness. Ellie Stuart was informed of the situation and asked to be presented the evidence and the FBI declined, to her disagreement.

The following day, Andrew Carlssin is sitting in the back of a FBI SUV, tasked to bring him to the courthouse. Hawkes was following the vehicle in his own, with McDonald and Hampstead on the back seat. Everything was going well until a small car came it at 80 miles an hour, Ellie Stuart behind the wheel, and hit the SUV containing Carlssin. The black SUV made several flips before stopping on the sidewalk. Stuart came out of her car, screaming to leave Carlssin alone and when Hawkes tried to find Carlssin in the damaged car, there was no trace of him at all.

The movie ends with Carlssin smiling, looking at the skyline from a futuristic New York City in a penthouse he bought with the money he made in the past, after killing Towns in the department store and vanishing with his portable portal after Stuart hit the car he was in.


Release: The Prisoner








The Prisoner
Genre: Sci-Fi/Mystery
Director: Christopher Nolan
Writer: John Malone
Cast: Tom Hardy, Liam Neeson, Jessica Chastain, Nicholas Hoult, Elizabeth Olsen, Olivia Williams, Pedro Pascal, Mia Wasikowska, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Justin Theroux


Budget: $160,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $157,285,001
Foreign Box Office: $229,311,611
Total Profit: $41,027,000

Reaction: While not a runaway hit, the film made very healthy profits - which are clearly hard to come by this season. Hopefully this is the start of a turnaround this season now that three films have at least made money in a row.


"Unfortunately, The Prisoner is Christopher Nolan up to his Interstellar tricks: a ponderous, pretentious sci-fi mystery full of plot holes and all-around incoherence." - Reggie Dunn, Sacramento Bee



"Both director Christopher Nolan and screenwriter John Malone are becoming well-known for large, thoughtful, complicated films - and this film fits in line with their previous output." - Ben Fullmer, Knoxville News Sentinel




"It's probably impossible to watch The Prisoner without getting at least a little confused by its complicated, intricate plot, but the talent on display in front of and behind the camera makes one very forgiving." - Andy Lewis, Cincinnati Enquirer