THE NUN II: 2 ½ STARS
âThe Nun II,â a new horror film starring Taissa Farmiga and now playing in theatres, is a sequel to a movie that was a prequel to the sequel of 2013âs âThe Conjuring.â Confused? Not to worry, despite its convoluted pedigree, all you need to know is that âThe Nun IIâ brings back one of the creepiest characters of recent memory.
The follow-up to 2018's âThe Nun,â the new R-rated (for violent content and terror) movie is set in 1956 France. Farmiga returns as the determined and devout demon warrior Sister Irene. When a priest is murdered in spectacular supernatural fashion, Sister Irene investigates, sensing the evil handiwork of her old adversary, Valak (Bonnie Aarons). Once an angel, Valak was rejected by God and sent to Hell before resurfacing to spread malevolence while disguised as a nun.
âWhat weâre going after,â says Sister Irene, âis unlike anything youâve ever seen before.â
As Irene zeroes in on Valak, her investigation leads to a French boarding school where Maurice (Jonas Bloquet) â wo saved her life at the end of the last film but may now have something to do with the spread of Valakâs reign of terror â works as a handyman. Joined by schoolteacher Marcella (Anna Popplewell), her daughter, Sophie (Katelyn Rose Downey), and rebellious novice Sister Debra (Storm Reid), Irene battles to prevent Valak from spreading evil to the world.
âI know why itâs here,â Irene says, âI saw what it wants.â
âThe Nun IIâ has atmosphere to burn. The boarding school, which appears to be made up of nothing but long hallways, flickering lights and a decrepit old chapel, provides an effective shadowy backdrop for much of the action. The dark, murky cinematography hangs over the proceedings like a shroud, creating a gloomy vibe that adds to the overall feeling of dread.
Trouble is, Sister Ireneâs journey to vanquish Valak is low on actual scares. There are a few pretty good jump scares, some eerie imagery, and the demon in full nun regalia is still an unsettling sight, but the movie is just a little too similar to âThe Nunââitâs another story about Irene and an ancient demon destroying relicâto feel anything but familiar.
The final 15 minutes, a showdown between the divine and the demonic, is visually interesting and ends the movie with a flourish, but even with the flashy finish, itâs hard not to think that, at this point, âThe Nunâ franchise is becoming a bad habit.
MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING 3: 2 STARS
The âMy Big Fat Greek Weddingâ franchise is baklava in theatres this weekend, bringing with it some familiar facesâNia Vardalos and John Corbett return as married couple Toula Portokalos and Ian Millerâand a load of Grecian-Americans stereotypes. The question is, on the third outing, is there anything fresh left for the franchise to say, or is it a Greek tragedy?
Twenty-one years ago, the original âMy Big Fat Greek Weddingâ told the silly and saccharine story of happy couple Toula and Ian.
âThere are three things that every Greek woman must do in life,â says Toula in that movie, âmarry Greek boys, make Greek babies, and feed everyone.â
That Ian wasnât Greek was a problem, but nothing that couldnât be overcome with some slapstick and sweet-natured good humour.
Two movies later, the light tone continues, but the family is mourning the loss of Portokalos patriarch Gus (played by the late Michael Constantine in the first two films), a man so proud of his heritage that he can trace any word back to its origins in Greek⌠even the word kimono.
In death, heâs still proudly Greek, leaving behind a last wish that his family visit his childhood village and reconnect with their roots. At the family reunion, Toula and Ian, with daughter Paris (Elena Kampouris) and Aunt Voula (Andrea Martin) in tow, explore the village, meet Gusâs old friends and pass along a journal he wrote about his lifeâs journey.
âThis is one reunion weâll never forget,â says Toula.
They may never forget the reunion, but the film is not memorable. The original movie was sublimely silly with just enough naturalism to keep the story earthbound.
Those days are gone.
If the good old Funk & Wagnalls was illustrated, the definition of the term âbroadâ could easily be accompanied by the poster for âMy Big Fat Greek Wedding 3.â Everything about Vardalosâs filmâshe wrote, directed and starred in itâis stretched and overblown. Whether it is the humour, the cloying sentiment or the manipulative undertones of nearly every scene, it is all played so broadly that itâs amazing she didnât have to shoot the whole thing with a wide-angle lens to capture the puffed-up vastness of it all.
It's a shame because there are some intimate moments that, if played with even a hint of restraint, could have pulled at the heartstrings. Instead, we get souvlaki jokes, banal schmaltziness and choppily edited tourism bureau style footage. Also (SORTA KINDA SPOILER), this may be the first film with the word âWeddingâ in the title to have a wedding, but not show the actual ceremony.
Still, franchise fans may get a kick out of spending some time with familiar characters. Martin has all the best lines, and the cast performs with enthusiasm. But is enthusiasm enough? Nope, but âMy Big Fat Greek Wedding 3,â for better and for worse, much worse, tries harder than any other movie this year to make you love it.
AMERICAN: AN ODYSSEY TO 1947: 3 STARS
âAmerican: An Odyssey to 1947,â a new documentary from director Danny Wu now on VOD, combines the artistic and ethical to form an intriguing portrait of the turbulent political landscape of the mid-20th century in the United States.
The filmâs first half focuses on director Orson Welles, the wunderkind who, after taking the New York theatre world by storm in 1936 by staging a version of Shakespeare's âMacbethâ with an entirely Black cast and creating a nationwide sensation with his radio adaptation of âThe War of the Worlds,â moved to Hollywood and made one of the greatest films of all time, âCitizen Kane,â all before the age of 25.
Although familiar to film fans, the story of how âCitizen Kaneâ landed in the crosshairs of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst is recounted here. The specifics of how the influential newspaperman used his political sway to torpedo the film and Wellesâ Hollywood career are intertwined with details of the directorâs growing involvement in politics and progressive causes.
In 1947, with the House of Unamerican Activities showing more interest in him than Hollywood, Welles decamped for Europe.
âAmerica is not as happy with me as I am with it,â he said.
Wu then broadens the filmâs focus to report how key moments of the time, the New Deal, World War II, the bombing of Hiroshima and racial injustice, played a part in shaping Wellesâ political and personal life.
Dropping the Hollywood biopic feel of the first half, Wu integrates the stories of Hiroshima survivor Howard Kakita, Isaac Woodard, an American soldier and victim of racial violence and Satsuki Ina, a psychotherapist born in an internment camp.
Disjointed though they may feel from time to time, these testimonials provide historical perspective and context for the over-arching look at the formation of Wellesâ political awakening. Their stories are compellingly told, painting a grim picture of the hardship and inequity that informed the political climate of the time by expanding the micro to the macro.
What emerges is a portrait of an artist, influenced by world events and steadfast in his beliefs, even when those opinions threatened his career.
In âAmerican: An Odyssey to 1947,â Wu does a good job of setting up time and place, and even though the shift from career retrospective to personal stories isnât smooth, the film finds its balance to become an interesting, inventive recontextualization of a well-documented life.