Shoot Twice or Forever Rest In Peace

Zombieland: Double Tap – 2019

Despite a raft of friendly “You won’t like it,” warnings, the type of movies I’m most willing to chance are those campy, preposterous, outrageous films that hit the big screen on $5 Tuesdays. With that shameless criteria, Fandango, take me away! Destination Tallahassee (redneck Woody Harrelson), Columbus (nerdy Jesse Eisenberg), Wichita (unflappable Emma Stone), Little Rock (lonely Abigail Breslin) and Madison (airhead Zoey Deutch). The national countryside is a swath of decay and rubble starting with the abandoned White House that our ragtag Zombie hunters claim as their personal amusement park home. So long as Honest Abe’s portrait is covered, preventing a judgmental leer at the squatting interlopers, life in and around the Oval Office is a playful, wacky romp. But fault lines crack the casa blanca merriment, fracture the relationship marryment and disrupt the foursome’s fidelity, launching a Rule #2 Double Tap cross-country rescue mission. From Maryland to Graceland to Babylon, a weaponless haven for peacenik hippies, this thoroughly entertaining zombie demolition derby rollicks and rolls along ramshackle highways for 99 minutes of absurd hilarity. Ten years after the 2009 original, this stellar alumni cast clearly relish their divergent roles and their full throttle enthusiasm easily reeled me in. A weekday discount matinee is also guaranteed to reel in a smattering of odd ducks who beat a retreat from the streets and find temporary respite in a theater. My matinee bonus was a back row of untethered young men who served as my de facto laugh track, helping me decipher and interpret the onscreen dialogue and action just like I was a Zombieland insider. Unfortunately one of the raucous group was so inebriated from his steady stream of bar orders that when the house lights came up, his pals were following Rule #29, The Buddy System, in an all-together-now lounger extraction effort. Good luck with that. He was stuck under his tray. So, to my doubting cohort of friends, surprise! I actually liked this playful, zany, zombie apocalypse flick. Go on now and enjoy your own discount matinee fun! Just remember to follow the rules, #32 Check the Back Seats for Zombies,  #4 Buckle Up, and most importantly Rule #32: Enjoy the Little Things, this movie being one. 

Magical, Mystery Tour

Yesterday – 2019

Meet Jack Malik (Hamesh Patel), a lovable,stereotypical swell British guy who is also a struggling, frustrated musician ready to hang up his guitar and trade in his sad crowd-less gigs for a secure teaching job. Cue a global blackout, bus accident, hospitalization, replacement guitar, and coaxed out serenade of perhaps the greatest song of all time,Yesterday, to loyal and loving friends met with “When did you write that?” and the movie sets off to pursue the surreal question: what if a cosmic shudder caused the music of The Beatles to vanish from the planet with nary a trace? It is funny to see the endless insect webpages that pop up from Jack’s frantic Google search of The Beatles.  It is fascinating and revealing to check off how many historical and cultural connections are linked to the famous Fab Four. The romantic story line of persistent but unrequited love between Jack and his friend and agent from grade school, Ellie (Lilie James), meanders harmlessly along.  All together now, ain’t she sweet! I do admire the creative spirit of this movie. But, I’m a Beatles purist. I cut my teeth on Yellow Submarine, Penny Lane, Yesterday and the complete Beatles songbook.  I instinctively balk at karaoke renditions regardless of how passionately played. Help! I can’t stop myself. Jack isn’t John or Paul or George and definitely not Ringo.  Tribute performances need not take the stage. So that’s my single issue with this film but it’s a big one given all the songs and concerts Jack belts out. I’m happily stuck in yesterday.  For me, let it be. For you, maybe all you need is love. Go see it for yourself and I bet we can work it out.