Friday, February 28, 2025

Best Pictures #114: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee: Emilia Pérez

by A.J.

Best Pictures #114: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee

Emilia Pérez


“Hello, very nice to meet you! I'd like to know about sex-change operation.”

Emilia Pérez received a stunning 13 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Director, Adapted Screenplay, and Best International Picture, becoming the most nominated foreign language film in the history of the Academy. It won the Special Jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival and received much critical praise. I cannot for the life of me understand why. Even aside from its controversies, including backlash from the transgender community and being offensive to the entire nation of Mexico, this is just a very bad movie on many levels. 

The controversy-free Zoe Saldaña plays Rita, a Mexican lawyer recruited by the drug lord Manitas to help facilitate their transition to female. Rita goes about finding a good and discreet surgeon and setting up safety nets for Manitas's wife, Jessi (Selena Gomez), and children since he will fake his death to fully become Emilia Pérez (Karla Sofía Gascón). Years later Emilia misses her children and has Rita arrange her return to Mexico City and bring Jessi and the children to live with her, now posing as Manitas's cousin. Emilia begins a romance with a woman widowed from cartel violence but when Jessi becomes involved with a former lover and wants to leave Mexico City with the children, trouble ensues.

Karla Sofía Gascón made Oscar history by becoming the first openly trans performer nominated for Best Actress–the goodwill for this accomplishment has since been soured by reporting on racist and hateful tweets followed by awkward non-apology statements. Off screen statements or actions aside, Emilia is a surprisingly bland character. After she transitions, Emilia is a benevolent figure. She starts an organization to locate the bodies of people missing and killed because of drug cartel violence. It does not come up that certainly some of these “disappeared” people are victims of Emilia’s past as a drug lord. She also retains and enjoys all of the wealth made in the drug trade. However, Emilia’s gentleness and benevolence last only as long as things are going her way. The idea that an unhappy and violent person may continue to be unhappy and violent even after they receive gender affirming treatment is brought up by the surgeon from Tel Aviv. This is an interesting idea, but it is not explored. The climax involves kidnapping, drug money, a big shoot out, and a car chase that could have been directed by Toonces the Driving Cat, because, you know, Latins are so hot blooded.

Of all the movie’s Oscar nominations Saldaña’s is the least perplexing, until you realize that is for Supporting Actress and Saldaña’s Rita is the main character. Selena Gomez stands out in a bad way but the fault is not entirely hers; her character has no personality or background or growth. Does Emilia react with shock at the thought of Jessi moving away with their children because Jessi is a bad mother or is it simply out of jealousy? We don’t see Jessi being a bad mother or a good mother. We don’t know if she was a party girl that never wanted to be a wife. She mentions to Emilia that she was afraid of Manitas but even this moment falls flat offering little insight into her past or present state of mind. 

Also this movie is a musical. I did not mention that until now because the movie itself barely cares about being a musical. There is good lively pacing at first but that stumbles when it becomes obvious that the movie could not decide if it should be sung through like The Umbrellas of Cherbourg or just have songs periodically. The Tel Aviv surgeon seems unable to figure out if he should sing in a traditional style or talk-sing like Rex Harrison in My Fair Lady. This is the result of bad direction. Somehow, two songs received Best Original Song nominations. El Mal is a big showy number, memorable because of Saldaña’s physicality while moving around tables and guests at a banquet. This is the song most like something from a Broadway musical. The other nominated song, Mi Camino, I only remember because at this point a bag of chips suddenly and mysteriously fell off the top of my refrigerator. For the most part the choreography is just as forgettable as most of the songs, if not just outright bad--especially for the song where Selena Gomez is just rolling around in her bed and messing about with pillows. When even I notice how bad the choreography is, something has gone terribly wrong.

Of course LGBTQ viewers and critics are better suited than I to speak about the film’s problems from that perspective though I can say with confidence that the screenplay uses transitioning like a soap opera plot device at best. There are so many other problems though and unfortunately the root seems to be the French director Jacques Audiard. Audiard does not speak Spanish or English; perhaps this accounts for the clunky dialogue and mistranslated swear words–you can confirm this with any 8-year-old with a Spanish last name–since the screenplay was presumably written in French, translated into Spanish, and then into English. He also admitted to doing little to no research about Mexican culture, wanting to use Mexico merely as a backdrop, and said that Spanish is a language of poor people and immigrants. It does not help that he cast non-Mexicans (two Americans, Saldaña and Gomez, and a Spaniard, Gascón) in the major roles. This is not necessarily a problem (a film like La Bamba, about the Chicano/Mexican-American Ritchie Valens stars people of Filipino, Puerto Rican, and Cuban background but that is hardly the flaw with that movie; Selena stars Jennifer Lopez, but don’t you dare say anything bad about Jennifer Lopez when she’s playing Selena) but it comes across as laziness on the part of the filmmakers–surely there exist 3 actress in Mexico who can sing and dance and act. I am not Mexican and I do not speak Spanish but I am of Mexican descent (3rd generation), a Chicano, or Hispanic, or Latin–though I cannot keep up with the ever changing terms, each claiming to be more correct than the last, so I identify as “whatever-white-people-call-us” and I am 100% not joking about that–and I grew up in South Texas so I have a strong sense for when a movie is legit about portraying Mexicans, or people of Mexican descent, or Mexican culture. Emilia Pérez is not legit. 

Statements from Audiard seem to suggest that he thinks the problems people have with Emilia Pérez are because it is so shocking. Positive reviews have also used adjectives like shocking, outrageous, audacious and compared it to the films of the Spanish master-filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar. This is a foolish and unworthy comparison. The films of Almodóvar (High Heels, Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!, All About My Mother, Talk to Her, Bad Education, Broken Embraces to name a few) are most outrageous and audacious in the grandiose emotions on display, not simply their subject matter. If I want to see a movie set in Mexico, directed by a non-Mexican, starring a Spaniard that actually portrays the drug trade in a negative light and has a real show stopping musical number I will watch Robert Rodriguez’s Desperado.
Nominees: Pascal Caucheteux and Jacques Audiard, Producers
Director: Jacques Audiard
Screenplay: Jacques Audiard, Thomas Bidegain, Léa Mysius, Nicolas Livecchi
Cast: Zoe Saldaña, Karla Sofía Gascón, Selena Gomez
Production Companies: Why Not Productions, Page 114, Pathé, France 2 Cinéma, Saint Laurent Productions
Distributor: Pathé Distribution
Release Date: November 13th, 2024
Total Nominations: 13, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Director-Jacques Audiard; Actress-Karla Sofía Gascón; Supporting Actress-Zoe Saldaña; Adapted Screenplay-Jacques Audiard, Thomas Bidegain, Léa Mysius, Nicolas Livecchi Paul Guilhaume on Le Bureau des Légendes S5e10 directed by Jacques Audiard; Cinematography-Paul Guilhaume; Editing-Juliette Welfling; International Feature Film-France; Makeup and Hairstyling-Julia Floch-Carbonel, Emmanuel Janvier, Jean-Christophe Spadaccini; Original Score-Clément Ducol, Camille; Original Song-Clément Ducol, Camille,Jacques Audiard For "El Mal"; Original Song-Clément Ducol, Camille For "Mi Camino"; Sound-Erwan Kerzanet, Aymeric Devoldère, Maxence Dussère, Cyril Holtz, Niels Barletta

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Best Pictures #113: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee: Anora

 by A.J.

Best Pictures #113: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee

“It’s not Anora. It's Ani.”
Anora, the latest from acclaimed writer-director Sean Baker, won the prestigious Palme d'Or, the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival, making it one of only a handful of American films to do so and ensuring it attention from the Academy Awards. It ended up earning 6 Oscar nominations (including Best Picture, Director and Original Screenplay for Baker, and Actress for Mikey Madison), but I am happy to report that this is not a case of prestige chasing prestige. Anora is at different points funny, dramatic, stressful, tense, a lively romp, cathartic. At certain scenes I laughed out loud. At others I feared for the main character. Anora has drawn comparisons to Pretty Woman, and naturally to Baker's previous films, but this film stands on its own and is one of the stand outs of 2024.
I would not call Anora a romance, though that is what Ani (Mikey Madison) and Ivan (Mark Eydelshteyn), believe they have. She works at a strip club where she has friends and rivals and lives in a working class home in Brooklyn. One night, because she is the only dancer who speaks Russian, she is sent to entertain Ivan, a young Russian man with very deep pockets. He wants to keep seeing her and luckily for both of them Ani is also a part time a sex worker. A day turns into a night that turns into a New Year's party that turns into a whirlwind week and a trip to Vegas and, before either knows it, they are married. It is all very fast paced and frivolous fun. Their marriage goes well for a little while until Ivan's oligarch (billionaire) parents hear rumors about their son's marriage and send Toros (Karren Karagulian), a beleaguered Armenian employee, to solve this problem.
None of the reviews I read or podcasts I listened to mention that the bulk of Anora, beyond the first act, is a one-crazy-night movie, a favorite subgenre of mine. Once Toros and his henchmen show up at Ivan's house to force Ani and Ivan to get an annulment, Ivan literally runs away. Toros slips on ice chasing after him–a clue that this is ultimately a comedy. So Toros, his crew, and a very unhappy Ani set out to find Ivan but they have literally nothing to go on because it turns out, to Ani's surprise, not ours, that she doesn't know Ivan as well as she thought. That crazy night turns into a crazy morning and a crazy and morning after.
The brilliant thing Baker has done with his movie is allow the characters layers and nuance. Nearly every character is more than who they seem at first glance. Toros, the would-be villain, is actually a put-upon employee so fearful of his bosses that he abandons a baptism mid-ceremony. His rant against "young people" at a late night diner is hilarious, one of many unexpected but natural moments of humor. Igor (Yura Borisov) seems the typical henchman type: broad shouldered, stone faced, silent. He chases Ani around Ivan's house, pins her down, and gags her with a scarf. The rest of the movie slowly reveals his true gentler self. He'll later give her the scarf to stay warm on cold and windy Coney Island. His time alone with Ani in the final act is what brings the film to its low-key but affecting catharsis and is responsible for Borisov’s Supporting Actor nomination. Ivan is bursting with eager, excited energy that would put any puppy dog to shame, however, his character reveals more too. It may not be surprising for us but it is heartbreaking for Ani.
The revelation of the movie is Mikey Madison as Ani. There are many things Ani does that I would never do, but none of her actions or behavior never felt contrived or at the demand of the screenplay. Ani is just that kind of person (we've all met that kind of person haven't we?). She commands our sympathy even as our feelings for others change. One perspective is that she is a working class dancer and part time sex worker who is making the most of an opportunity; a perhaps cynical but justifiable standpoint. Another is that she really falls in love with Ivan, or at least thinks she does, and isn't it wonderful that he is from a billionaire family. Her willingness and readiness to explain herself to Ivan's family goes a long way. No matter if we want her and Ivan to stay together or are thinking "girl, you need to get out!", we are always rooting for her.
I don't think it is a spoiler to say that nothing especially bad happens in this movie but danger and harm never feel far away. In its final moments Anora leans towards drama but it is never dour, or dark, or cruel. The ending is may be unexpected though not indecipherable, at least not on an emotional level. Anora runs a bit long (2h 19m) but it makes the most of every minute. Sean Baker is a talent to be sure, but Mikey Madison is the miracle of the movie. She shows us what it is like to be somebody else.
Nominees: Alex Coco, Samantha Quan and Sean Baker, Producers
Director: Sean Baker
Screenplay: Sean Baker
Cast: Mikey Madison, Mark Eydelshteyn, Yura Borisov, Karren Karagulian
Production Companies: FilmNation Entertainment, Cre Film
Distributor: Neon
Release Date: October 28th, 2024
Total Nominations: 6, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Actress-Mikey Madison; Director-Sean Baker; Original Screenplay-Sean Baker; Supporting Actor-Yura Borisov; Editing-Sean Baker

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Best Pictures #112: 2024 Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee: The Substance

 by A.J.

Best Pictures #112: 2024 Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee

“There’s been a slight misuse of the substance.”
The Substance is weird, wild stuff. It is not exactly scary but it is horrifying. This is not just a horror movie but specifically a body-horror movie with sights and sounds that rival or maybe even go beyond anything in David Cronenberg's The Fly or John Carpenter's The Thing. Writer-director Coralie Fargeat, who won the Best Screenplay award at the Cannes Film Festival, has created not merely a geek show but a darkly funny satire of the effects the male gaze on female body image anchored by an incredible Oscar nominated performance from Demi Moore.
Moore plays fitness star Elisabeth Sparkle who has just turned 50 and so is fired from her TV show. After a car accident she receives a mysterious note about "the substance", which promises to unlock a “younger, more beautiful, more perfect” version of herself. Once she injects herself with the green liquid–guaranteed to remind horror fans of the re-agent from the cult classic Re-Animator–her back splits open along her spine and out is “birthed” a younger version of herself, played by Margaret Qualley. There are rules. Each version gets 7 days to be active while the other is in a comatose state and then they have to switch. There are no exceptions. The other self has to "stabilize" with an injection of body fluid from the original self everyday. There are no exceptions. Things go well at first, of course. The other self, Sue, is able to get the job hosting the new version of the exercise show, which is more focused on shaking butts than actual exercise. Then of course the rules are broken with increasingly bad results. Elisabeth and Sue come to resent and despise each other. They forget that they are one and any damage done cannot be undone.
As incredible as the special makeup effects are, The Substance just would not work without Demi Moore’s fearless performance. When I say that Moore's performance is fearless I don't mean her willingness to take a role so focused on her appearance or her willingness to do nude scenes. She is fearless in how she goes big and over the top, which is exactly what this movie requires. Her muttering to herself as she watches TV interviews of Sue while furiously cooking is hilarious. The contortions she puts her body through in the "birth" scene is another impressive moment. The scene that made me squirm and want to look away involved no gross effects at all. Elisabeth has finished her makeup and is ready for a date. Then she sees a billboard of Sue. She goes back to redo her makeup while the clock ticks in over her shoulder. Then, she sees the billboard again and goes back to the bathroom mirror again. It is an excruciating scene, but also brilliant cinema. Many of Moore's most effective moments are silent, whether she is slumped over at a bar with four empty martini glasses or reacting to a horrifying change in her body after Sue has taken extra time. This is why I believe that Moore is worthy of all the praise and awards she has received thus far and why I'll be happy if she wins the Best Actress Oscar. I only hope that her next role, no matter the genre, makes as full a use of her talents and skills as The Substance.
The makeup effects are impressive to say the least and obviously practical, to the delight of horror fanatics like myself. CGI gloop will never be as gross or effective as handmade gloop. The final act is a gross out extravaganza that may be over the line for a lot of people. You wonder where else can the film go but Fargeat’s screenplay finds a place and slithers there. The “birth” scene is the first real gross out moment, so if that is too much then you definitely won't like the rest of what happens. However an early clue about how gross the movie might become is an early scene of lunch with Elizabeth’s boss (Dennis Quaid playing a living cartoon) eating shrimp. Extreme closeups of his mouth munching shrimp, the dipping sauce, discarded food bits mixed with an extra loud sound design and Quaid’s frenetic dialogue are an assault on the senses, and this is for a scene of something normal. 
Even as The Substance did well at the box office and Moore kept winning awards, I thought: Demi may get a Best Actress nomination or even win, but the film will never get a Best Picture nomination; it'll be lucky if it even gets a much deserved makeup & hairstyling nomination. The Academy is just not that cool. But I was wrong. The Academy was cool enough to give The Substance nominations for Best Picture, Actress for Moore, Director and Original Screenplay for Fargeat, and that much deserved Makeup & Hairstyling nomination. Of course, whether this wins anything or not, The Substance has made its mark and will likely find a place in the modern horror canon.

Nominees: Coralie Fargeat and Tim Bevan & Eric Fellner, Producers
Director: Coralie Fargeat
Screenplay: Coralie Fargeat
Cast: Demi Moore, Margaret Qualley, Dennis Quaid
Production Companies: Working Title Films, Blacksmith
Distributor: Mubi
Release Date: September 20th, 2024
Total Nominations: 5, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Actress-Demi Moore; Director- Coralie Fargeat; Original Screenplay-Coralie Fargeat; Makeup & Hairstyling-Pierre Olivier Persin, Stéphanie Guillon, Marilyne Scarselli

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Best Pictures #111: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee: I'm Still Here

by A.J.
Best Pictures #111: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee:

“Then one day when we went by, [the house] was completely closed and there was police guarding it.” 
Is it wrong to call a movie about something so devastating and tragic wonderful? That is how I felt after watching I'm Still Here, based on the true story of the Paiva family and what they endured under the military dictatorship in 1970’s Brazil. It would be a disservice to use any of the cliched blurbs and one liners that typically get applied to movies based on true stories: triumphant; powerful; a story about the power of the human spirit. All of these things are true but I’m Still Here is so well-made and so deeply affecting that it stands above prepackaged praise or comparison to other movies. I would not have seen it if not for its Best Picture nomination, but I'm very glad I did because this is indeed one of the best pictures of 2024.
The movie begins with a portrait of family life that is simultaneously idyllic–not idealized–and average. They live in a nice house that is walking distance from the beach in Rio de Janeiro. Their house is filled with relatives and friends. One of the 5 Paiva children adopts a stray dog. The teenagers love rock music, especially The Beatles. They like books, make home movies, and take lots of pictures. The parents, Eunice (Fernanda Torres) and Rubens (Selton Mello) are gentle and warm. Also army vehicles drive by in the background of a day at the beach. The grownups talk about the big news story of a kidnapped ambassador. The oldest teenage daughter and her friends are stopped at a checkpoint, their IDs checked, car searched, and eventually sent on their way. Later she goes to school in London and the family gathers around to watch a home movie she sent of an English winter filled with exotic snow–her letter says that it feels weird not to go to the beach at Christmas. It is a wonderful family moment. Then men in regular clothes with guns arrive at the house and say that Ruebens has to come with them. He gets in a car and is never seen again.
Another movie, a lesser movie, would arrive at this moment sooner. After all, every screenwriting class and book says to make the first act as short as possible, 15-20 minutes, 10 if you can. By delaying the inciting incident director Walter Salles and screenwriters Murilo Hauser and Heitor Lorega make this movie truly a story about a family–not an event–whose lives are disrupted and forever changed by outside forces in the form of political violence. It was also a wise choice to background the dictatorship and any sense of politics in the extended first act. We get lulled into a false sense of security. I think anyone who watches this movie will secretly hope like I did that we get to just spend the whole movie with the Paivas and whatever they get up to. This only helps to deepen the profound loss and irrevocable change dealt to the family.
In addition to a generous screenplay, the emphasis on characters and family life works so well because of the talent and skill on camera, especially in the incredible and wonderful performance of Fernanda Torres as Eunice. The brilliance of Torres’s performance is in her command of expression. She puts on a brave face for the children while conveying fear and uncertainty to the audience. Eunice endures so much, whether it is her being imprisoned along with her daughter, Eliana, and interrogated and played mind games with—thankfully both are released—or the less direct but no less stinging injustice of not being able to take money out of the bank without her husband, who is not legally dead. The low-key defiance of Eunice, while still ensuring the safety of her children, is unquestionably believable because of Torres.   
A subtle but important part of I'm Still Here is the production design and the costumes and hairstyles. Everything looks like old photographs of the 1970's; that is to say that the characters' clothes and hair, especially on the youths, looks more like the reality of the era. The hip pretty teenagers look like people trying to look like movies and magazines instead of looking like modern people with their hair and makeup done up in a glamorous, retro style. This is true for the adults as well. The same goes for the house and the cars.  Everything looks like it is lived in and used all the time. This goes a long way to setting this true story in a true feeling time and place. Walter Salles's own experiences growing up in Rio as a teenager at this time, especially knowing the Pavia family, no doubt played a major part in capturing the authenticity of this moment in time and these people. In an interview with Variety he recalls, “There was such a vitality to the house. It was a place we all wanted to drift through…Then one day when we went by, it was completely closed and there was police guarding it. You can imagine the shock.”
I'm Still Here is about depressing things but it is not a depressing movie. Receiving a death certificate after decades of legal fights may seem like a morbid triumph, but by this point we know how much it means. Eunice insists that her family smile in photographs, even for a news story about what they have suffered. Those smiles show that they are still a family, still together. Flashforwards deliver a sense of closure and may feel redundant, especially given the epilogue cards, but they are welcome moments. The final scene features an elderly Fernanda Montenegro (Torres’s real life mother who was the first Brazilian actress nominated for a Best Actress Oscar, also for a Walter Salles movie, Central Station (1998); her daughter is the second). It is a small but beautiful moment. This is the kind of movie that seems like homework or eating your vegetables. However, despite its subject matter I'm Still Here is not a chore to get through; ultimately you come away feeling thankful for the experience
Nominees: Maria Carlota Bruno and Rodrigo Teixeira, Producers
Director: Walter Salles Screenplay: Murilo Hauser and Heitor Lorega; based on I'm Still Here by Marcelo Rubens Paiva
Cast: Fernanda Torres, Selton Mello, Fernanda Montenegro
Production Companies: VideoFilmes, RT Features, MACT Productions, Arte France Cinéma, Conspiração, Globoplay
Distributor: Sony Pictures Releasing (Brazil), StudioCanal
Release Date: February 7th, 2025
Total Nominations: 3, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Actress-Fernanda Torres; International Picture

Sunday, February 23, 2025

Best Pictures #110: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee: Dune: Part Two

 by A.J.

Best Pictures #110: 2024 (97th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
Dune: Part Two

“Power over spice is power over all.”
Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part One (2021) was an incredible box office hit, pop culture phenomenon, and big winner at the Academy Awards, winning 6 of its 10 nominations at the 94th Awards. Dune: Part Two, the continuation of Frank Herbert's epic science fiction fantasy novel, was also a major box office hit though this installment earned a total of only 5 Oscar nominations (Picture, Cinematography, Production Design, Sound, and Visual Effects). I must admit that I was not caught up in the mania for Dune: Part One; it is without a doubt a technical achievement but I found it too serious to be any fun or have a sense of adventure–unlike David Lynch's maligned turned cult classic 1984 version, which is campy and strange and entertaining. I am happy to report however that Dune: Part Two does have a sense of adventure and entertainment in addition to its sense of grandeur and importance.
Perhaps I found this chapter of the new Dune saga more entertaining than Part One because I was already familiar with Villeneuve’s version of the world and characters of the desert planet, Arrakis, also called Dune. Or, perhaps it is because things like world building and the exposition of an intricate plot were the burden of Part One. With all of that out of the way, Dune: Part Two feels by contrast more focused and less esoteric. There is little talk of the mystical and powerful "spice", a thing so coveted and necessary for this interplanetary society that it is the crux of the entire plot. I would even go so far as to guess that someone who is entirely unfamiliar with the Frank Herbert novel, David Lynch version, or even Villeneuve’s Dune: Part One could watch this movie and not feel lost at all. Dune: Part Two is the story of an oppressed native people fighting colonial invaders and a young outsider who may or may not be–but almost certainly is–their prophesied messiah. The exotic sounding names and creatures and costumes are all just window dressing, which is how science fiction fantasy should be.
The cast of Part One returns with Timothée Chalamet playing Paul Atreides and Rebecca Ferguson as his mother, Lady Jessica, who is part of the mystical religious order the Bene Gesserit. There is no “previously on" or recap but the plot threads are easy to pick up. Paul and Lady Jessica have survived a betrayal and massacre of their entire royal house by the evil Harkonnens, who now control Dune. Paul and Lady Jessica are only welcomed, to a degree, into the society of the native Fremen because one of their leaders, Stilgar (Javier Bardem) believes Paul to be the messiah who will liberate Arrakis and turn the desert world into a green paradise. His daughter and Paul's love interest, Chani (Zendaya) is more than skeptical of the prophecy but she starts to have feelings for Paul. Their moments alone together–her teaching him to walk without rhythm, which still seems to have a rhythm, or her not believing Paul about the idea of swimming–are nice character building and emotional respites. Paul comes to believe that he is the messiah and whether or not this is because of a generations old plan by the Bene Gesserit becomes less important as Paul delivers on the promises of the messiah.
At many points in Dune: Part One I could barely see what was happening even though I had all the lights off in my house and the brightness settings on my TV turned all the way up. With Part Two I had no such problems–I did turn off all the lights in my house but this gave the movie a more theatrical feel instead of being a visual necessity. Perhaps this is because most of the action takes place in the desert daytime outdoors though even scenes in underground caves were also clear. Paul triumphantly riding the gigantic desert sandworm is an impressive sight though it is unclear how he makes it stop. The most visually stunning sequence however belongs to the world of the villains, a world that is not so much black and white as it is devoid of color. Baron Harkonnen's (Stellan Skarsgård) favorite and sadistic nephew Feyd-Rautha (Austin Butler) slaughters drugged fighters in a massive coliseum but one of them, an Atreides prisoner, puts up a real fight, to the blood thirsty delight of Feyd-Rautha. It is impressive that a scene so devoid of color can be so eye-catching. 
Other new cast members include Christopher Walken as the galactic emperor who set the betrayal of the Atreides family in motion and his daughter, Princess Irulan (Florence Pugh), who functions as an audience stand-in, getting filled in on information about the main plot. The increasing severity of Florence Pugh’s headdresses and face coverings throughout the movie cannot go without notice and feels like a joke by the costume designers. Both Walken and Pugh have little to do other than lend their screen presence, though hearing Walken talk sci-fi Dune speak in his unique voice is unintentionally funny 
In the novel Paul gets to be a bit annoying; he has all the bravado and swagger of a regular teenage boy multiplied by his privileged upbringing and discovery that he is the messiah. Thankfully, as played by Chalamet, Paul is a young man who harbors doubts about himself and his abilities. We know that the prophecy of the messiah was created by the Bene Gesserit to control the Freman; Lady Jessica knows this, Paul knows this, Chani knows it instinctually. Yet Paul and Lady Jessica rebel against their religious and political order and make the prophecy come true, so do they not fulfill the prophecy? Can people believe something enough to make it reality? These are surely questions that Frank Herbert meant to stir with his novel. They were absent or muddled in Dune: Part One but are here in Dune: Part Two adding an extra thematic layer that does not distract from the adventure. 
Though Dune: Part Two concludes the story of Frank Herbert’s Dune, it is actually the middle part of an intended trilogy (to be concluded with Dune Messiah, based on the second Dune novel, in 2026). As far as middle film installments of recent trilogies go, this one is pretty good. It ends with a feeling of “onto the next adventure!” instead of “come back next year for the ending.”

Nominees: Mary Parent, Cale Boyter, Tanya Lapointe and Denis Villeneuve, Producers
Director: Denis Villeneuve
Screenplay: Denis Villeneuve and Jon Spaihts; based on the novel by Frank Herbert
Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson, Josh Brolin, Austin Butler
Production Companies: Legendary Pictures
Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures
Release Date: March 1, 2024 (United States)
Total Nominations: 5, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Cinematography-Greig Fraser; Production Design-Shane Vieau (set decorator), Patrice Vermette (production designer); Sound-Gareth John, Richard King, Ron Bartlett, Doug Hemphill; Visual Effects-Paul Lambert, Stephen James, Rhys Salcombe, Gerd Nefzer