Movie Review: No Hard Feelings


Jennifer Lawrence won 3 Golden Globe awards and one Oscar for best actress in “Silver Linings Playbook” in 2013. Lawrence is one of the very few actors who have won several major acting awards at a very young age. Jennifer’s last two high-quality acting roles were “Joy” in 2015 and “American Hustle” in 2013. Unfortunately getting the next high-quality movie role requires a great script, written by a great screenwriter – a few-and-far-between miracle that does not come around that often.

As far as deciding to take the role of a bad comedy called “No Hard Feelings”, it is very hard to believe that Lawrence could have read this script, and then decided to actually act in this movie. This film is at best below average, in terms of both the story and any appearance of something that is actually funny. The acid test for any comedy – nobody laughed in the theater I was in.

Once again, Lawrence felt the need to stay relevant, more than her desire to only act in high-quality productions. We can only hope that Jennifer will not be going the Robert De Niro route of making a string of bad comedies, that are well below her standards.

The story of No Hard Feelings is about the parents of a young college-bound boy, Alison and Laird Becker, played by Laura Benanti and Matthew Broderick and Andrew Barth Feldman, who plays their son Percy. Alison and Laird are concerned about Percy’s shy introverted personality before he goes off to college, so they hire Maddie, played by Jennifer Lawrence as a kind of sex surrogate for their son, which creates incidents of attempted comedy that mostly do no work throughout this story. If Maddie can pull off significantly changing their son, then she will get their used car. It is hard to believe that this idea was greenlighted as a mainstream movie. The most insane thing about this movie is Lawrence agreeing to do a nude-fight scene on a beach at night while 3 teenagers are trying to steal her clothes. What was she thinking there?

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this film is a correctly low 67%, with my rating at 50% for a solid miss this movie opinion.

Netflix Movie Review: Extraction 2


The new Netflix release, “Extraction 2”, is one of the few action movies where a bare minimum story is actually better because the action scenes and special effects are so spectacular.

Over 20 years ago Netflix started as a movie DVD company with no late fees. It is amazing to see how far this company has come, with the movies they produce that in many cases are as expensive and impressive as any mainstream movie. Netflix released the action movie Extraction in April 2020, also starring actor Chris Hemsworth as Tyler Rake, a black market mercenary. In Extraction 2, Rake’s new assignment is to extract a ruthless gangster prisoner and his entire family from a prison.

Most impressive about this action movie are the intense and well-shot fight scenes, which are not only long but seem extremely dangerous for the actors to shoot without being seriously injured. It’s one thing to be a bankable actor making impressive movies, it is quite another thing to realize the physical work involved along with the potential danger when practicing and choreographing dangerous hand-to-hand fighting scenes.

Along with Hemsworth are actors Golshifteh Farahani and Adam Bessa who play Nik Khan and her brother Yaz Khan who are equally impressive in their dangerous fight scenes throughout this film.

The scenes involving a moving train and attacking helicopters are as impressive action sequences that I have ever seen. I often wondered how the director pulled off some of the spectacular explosions and gunfire many times while watching this very good movie. There are other scenes where people are dangling from a high-rise building and falling through glass after hanging on trying not to fall, all the while shooting some of the most dangerous action fight sequences ever filmed.

Extraction 2 is much better and has many more spectacular action sequences than the first installment. The acting is also very well done and believable.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings for Extraction 2 are too low 76% with my rating of 90% and a strong recommendation.

Movie Review: The Flash


All science fiction/action movies that involve time travel take the risk of creating a timeline and/or a storyline that has a high chance of becoming ridiculous very quickly. The case of the new Marvel movie “The Flash” is about a Marvel character who can move at the speed of light and can also run faster than the speed of light (not possible within any natural law of Physics). The Flash got his incredible speed from a combination of being struck by lightning while being drenched in toxic chemicals. An off the wall crazy idea that I thought should have come from a better explanation.

When the Flash, played by actor Ezra Miller, runs faster than the speed of light, he has the ability to go back in time. This is the part of this story that does not work because the time travel is way overdone and mostly makes no sense. The time travel within this story brings back superheroes from other times in history, including Christopher Reeve, and George Reeves as Superman, using archive footage, and even Ben Affleck, Michael Keaton (the original Batman from 1989), and Adam West, the original Television Batman from the 1960s. The main message within this movie about time travel and superheroes are that if you make even one tiny change in what has happened in the past, the entire universe can come to an end, with possibly no way of fixing this corruption of time. In this story, due to a tiny event involving a can of tomato sauce, Barry “The Flash’s” mother is killed and his father is falsely arrested for her murder. Undoing this injustice is the majority of the plot of this film.

This movie includes the addition of a new movie Super Girl, played by newcomer Sasha Calle, who makes her first appearance about 75% into this story. As with all Marvel action movies like this one, the special effects are once again spectacular with the same idea of CGI first, story refinement is always less important.

Overall the acting is good and there are some genuine moments of humor, but not quite enough to save this film for a recommendation. I agree with the low 66% ratings on Rotten Tomatoes and do not recommend The Flash.