Friday, June 19, 2026

WEEKEND MADNESS WRAP-UP.......SPECIAL "GREEN SLIME!" EDITION......

 Let us now gaze upon Trump's Big Beautiful Blue Reflecting Pool.....


New U.S. Park Service Poster now placed  in front of the Reflecting Pool......


And the madness rages on......


Everyone (except Trumpanzees) have a terrific weekend! See you all next week!






Thursday, June 18, 2026

'DISCLOSURE DAY'.....OVERPLOTTED, OVER-COMPLICATED, DUMB AS A MOON ROCK.....BUT HEY, IT'S STILL SPIELBERG....

 Disclosure Day (2026)

      As a lifelong Spielberg nerd, we write this review with a heavy heart.....

      To our everlasting sadness, we found that some of the unfavorable reactions to this film were indeed, all too true......

      This film most assuredly does not capture that sense of awe and innocent pure wonder we all remember from "Close Encounters of the 3rd Kind" and "E.T.".

       And the film generates excitement only in spurts, as mostly it's bogged down by its impenetrable plotting and silly sci-fi gimmickry left over from old 'Star Trek' episodes. 

        Its central premise, the engine that drives this slow chuggin' train, is that the existence of aliens and other worlds would drive us all into such an existential  funk, society would collapse altogether.

        Yes, we know. Imbecilic bullshit......but for the purposes of David Koepp's convoluted screenplay, that's the mission statement of the powerful, creepy government supported corporation Wardex, fronted by powerful, creepy Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth). 

         Wardex, in collusion with the government has spent the last 79 years, capturing, vivisecting and hiding away alien visitors unlucky enough to crash land on earth. You can think of Wardex as a sort of  special intergalactic branch of ICE, terrorizing aliens before scooping them up into incarceration.  But to borrow the tagline of many a 1990's movie trailer......"everything  is about to change". 

          David Koepp's absurd, ridiculously over-involved storyline pours out an ocean of conspiracy theory molasses that Spielberg's forced to swim through. It's really nothing more than an extended chase, but festooned with some cornball sci-fi technology that sounds like Koepp was making it up as he went along.  Try to imagine 'Close Encounters' if Spielberg had devoted almost all its running time to Richard Dreyfuss and Melinda Dillon crawling up the side of Devil's Tower. That'll give you a rough idea of what it's like to sit through this film. 

         Wardex's ex cyber security whiz Daniel Kellner (John O' Conner). swipes all their damning UFO-Alien files, with the help of his ex-nun girlfriend Jane (Eve Hewson). They're out to tell the world and a frantic Scanlon and his heavily armed minions are out to stop them......the chase is on. 

           Meanwhile, Kansas City TV weather girl Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt in a bravura performance) is suddenly gifted with otherworldly powers, speaking in fluent alien-ese and assorted earthly foreign languages. She only confounds and confuses her live in boyfriend Jackson. (Wyatt Russell,  essentially stuck with playing the Teri Garr role from "Close Encounters")  

           Margaret,  by the way, can instantly Jedi mind-trick anybody with her ability to unload an empathetic information dump of everyone's most private personal problems. The relentless Scanlon, however, has access to an alien device allowing him to telepathically carry on personal mind-meld conversations with any of our three 'good guys, Daniel, Margaret and Jane.

         Those good guys, with the Wardex stormtroopers yappin' at their heels, desperately race to meet up with Hugo Wakefield (Coleman Domingo), yet another Wardex defector who serves as Scanlon's worthy nemesis and former friend.        

          Everything we've just described takes a lonnnngggg  time  to play out, with the actors wading through mountains of exposition that's not all that well explained anyway.

           (Along the way, aliens pop up disguised as forest animals resembling CGI'd refugees from one of those terrible Disney live action versions of their animated films. Believe or not, we didn't mind these cuddly 'Bambi' aliens at all as opposed to most critics.....)

          You may well ask.....but what's all this mean?  And is finding out for sure we're not alone in the universe going to change what sounds like an impending nuclear war with North Korea?  Will it make us all gaze dreamily into the heavens, join hands with Kim Jung Un and sing Kumbaya together?

            We can only reveal this much - it just feels like it must have been an uphill battle for Spielberg to finally shepherd this movie to its Grand Finale.....but when it at long last gets there, it looks silly, far fetched and then....abrupt. While there's unquestionably whole chunks of 'Disclosure Day' worth admiring,  you'll get no warm hug 'Close Encounters'/'E.T. vibes out of it, so maybe don't go into the theater expecting any. 

            But let's remember that even when faced with a messy, all-over-the-place script like this one, Steven Spielberg remains one of cinema's great storytelling craftsmen......and he skillfully glides through "Disclosure Day" deploying his usual mastery of every single filmmaking art - editing, camera movement, directing of actors and when called upon, unparalleled action. (You'll literally gasp at a combo car and train chase that's already taken it's place as one of one of the director's most thrilling sequences ever.)

         (What will stick in our mind within the 2 & 1/2 hour running time.....a brief, heartbreaking clip of the Wardex-Government team torturing a little alien visitor until he/she/it shrieks in wailing agony.  We can picture Trump's official Nazi,  Stephen Miller putting this clip on an endless loop, so he can watch it over and over, giggling with a tub of buttered popcorn.....)

         And more sadness to report. Genius maestro John Williams, composing his 30th score for Spielberg (and most likely Williams' final bow) found little or nothing to inspire him musically  here. He provides serviceable enough accompaniment for the imagery but you won't hear his orchestra hitting those iconic heights of his previous collaborations with the director.  But during the end credits, you can always close your eyes and use Williams' heartfelt soaring choir to imagine the alien visitation movie you wish Spielberg had made instead of this one.

        Then again, maybe in this age of unease, anxiety, rancor, division and conspiracy paranoia, Spielberg's given us a thriller that can lift our hopes only just a little bit and not much more than that. 

         And that's kind of dispiriting for all of us.

         2 & 1/2 stars (**1/2) 

         (Despite our lowest rating ever for a Spielberg film, we'd still declare it a must see for all movie lovers. Remember, even second rate Spielberg is infinitely better than some other directors at their all-time best.....)


            

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

'SELF-HELP FOR SERIAL KILLERS'....FOR THIS MARRIED COUPLE, IT'S TOUGH BALANCING WORK 'N SLAY.....

  Self-Help for Serial Killers by Asia Mackay (2026)


     Wonderful news to know that Hazel and Fox, that beautiful/handsome couple of "A Serial Killer's Guide to Marriage" are back in action once again.......living their best lives while depriving a whole slew of better-off-dead guys of theirs. But the murderous misadventures of this deadly duo wouldn't be nearly as much fun as they are without author Asia Mackay to throw every variety of obstacles, complications and plot twists in their way.

     And trials and tribulations aplenty keep Hazel and Fox in a constant state of anxiety and suspicion of everyone around them. They're a family now, with irrepressible toddler Bibi and baby Reggie, .........so it's tough to balance their parental responsibilities with their private crusade to rid the world of assorted rapists, abusers and all around rotten men. Fox, deep in midlife crisis and loss of mojo, turns to therapy to navigate his crumbling self-confidence and fear that he's no longer a worthy husband and co-killer for Hazel.. Hazel, meanwhile, copes with the 24/7 demands of a newborn and a new powerful enemy she's made out of the formidable mother of one of Bibi's pre-school bullies.

     That's only the least of their troubles. Our favorite kill-happy couple have also run afoul of an international criminal organization who've sent out their dreaded expert top assassin, 'The Chameleon' for one last job before his retirement........and guess which married couple sits on the top of his hit list. As if that's not enough on their plates, there's also the relentless Interpol agent sniffing about, curious as to how dead bodies seem to pop up in Hazel and Fox's wake wherever they go.

     Author Mackay never forgets to leaven all this marital mayhem with generous portions of dark humor and wit sharper than one of Hazel's favorite knives. This couple's reversal-of-fortunes never cease, along with twists both surprising and wickedly ironic. . No matter how much our lovebirds plan to combine marriage and murder as a lifestyle go off the rails, you'll still want them to succeed........and hopefully continue the chaos in another series entry.  I, for one, can't wait.....

       4 stars (****).

'SOMEONE ELSE'S HUSBAND'.....FROM KILIMANJARO TO PARK AVENUE.....IT'S JUST MURDER OUT THERE.....

  Someone Else's Husband by Kimberly McCreight (2026)

     Among the uppercrusts of New York City, no picture perfect storybook marriage ends up more tangled in webs of adultery and murder accusations than that of Gretchen and Richard Falk. It turned out Gretchen's worries about her beloved husband joining his old college buddies to climb Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro were well founded. Because joining the otherwise all male expedition was beautiful New York artist Frankie Callahan, hopefully on the verge of critical acclaim and financial success with an upcoming gallery exhibition.

     The exhausting climb to that famous summit ends in tragedy for one of Richard's friends but also fosters a possible much-more-than-friendly bond between himself and Frankie. But then two weeks later, with the adventure's survivors all back in New York, Richard's charged with with Frankie's brutal murder,..... her body's missing but detectives find her apartment (and some of Richard's clothing) soaked in blood. A traumatized, horrified Gretchen and her three grown children try to cope with the very public spectacle of a loving husband and father accused of such a heinous crime.

     Author Kimberly McCreight certainly knows how to deepen the mystery and suspicions here. The book deftly unfolds multiple timelines exploring the emotions, twists and turns of Frankie and Richard's lives during that perilous ascension of Kilimanjaro. And there's clearly more than meets the eye going on in Gretchen's life as well during that pivotal two week period before Frankie's slaying at the hands of.........well, that's for us readers to find out, isn't it. And you most definitely won't want to stop turning the pages until you do, with no end of surprises in store.

     I love a thriller that manages to combine all those NYC entitled one-percenters (and their wayward kids) with a complex mystery and a serious, honest look at the complexities of love and marriage. This book easily checks off all those boxes. By all means put this one on your latest reading list.

     4 stars (****).

Friday, June 12, 2026

WEEKEND MADNESS WRAP-UP.......SPECIAL 'I LOVE THE INFLATION!' EDITION.......

 Dearest Trump Voters:

      This weekend, we don't even need to sign off with our usual final line to wish you ill.....

       Your Dear Leader, your Fearless Fuhrer did all the work for us......

       This Weekend Wrap-Up is just for you, both hardcore Trumpanzees and "But I didn't vote for this!" whiners.....

       Enjoy!  Enjoy!


And the madness continues.......

To BQ visitors....Wonderful weekend to you all...see you next week!






Thursday, June 11, 2026

'BACKROOMS'.......WHO'S MINDING THE STORAGE?

 Backrooms (2026)

       As the end credits came up on this one, we experienced two separate but equal reactions.....

       The first:  "What the actual **** did we just watch?"

         The second:  "We may not understand what the actual **** we just watched, but we're pretty damn sure what we watched......might come close to brilliant."

         Co-writer and director Kane Parsons, some kind of YouTube, Tik-Tok wunderkind making his feature film debut, has definitely crafted a film worth thinking about, arguing about and filled to the brim with images that stick with you. 

      We're well aware that for all of the box office money it's scooping up like a vacuum cleaner, it's leaving plenty of viewers annoyed , confounded and convinced it wasn't worth the ticket price. 

       We agree to disagree. "Backrooms" more than accomplishes what every horror movie sets out to do, if you get right down to it.......to envelop you in a waking nightmare from which there's no escape. 

       And what a clever bad dream does young Kane suck you into.......the epitome of what's now referred to as 'liminal horror'......a deceptively bland dreamscape that's part Franz Kafka in its bleak outlook and part artist M.C. Escher in its infinite architecture that appears to go nowhere and somewhere all at the same time. 

       Right at the start, it's implied that this bizarre alternate universe of endless yellow walled backrooms, one leading to the other, is currently under study and exploration by some unknown scientific corporation......and that it's as dangerous as looking for the Blair Witch or wandering through the 'Nostromo' in 'Alien'. 

      But our primary lead victim is a very normal down-to-earth (and down and out) everyman.  Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor) bitter, alcoholic, divorced and a failed architect, is reduced to managing an equally failing strip mall furniture store. 

        To his stunned disbelief Clark discovers his store's basement level contains a fourth dimensional portal into the weird, maze-like Backroom world. He tries telling his empathetic therapist Mary (Renate Reinsve), who's dealing with her own memories of a  fractured childhood......but Mary's empathy doesn't extend to swallowing the sheer lunacy of what Clark's describing. 

       (And let us stop a moment here to credit the outstanding performances by Ejiofor and Reinsve, whose gifted work further elevates the film......)

       As horror fans could easily predict, Clark's recruitment of his two young assistant managers to help explore Backroom-ia (or whatever you want to call it) doesn't go well for any of them.  It falls to the vulnerable, incredulous Mary to plunge herself in the hearts of darkness lurking within all those countless interconnected brightly lit rooms, each of them bland yet still terrifying in their stark simplicity.

       What's it all mean?  Good question. 

        While the film will supply you with an all too conventional explanation for those jump-suited tech guys we saw lurking about at the beginning, the ultimate mysteries of the Backrooms will not be spelled out for you..........(which would account, we think, for those audience members leaving the film scratching their heads, deeply confused and unsatisfied.)

       Like many film pundits, we could start to pontificate on our own personal theories on the film's meaning but chances are, they wouldn't sound  any more or less perceptive than anybody else's. But that's the pure excitement and fun of experiencing a film that's willing to challenge you, laying out all its crazy ideas for you to absorb and ponder. 

          If you're seeing the film or plan to see it, we'd love to here your take on Backrooms, so by all means drop us some thoughts at www.thebeachedqull@gmail.com.

           Not everybody may like it, but BQ puts this one among the essential watches for 2026.

           4 stars (****).