Friday, 22 August 2025

NOBODY 2 : Tuesday 19th August 2025.

I saw the MA15+ Rated 'NOBODY 2' earlier this week at my local multiplex, and this American action thriller film is Directed by Timo Tjahjanto who first burst onto the scene in 2009 as one half of The Mo Brothers with their feature length debut with 'Macabre', which they would follow up with 'Killers' in 2014, and 'Headshot' in 2016, and then in his own right 'May the Devil Take You' and 'The Night Comes for Us' both in 2018, 'May the Devil Take You Too' in 2020, 'The Big 4' in 2022 and 'The Shadow Strays' in 2024. This film was released in the US and here in Australia last week, has so far grossed US$19M off the back of a US$25M production budget and has garnered generally positive critical reviews.

Here then, this sequel to 2021's 'Nobody' sees suburban husband, father and workaholic assassin Hutch Mansell (Bob Odenkirk who also Co-Wrote the screenplay and Co-Produces here too) is forced to take on assignments for 'The Barber' (Colin Salmon) as an assassin to pay off a US$30M debt he owes after destroying a Russian obshchak. 

His relationship with his family has grown distant as a result, especially with his wife, Becca (Connie Nielsen). Wanting a break to re-bond with his family, he plans a family trip to Plummerville, a somewhat outdated amusement park which he visited when he was much younger with his brother Harry (RZA) and father David (Christopher Lloyd), promising Becca to leave his life as Nobody for the duration of their holiday.

While at an amusement arcade at Plummerville, his teenage son Brady (Gage Munroe) gets in trouble after a teenager, Max Martin (Lucius Hoyos), destroys a plush toy meant for his younger sister Sammy (Paisley Cadorath). This results in the whole family being kicked out. When an employee slaps the back of Sammy's head, Hutch impulsively beats up the staff, drawing the ire of both Wyatt Martin (John Ortiz), the owner of the amusement park, and Abel (Colin Hanks), a corrupt sheriff. Wyatt wants Hutch and his family kicked out, but Abel secretly tells his men to kill them. 

The next day, on a river boat, Hutch is attacked by some of Abel's men, losing the tip of his pinky finger in the process. He soon finds out from his brother, Harry, that Plummerville is a bootlegging route, while The Barber informs him that the route belongs to Lendina (Sharon Stone), whom Abel works for, and Wyatt has to pay off. When Wyatt tells Lendina this is his last payment and that his original debt is now cleared, she has Abel kidnap his son, Max. 

Hutch, wanting to de-escalate the situation, tells Abel that he and his family will leave town. But, when he sees the kidnapped Max bound and gagged, he decides to rescue him and burns a stack of Lendina's money and drugs, and blows up their warehouse in the process, scarring Abel for life.

Hutch and Max head to an old lodge where David was staying, and Brady and Max reconcile their differences. While Becca is angry that he couldn't keep his promise of not getting into more trouble, she tells him that she's not going anywhere, and he must fix it. He and Wyatt reconcile and prepare the amusement park for Lendina's arrival, with help from Harry and David.

Later that night with the theme park cleared of all tourists, Abel saunters up to Hutch and Wyatt and delivers them an ultimatum while Lendina and her small army of henchmen look on, saying that they can accompany him and risk their fate, or stand and fight and face certain death. Needless to say Hutch and Wyatt decide to stand their ground and as Abel turns and walks back he is executed at Lendina's command for being an annoyance, while most of her men are killed by Hutch and Wyatt. 

Harry kills Lendina's henchmen at the lodge, while Wyatt is shot in the leg, and David is knocked unconscious. Lendina attacks Hutch, but is tranquilised first in the shoulder and then in the eye by Becca. David recovers just in time to blow up the park, killing Lendina and the remainder of her men in the process. 

Hutch and Becca embrace and then dive headlong into a water feature to escape the burning explosions all around them as the park erupts in a ball of flame. After being interrogated in an unknown hangar, Hutch and Becca are freed on orders from an anonymous source. Later on, the family watches a visual album of their Plummerville holiday.

'Nobody 2'
is B-movie action fare writ large, which packs a punch (pun intended) when Hutch's back is against the wall, and there are a couple of genuine laugh out loud moments to be enjoyed here. Bob Odenkirk does a fine job of playing the somewhat down at heel suburban, yet nonetheless loveable, dad and family man masking a cold hearted killer when he's doing his day job as a latter day hero. Sharon Stone turns in an all too brief role as the main antagonist here arriving on the scene well beyond the half-way mark, and Connie Nielsen get's her moment in the sun when she takes out Lendina with a tranquiliser gun. However, this film follows the formula of most sequels and fails to deliver the story we all hope for, instead opting for cartoonish action sequences delivered by half baked cookie cutter characters. All of that said, this film lacks the originality and the polish of the first film, but it is serviceable yet easily forgettable, and at an 89 minute runtime it doesn't leave you wanting either. 

'Nobody 2' merits three claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 20 August 2025

What's new at Odeon's this week : Thursday 21st August 2025

The 82nd annual Venice International Film Festival will be held this year from 27th August to 6th September at Venice Lido in Italy. It is the world's oldest film festival and one of the 'Big Five' International film festivals worldwide, which include the Big Three European Film Festivals (Venice, Cannes and Berlin), alongside the Toronto International Film Festival in Canada and the Sundance Film Festival in the USA. Founded in August 1932 the festival is part of the Venice Biennale, one of the world's oldest exhibitions of art, created by the Venice City Council on 19 April 1893. The range of work at the Venice Biennale now covers Italian and international art, architecture, dance, music, theatre, and cinema. During the festival, Venice hosts many events and parties, interviews and meetings with filmmakers and Actors every night, venues open all night, and parties are held in beautiful casino palaces and gardens.

This year the festival will open with the World Premiere screening of the drama film of a love story 'La grazia' from Italy, and Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Paolo Sorrentino, and is in official competition for the Golden Lion. The festival closes with the Sci-Fi crime thriller 'Dog 51' from France and is Co-Written and Directed by Cedric Jimenez. 

American filmmaker Alexander Payne will serve as Jury President for the main competition for the Golden Lion, of which there are twenty-one films in contention. Among those films are the following :-

* 'Bugonia'
- from Ireland, South Korea and the USA and this Sci-Fi black comedy is Co-Produced and Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos and stars Jesse Plemmons, Emma Stone and Alicia Silverstone and focuses on two conspiracy-obsessed young men who kidnap the high-powered CEO of a major company, convinced that she is an alien intent on destroying planet Earth. World Premiere.
* 'Father Mother Sister Brother' from the USA, Ireland, France, Italy and Japan this comedy drama is Written and Directed by Jim Jarmusch and stars Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver, Charlotte Rampling and Tom Waits. Estranged siblings reunite after years apart, forced to confront unresolved tensions and reevaluate their strained relationships with their emotionally distant parents. World Premiere.
* 'Frankenstein'
- from the USA and this Gothic Sci-Fi film is Written for the screen, Co-Produced and Directed by Guillermo del Toro and stars Oscar Isaac, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Charles Dance, Christoph Waltz, Ralph Ineson and Burn Gorman. A brilliant but egotistical scientist brings a creature to life in a monstrous experiment that ultimately leads to the undoing of both the creator and his tragic creation. World Premiere.
* 'A House of Dynamite' - from the USA and this political thriller is Co-Produced and Directed by Kathryn Bigelow and stars Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Gabriele Basso, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Moses Ingram, Anthony Ramos, Greta Lee and Jason Clarke. A group of White House officials scramble to deal with an incoming missile attack on the USA. World Premiere.
* 'Jay Kelly'
- from the UK and the USA this coming of age comedy drama is Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Noah Baumbach and stars George Clooney, Adam Sandler, Laura Dern, Billy Crudup, Stacy Keach, Riley Keough, Emily Mortimer, Patrick Wilson, Jim Broadbent, Lenny Henry, Greta Gerwig, Isla Fisher and Alba Rohrwacher. The film follows a friendship between a famous actor and his manager as they travel through Europe and reflect on their life choices, relationships, and legacies. World Premiere.
* 'No Other Choice' - from South Korea and this black comedy thriller film is Co-Written, Produced and Directed by Park Chan-wook. It follows a man who engages in a desperate hunt for new employment after being fired from a position he has held for 25 years. World Premiere.
* 'The Smashing Machine'
- from the USA, Canada and Japan and this biographical sports drama film is Written, Co-Produced, Directed and Edited by Benny Safdie and stars Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt and Ryan Bader. The film tells the story of mixed-martial arts and UFC champion Mark Kerr. World Premiere.
* 'The Stranger' - from France and this drama film is Written for the screen and Directed by Francois Ozon and stars Benjamin Voisin. Set in 1930's Algeria, an apathetic Frenchman shows total indifference to life. His emotional detachment leads to a murder, followed by a trial that scrutinises both the crime and his character. World Premiere.
* 'The Testament of Ann Lee' - from the UK and this historical drama musical film is Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Mona Fastvold and starring Amanda Seyfried, Thomasin McKenzie, Lewis Pullman, Tim Blake Nelson, Christopher Abbott, Stacy Martin and Matthew Beard. Ann Lee, the founding leader of the Shaker Movement, and proclaimed as the female Christ by her followers, depicts her establishment of a utopian society and the Shakers' worship through song and dance. Based on real events. World Premiere.
* 'The Wizard of the Kremlin'
- from France, the UK and the USA and this political thriller is Co-Written for the screen and Directed by Olivier Assayas and stars Paul Dano, Jude Law, Alicia Vikander, Zach Galifianakis, Tom Sturridge and Jeffrey Wright. It follows the fictional character of Vadim Baranov during the final years of the Soviet Union and the turbulent start of the Russian Federation, while a young Vladimir Putin rises into power. World Premiere.

For the full run down of all feature films in the Official Competition for the Golden Lion, plus all the details of the other films in competition, those out of competition and the other film strands being showcased, together with a whole lot of other good stuff, you can go to the official website at : https://www.labiennale.org/en/cinema/2025

Turning to this weeks seven hottest new release movies coming to a big screen Odeon close to your home, we launch with a black comedy neo-Western film about the political and social turmoil caused by the contested mayoral election fought between the Sheriff and the Mayor of this small town in New Mexico. Then we turn to a story about a secretive 'fixer' who brokers payoffs on behalf of corrupt corporations, and a potential client who may need his protection. Next up we have an Australian action horror offering set at the height of the Vietnam War in which a recon unit is sent to an isolated jungle valley to uncover the fate of a missing Green Beret platoon, but they soon discover they are not alone, and must face the most terrifying creatures to ever walk the Earth. This is followed up with an American action comedy film in which only one man has the particular set of skills - to lead Police Squad and save the world. Following on we have a film based on a true story about a Polish woman conscripted to serve as housekeeper to a Nazi officer in Warsaw after it fell to the Nazis, and how she helped shelter a dozen Jews. Next we turn to an Australian drama comedy about a struggling Hollywood actress who returns home to Kangaroo Island, confronting the love triangle that tore her family apart; before closing out the week with an American dark comedy in which a female private investigator probes a number of strange deaths linked it seems to a religious cult. 

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the seven latest release new films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release or as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are most welcome to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon outing during the week ahead.

'EDDINGTON' (Rated M15+) - this American neo-Western black comedy film is Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Ari Aster whose prior feature film making credits are his 2018 debut with 'Hereditary', then 'Midsomer' in 2019 and 'Beau is Afraid' in 2023. This film had its World Premiere showcasing at the main competition of the Cannes Film Festival in mid-May this year and was released in the US in mid-July. It received generally positive reviews from critics, and has so far grossed US$12M worldwide against a budget of US$25M.

In May 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, a standoff between a small-town sheriff and mayoral candidate Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) and mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) who is running for re-election, sparks a powder keg as neighbour is pitted against neighbour in Eddington, New Mexico. Also starring Emma Stone, Austin Butler, Luke Grimes, Deirdre O'Connell and Michael Ward.

'RELAY' (Rated M) - is an American thriller film Co-Produced and Directed by David Mackenzie who made his Directorial debut in 2002 with 'The Last Great Wilderness' which he would follow up with other titles including 'Young Adam' in 2003, 'Hallam Foe' in 2007, 'Perfect Sense' in 2011, 'Starred Up' in 2013, 'Hell or High Water' in 2016 and 'Outlaw King' in 2018. Here, a world class 'fixer' Tom (Riz Ahmed) specialises in brokering lucrative payoffs between corrupt corporations and the individuals who threaten their ruin. He keeps his identity a secret through meticulous planning and always follows an exacting set of rules. But when a message arrives one day from potential client Sarah Grant (Lily James), needing his protection just to stay alive, the rules quickly start to change. Also starring Sam Worthington and Victor Garber. The film had its World Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in early September last year and is released here in Australia and the US this week, having garnered generally positive critical feedback.

'PRIMITIVE WAR' (Rated MA15+) - this Australian wartime action horror film is Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Luke Sparke who made his feature film Directing debut with 'Red Billabong' in 2016 and would follow this up with 'Occupation' in 2018, 'Occupation : Rainfall' in 2020, 'Devil Beneath' in 2023, 'Bring Him to Me' also in 2023 and 'Scurry' in 2024. Here then, set in 1968 Vietnam, a recon unit known as Vulture Squad is sent to an isolated jungle valley to uncover the fate of a missing Green Beret platoon. They soon discover they are not alone, and instead of enemy soldiers they face prehistoric dinosaurs. Starring Tricia Helfer, Ryan Kwanten, Jeremy Piven, Ana Thu Nguyen and Nick Wechsler.

'THE NAKED GUN' (Rated M) - is an American action comedy film Co-Written and Directed by Akiva Schaffer whose previous feature film Directorial credits include his debut in 2007 with 'Hot Rod', then 'The Watch' in 2012, 'Popstar : Never Stop Never Stopping' in 2016 and 'Chip 'n Dale : Rescue Rangers' in 2022. This film serves as a legacy sequel to 1994's 'Naked Gun 33⅓: The Final Insult' and is the fourth instalment in 'The Naked Gun' franchise, with those first three films in the series grossing a combined US$477M at the global Box Office. Here, following in the footsteps of his bumbling father, Detective Frank Drebin Jr. (Liam Neeson) must solve a murder case to prevent the police department from shutting down. Also starring Pamela Anderson, Paul Walter Hauser, Kevin Durand and Danny Huston. The film was released Stateside on 1st August, has so far grossed US$74M off the back of a US$42M production budget and has generated positive critical acclaim.

'IRENA'S VOW' (Rated MA15+) - this Canadian and Polish Co-Production is Directed by Louise Archambault, whose prior feature film making credits take in her 2005 debut with 'Familia', then 'Gabrielle' in 2013, 'And the Birds Rained Down' and 'Thanks for Everything' both in 2019 and 'One Summer' in 2023. The screenplay for this film was written by Dan Gordon who also wrote the Broadway play of the same name. Here, Irena Gut Opdyke (Sophie Nelisse), a Polish nurse helps shelter and protect a dozen Jewish people during the Holocaust by hiding them in the cellar of the home where she was employed as a housekeeper by Nazi German officer Eduard Rugemer (Dougray Scott). The film premiered in the Centrepiece programme in September 2023 at the Toronto International Film Festival, and was released in Canada in mid-April 2024. It has so far grossed US$1.2M at the Box Office and has garnered generally positive critical reviews.

'KANGAROO ISLAND' (Rated M) - is an Australian drama comedy film Co-Produced and Directed by Timothy David in his feature film debut. Estranged daughter Lou (Rebecca Breeds), an actress whose career has not taken off in Hollywood, returns to her hometown on Kangaroo Island, upon request by her father (Erik Thomson). Lou and her sister Freya (Adelaide Clemens), who is religious, have a complicated past relationship. They try to repair their differences and make peace for the sake of their father, but another family secret is revealed. The films name derives from Kangaroo Island in South Australia, where it was filmed. It saw its World Premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival in early November last year, and has generated largely positive critical reviews.

'HONEY DON'T!' (Rated MA15+)
- this American neo-noir dark comedy detective film is Co-Written, Co-Produced and Directed by Ethan Coen, one half of the highly acclaimed, multi-award winning Coen Brothers combo that he shares with his brother Joel. The pair made their Directorial debut with 1984's 'Blood Simple' and would follow this up with other notable titles including 'Raising Arizona' in 1987, 'Miller's Crossing' in 1990, 'Barton Fink' in 1991, 'Fargo' in 1996, 'The Big Lebowski' in 1998, 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' in 2000, 'No Country For Old Men' in 2007, 'Burn After Reading' in 2008, 'True Grit' in 2010 and 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs' in 2018. His first solo feature film came in 2024 with 'Drive-Away Dolls', and this film is intended to be the second in a three parter. Here, in Bakersfield, California, female small town private detective Honey O'Donahue (Margaret Qualley) investigates a woman's death and tangles with a religious cult, led by the Reverend Drew Devlin (Chris Evans). Also starring Aubrey Plaza and Charlie Day, the film is released this week too in the USA having seen its World Premiere screening at this years Cannes Film Festival in late May. 

With seven new release movie offerings this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere at your local Odeon in the coming week.

-Steve, at Odeon Online- 

Friday, 15 August 2025

WEAPONS : Tuesday 12th August 2025

I saw the MA15+ Rated 'WEAPONS' earlier this week, and this American mystery horror film is Written, Co-Produced, Directed and Co-Scored by Zach Cregger, whose prior feature film making output are 'Miss March' in 2009, 'The Civil War on Drugs' in 2011 and the critically and commercially successful horror thriller 'Barbarian' in 2022. The film was released in the US and here in Australia last week, cost US$38M to produce, has so far grossed US$101M and has garnered universal critical acclaim.

The film opens with a young child narrating the story of how seventeen children from Justine Gandy's (Julia Garner) third grade elementary school class all run from their homes in Maybrook, Pennsylvania and disappear into the night at exactly 2:17 AM. Though only one child, Alex Lilly (Cary Christopher) from the class didn't vanish, Justine herself counts as one of two people from the classroom who didn't, and so a months long Police investigation begins, but to no avail. It is from this point on, that the story gets interesting as the narrator (Scarlett Sher) says. 

Approaching a month after the disappearance of the children, and following a very heated meeting with the school community with all relevant stakeholders including Justine, Principal Marcus Miller (Benedict Wong), and the local law enforcement, Marcus places Justine on compulsory leave, as the local townsfolk and parents of the missing children suspects her involvement in the children's disappearance. 

Depressed and anxious, she turns to vodka and seeks comfort from her ex-boyfriend, local Police Officer Paul Morgan (Alden Ehrenreich). Meanwhile, Archer Graff (Josh Brolin), a local property developer and the father of one of the missing children Matthew (Luke Speakman), struggles with his sons disappearance and, frustrated by the Police's seemingly ineffective investigation and glacial progress, commences his own. 

Concerned about Alex's well-being, Justine seeks authority from Principal Marcus to visit Alex just to check up on him, as a friendly familiar face that he might confide in. Marcus flatly denies her request and tells her to keep well away. However, she follows him home and observes that all of the windows of the house are covered in newspaper. Banging on the door and making her presence known, she creeps around the back of the house, and through a small opening between the sheets of newspaper, sees Alex's parents sitting completely motionless on the couch. She tells Marcus and insists he perform a wellness check. 

Later that night Justine and Archer have separate dreams about the missing children and a strange woman with clown-like make-up. Justine revisits Alex's house to stake it out, but as night time comes falls asleep in her car. Alex’s mother (Callie Schuttera), walking in a stilted manner and carrying a large pair of scissors, exits the house and enters the car through an open back door and cuts off a lock of Justine's hair, and then disappears back inside the house.

James (Austin Abrams), a local homeless drug addict who supports himself by pawning stolen items, breaks into Alex's house in the pouring rain seeking shelter, thinking it is abandoned, where he finds Alex's parents sat on the couch and the missing children in the basement, all in a catatonic state. After spotting a poster for the missing children promising a US$50K cash reward at his local pawn shop, he goes to the Police station to report his findings. However, Paul, who threatened James following an earlier altercation, in which the Police Officer pricked his finger on the needle of a syringe concealed in James's pocket fearing AIDS, hepatitis or some other nefarious virus, spots and chases him. James runs into the woods, where he becomes disoriented and sees the woman from Justine and Archer's nightmares. Paul catches James, who in attempt to gain favour with Paul says he knows where the missing children are located and offers to split the US$50K reward with him. Paul drives to Alex's house to investigate, leaving James handcuffed in the patrol car. Hours later undercover of darkness, Paul returns to the car and drags James into the house kicking and screaming.

Marcus is visited at school by a mysterious heavily made up woman wearing gaudy clothes - Alex's eccentric aunt, Gladys (Amy Madigan), who claims to be the family's caretaker after Alex's parents have fallen ill. Marcus insists he must meet with Alex's parents. The next day, being a Saturday, Gladys appears at Marcus and his husband Terry's (Clayton Farris) home claiming she missed the bus and had to walk all the way to their home and that she is distressed, exhausted and needs to talk to Marcus. She performs a ritual with a stick from a potted tree that she carries around with her, and a lock of hair she cut from Terry's head, and with a small bell hypnotises Marcus into violently killing Terry by head butting him multiple times until his skull caves in. 

She then orders Marcus to kill Justine. Marcus attacks Justine at a petrol station, interrupting an argument between her and Archer, who does what he can to defend Justine. She narrowly escapes in her car, with Marcus frantically running after her. Archer giving chase in his pick-up truck sees Marcus being fatally struck by a car travelling at speed through an intersection killing him outright with his brains spilled out all over the road. That night, Justine and Archer reconcile their differences after coming to the conclusion that the children were running toward Alex's house.

It is subsequently revealed that Gladys is in fact a dying witch posing as Alex's aunt, who can subdue people and weaponise them against others, using personal items from her subjects and a lock of hair from any target of her choice. After entrancing his parents, Gladys ordered Alex to keep her secret and threatened to murder his parents if he disobeyed her, saying that she can turn them against each other, and even make them eat one another if she so chooses. Gladys instructed Alex to gather one item from each of his classmates, and a desperate Alex complied after she promised she would leave once recovered. Using the personalised name tags Alex stole from his classmates' individual storage boxes, Gladys cast a spell on the children, drawing them to Alex's house at 2:17 AM and keeping them in the basement in order to feed off their life-force and extend her own longevity.

After maintaining a kerb side vigil outside Alex's house to see if there are any movements or developments Paul appears at the front door and motions for them to enter. Upon entering to investigate, Justine and Archer are attacked by Paul and James, both now hypnotised. James relentlessly attacks Archer, and Paul has Justine pinned up against a kitchen cupboard with both his hands around her neck. Justine is able to wrest Paul's gun and first shoots him through the throat and then cleanly through the temple killing him outright. James by now has the upper hand over Archer, as Justin appears from behind and unloads a single bullet straight into the back of James head. Searching for Matthew in the basement, Archer encounters Gladys, who enchants him into attacking Justine. 

Chased by his parents, Alex enters Gladys' room and copies her spell using hair from Gladys' wig. The possessed children suddenly chase Gladys out of the house and through the neighbourhood, smashing through windows, doors, fences and upending furniture as they go until they catch, dismember, and decapitate her, breaking the curse and snapping all of her living victims out of their trance. Justine searches through the house for Alex finding him cradling his parents in his arms and Archer follows the trail of destruction left by the rampaging children until he comes to a house, and in the front garden are the children looking down on the blood stained grass and what remains of Gladys. Archer reunites with a seemingly catatonic Matthew. 

The narrator explains that Alex moved out of town to live with a kinder aunt after his parents were institutionalised. The children were all reunited with their parents, though only some have started to speak again.

With 'Weapons' Writer and Director Zach Cregger  has crafted a taught and tight horror offering that proves that he is no one trick pony after the critical and commercial success of 'Barbarian', and at the same time has delivered us one of the best original and inventive films of the genre this year. The film masterfully blends dark humour, with a few jump scares, psychological horror, mystery and a chilling and interesting premise that will keep you fully engaged for its 128 minute running time. And the performances by the principle cast are all top notch, but particularly from Garner, Brolin and young Cary Christopher who all bring a sense of angst and immediacy to their roles. Told in perhaps for the genre, a non-linear fashion, this film sets the standard by which others will be judged, and if you have to see one horror movie this year, make it this one.

'Weapons' merits four claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 13 August 2025

What's new at Odeon's this week : Thursday 14th August 2025.

The 78th edition of the Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) takes place this year from Thursday 14th through until Wednesday 20th August. EIFF is the world’s oldest continually running film festival and, in 2024, relaunched as a brand new entity with a new board of industry leaders. Honouring 70+ years of festival history, EIFF showcases the very best filmmaking talent in a re-energised format that is rooted in a local Scottish context whilst embracing the international diversity of creative expression. EIFF’s August fixture runs in parallel to a host of creative festivals taking place in Edinburgh, including The Fringe, Edinburgh International Festival, Edinburgh International Book Festival, Edinburgh International Art Festival, Edinburgh International TV Festival, and many more, which sell millions of tickets to cultural connoisseurs from around the world. A global player celebrating the very best that cinema has to offer in a modern, energised context, the core strategy of the revitalised Festival is to embed within the wider cultural offering taking place in Edinburgh in August, embracing the sense of discovery, experimentation and cross-arts collaboration - so reads the official website.

This years Opening Night Film presentation is 'Sorry, Baby' from the UK and the USA and Directed by Eva Victor and stars Eva Victor, Naomi Ackie and Lucas Hedges. Something bad happened to Agnes, but life goes on for everyone else. When a beloved friend on the brink of a major milestone visits, Agnes starts to realise just how stuck she's been, and begins to work through how to move forward. UK Premiere. 

The Closing Night Film of the festivals Midnight Madness strand is 'The Toxic Avenger' from the USA and Directed by Macon Blair and starring Peter Dinklage, Jacob Tremblay, Kevin Bacon and Elijah Wood. A downtrodden janitor, Winston Gooze, becomes a social outcast when a freak accident at a chemical factory turns him into a mutant. However, he soon uses his newfound superhuman strength to battle slimy criminals and a corrupt CEO. UK Premiere.

The ultra-competitive The Sean Connery Prize for Feature Filmmaking Excellence presents a panorama of contemporary international film and exciting new filmmakers. The Competition comprises ten feature-length World Premieres, with the winning filmmaker awarded £50K to support their future projects. Decided by an audience vote, the winner will be announced at the end of the Festival and the award is generously supported by The Sean Connery Foundation. Those ten films are :-
* 'Best Boy' - from Canada and Directed by Jesse Noah Kline. Three adult children and their mother reunite after the death of their abusive father and engage in a strange, cruel competition that shaped their childhood. As the games play out, hidden truths emerge.
* 'Blue Film' - from the USA and Directed by Elliot Tuttle. A queer camboy agrees to spend the night with a mysterious stranger.
* 'Concessions' - from the USA and Directed by Mas Bouzidi. Oddball staff, wacky clientele and even ageing Hollywood idols cross paths at a small town US cinema on the day of its closure.
* 'In Transit'
- from the USA and Directed by Jaclyn Bethany. When an enigmatic artist invites a young bartender to pose for her, a strange, confusing relationship develops that will change both women forever. Starring Jennifer Ehle and Francois Arnaud.
* 'Low Rider' - from the UK and South Africa and Directed by Campbell X. A young woman embarks on a road trip to find her estranged father, aided by a charismatic stranger on the way.
* 'Mortician'
- from Canada and Directed by Abdolreza Kahani. A mild-mannered Iranian mortician in Canada forms an unexpected bond with a dissident singer in exile.
* 'Novak' - from Greece and Switzerland and Directed by Harry Lagoussis. An ostracised neuroscientist is drawn out of hiding by an activist group of idealistic young scientists fascinated by his previously discredited theories.
* 'On The Sea' - from the UK and Directed by Helen Walsh. A fishing village on the Welsh coast is the breathtakingly atmospheric setting for this rough and tender love story about a married mussel farmer who falls in love with a handsome newcomer. 
* 'Once You Shall Be One Of Those Who Lived Long Ago'
- from Sweden and Directed by Alexander Ryneus and Per Bifrost. A documentary about the remaining people in Malmberget in north Sweden, a small town collapsing into the mines beneath it. As residents reflect on the once vibrant community, the town itself is slowly dismantled around them.
* 'Two Neighbours' - from the UK and USA and Directed by Ondine Vinao. This modern retelling of an Aesop fable, in which two women from different worlds collide one night at a debauched party and are faced with a bizarre offer from a charismatic stranger.

For the full line up of other feature films being showcased, documentaries, short films, World Premiere screenings and a whole lot of other good stuff, you can visit the official website at : https://www.edfilmfest.org/

Turning the focus back on this weeks four new release movies coming to your local big screen Odeon, we kick start with a fantasy drama film that tells the story from childhood to adulthood, as Charles Krantz experiences the wonder of love, the heartbreak of loss, and the multitudes contained in all of us. This is followed by a sequel to an earlier 2021 film that sees this seemingly ordinary suburban dad and former assassin once again drawn into the violent world he tried to leave behind. Next up we have a biographical drama film about a wild school boy Rich Jenkins, son of a boozy miner and an English teacher who recognised his talent, Philip Burton; and closing out the week we have a story of how surviving on an isolated farm after a series of plagues and wars, a former soldier and her family make one last stand against a vicious militia that wants to take their land.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the four latest release new films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release or as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are most welcome to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon outing during the week ahead.

'THE LIFE OF CHUCK' (Rated M) - is an American fantasy drama film Written for the screen, Co-Produced, Directed and Edited by Mike Flanagan who made his feature film making debut with 'Absentia' in 2011, and which he would follow up with 'Oculus' in 2013, then 'Hush', 'Before I Wake' and 'Ouija : Origin of Evil' all in 2016, 'Gerald's Game' in 2017 and 'Doctor Sleep' in 2019. He also created, wrote, Produced, and served as Showrunner on the Netflix horror series 'The Haunting of Hill House' in 2018, 'The Haunting of Bly Manor' in 2020, 'Midnight Mass' in 2021, 'The Midnight Club' in 2022 and 'The Fall of the House of Usher' in 2023 also Directing and Editing some if not all episodes of each. This film is based on the novella of the same name by Stephen King, which was published in his 2020 compilation book 'If It Bleeds'. The film saw its World Premiere showcasing at TIFF in early September last year, was released in the USA in mid-June, has garnered generally favourable critical reviews and has so far grossed US$11.5M. 

The film is shown in reverse chronological order with the film split into three acts, from adulthood to childhood Charles 'Chuck' Krantz (Tom Hiddleston) experiences the wonder of love (Act Three : Thanks, Chuck), the heartbreak of loss (Act Two : Buskers Forever), and the multitudes contained in all of us (Act One : I Contain Multitudes). Also starring Jacob Tremblay as seventeen year old Chuck, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Karen Gillan, Mark Hamill, Carl Lumbly, Heather Langenkamp, David Dastmalchian, Q'orianka Kilcher and Nick Offerman.

'NOBODY 2' (Rated MA15+) - this American action thriller film is Directed by Timo Tjahjanto who first burst onto the scene in 2009 as one half of The Mo Brothers with their feature length debut with 'Macabre', which they would follow up with 'Killers' in 2014, and 'Headshot' in 2016, and then in his own right 'May the Devil Take You' and 'The Night Comes for Us' both in 2018, 'May the Devil Take You Too' in 2020, 'The Big 4' in 2022 and 'The Shadow Strays' in 2024. Here then, this sequel to 2021's 'Nobody' sees suburban husband, father and workaholic assassin Hutch Mansell (Bob Odenkirk who also Co-Wrote the screenplay and Co-Produces here too) takes his wife Becca (Connie Nielsen) his teenage son Brady (Gage Munroe) and his daughter Sammy (Paisley Cadorath) on a much-needed vacation to the small tourist town of Plummerville, after thwarting a home invasion. However, he soon finds himself in the crosshairs of a corrupt theme-park operator Henry (John Ortiz), shady sheriff Abel (Colin Hanks), and Lendina (Sharon Stone) a bloodthirsty crime boss and the mastermind behind a bootlegging operation. Also starring Christopher Lloyd, RZA and Michael Ironside. The film is released in the US this week also.

'MR. BURTON' (Rated M) - is a British biographical drama film Directed by Marc Evans who made his theatrical feature film debut with 'House of America' in 1997 which he would follow up with the likes of 'Resurrection Man' in 1998, 'My Little Eye' in 2002, 'Trauma' in 2004, 'Snow Cake' in 2006 and 'Hunky Dory' in 2011. Here, in the Welsh town of Port Talbot, in 1942, Richard Jenkins (Harry Lawtey) lives as a wayward schoolboy, caught between the pressures of his struggling family, a devastating war, and his own ambitions. However, a new opportunity arises when Richard’s natural talent for drama catches the attention of his teacher, Philip Burton (Toby Jones). Taking Richard under his wing, the young man thrives thanks to Philip’s strict tutelage and the guidance of kindly landlady, Ma Smith (Leslie Manville). However, as the acting world comes within Richard’s reach, the burden of his past risks holding him back forever. Also starring Aneurin Barnard. The film was released in the UK in early April this year. 

'40 ACRES' (Rated MA15+) - this Canadian post-apocalyptic thriller film is Written and Directed by R. T. Thorne in his feature film making Directorial debut. Here, a matriarch of descendants of African American farmers and former soldier Hailey Freeman (Danielle Deadwyler) who settled in 1875 in rural Canada after the first Civil War, find themselves two hundred years later, trying to survive in a decimated future as they strive to defend their forty acre homestead in the middle of nowhere against cannibals and raiders. The film saw its premiere screening at TIFF in early September last year, was released in the US in early April this year, has so far grossed US$775K and has generated largely favourable critical reviews.

With four new release movie offerings this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere at your local Odeon in the coming week.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-