Movie Review: Good Fortune


While watching the new movie “Good Fortune”, which has a lot to do with people who live at the edge of homelessness, I was thinking that the writer/director of this film Aziz Ansari, knows about this life from his years as a struggling Indian stand-up comedian. Aziz also plays the lead role in this story, Arj, whose life is a disaster of living in very bad Motels, sleeping in his car, and working odd jobs that even include standing in line for hours for other people to get concert tickets and even hard-to-get popular food.

Arj majored in film and documentary editing, guaranteeing him a difficult career trying to make a living within a field where the opportunity for any job is almost nonexistent. Much of this story is hard to watch, understanding the risk Ansari took in attempting to make squalor and financial desperation funny. Arj lives in run-down Motel rooms and far too often has to sleep in his car; none of this is ever funny.

This movie comes off like a combination of “It’s A Wonderful Life” (1946) and “Trading Places(1983). Keanu Reeves plays the angel in this story, named Gabriel, trying to save the life of Arj, and later his very wealthy friend Jeff, played by Seth Rogan. It turns out that Gabriel tries to teach Arj that his horrible life of no money is still worth living, by swapping the lives of Jeff and Arj, a very similar idea to Trading Places.

The good part of this story is how Ansari demonstrates the huge contrasts between a life of absolutely nothing and another life that has no boundaries. The parts that are off about this story are that it is too erratic, slow, and at times strange – almost as if the screenwriter was trying to make the movie two hours long regardless of the sequences of scenes making enough sense. The character Elena, played by Keke Palmer, works for a Home Depot-like company and tries to start a Union to help the many employees who are not being treated fairly. Her off-and-on again relationship with Arj, at times, seems more like filler to make the film two hours.

Some of the messages and statements in this movie about how unfair life is, and the differences between the lives of people who have everything and those who are on the edge of suicide and despair because they have no money, are brilliant. The best example of this is at the end of this film, with a speech from Jeff, who announces new rules in dealing with the delivery employees of his company when he says, “Enough of us getting rich off the misery of other people”. Another harsh reality of life, when the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, the main reason is that rich people have no empathy for those who live at the bottom of the world.

This film has numerous excellent messages about good and evil, rich and poor, and despite this, this film is receiving middle-of-the-road, below-average ratings of only 77% on Rotten Tomatoes. This is because of the erratic storytelling and scenes that seem more like filler than advancing the story. My rating is a solid 80% for some of the humor, acting, and the overall message, which is very well conveyed.

Movie Review: Roofman


The new movie “Roofman” is one of those ideas that, if it weren’t based on a true story, nobody would have greenlit the screenplay because the facts are too unbelievable.

Jeffrey Manchester (Channing Tatum) is a soldier who, after returning from Afghanistan, has a life that is a disaster. Like so many people who return from war in this country, Jeffrey has no marketable skills and is unable to get any decent-paying job. He has no money and is married with three children, and his marriage is falling apart. Desperate to support his family, Jeffrey does something stupid and robs a local McDonald’s. Even more unfortunately for Jeffrey, he locks the employees in a freezer, and the judge threw the book at him, adding kidnapping to his charges, sentencing him to a horrendous 45 years in prison.

It turns out that Manchester is super intelligent with high-level observational skills, making his life after the war even more unfortunate because nobody in the Veterans Administration took the time to recognize his high IQ and train him for a high-paying job that takes advantage of his high-functioning brain. How many thousands of veterans experience homelessness, depression, and suicide after returning from war, because nobody in the Veterans Administration takes the time to help them?

All of this sets the stage for Manchester to use his high IQ and observational skills to not only break out of prison but to evade the police for an amazing six months. Jeffrey stayed in the immediate area after escaping from prison and hid inside a Toys R US, by using a large unused storage area to live and sleep and stay hidden from everybody in the store.

This story is even more insane because after the many television broadcasts showing Manchester’s face, after only a few months, Manchester became a known member of the town he was living in, and even fell in love with a divorced woman with two children Leigh Wainscott (Kirsten Dunst). Manchester frequently attended Church with Wainscott, who was a member of the Church choir. This part of the story is the most unbelievable because after the prison escape, Jeffrey Manchester’s face was all over television, and after only a few months, out of all the hundreds of people he knew in the town, nobody remembered his face from the prison break?

The end of this story had to do with Manchester trying to use a friend he knew from the war to help him escape to a different country, and it was easy to guess the conclusion, which did not diminish the high quality of this movie

The Rotten Tomatoes is a high, well-earned 84% and I agree with this rating and give a strong recommendation to this film.

Movie Review: Tron Ares


“Tron” is a science fiction movie franchise that started in 1982, starring Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner. The last Tron movie was released in 2010 “Tron Legacy”, starring Garrett Hedlund and Olivia Wilde, with below average IMDB ratings on a par with the first movie, 6.8 out of 10.

The new movie “Tron Ares” is yet another example of name recognition, fans of the old movies and TV series, where the producers in charge think that throwing special effects at an audience is more than enough to get people to see any science fiction movie. Forego the screenplay, which takes too long; just pay a special effects company, and all we need is some dialogue. This summarizes this movie perfectly, because there is no story, no continuity, and no understandable screenplay anywhere in this disaster of two hours.

This movie stars Jared Leto as Ares, who is a robot, Jodie Turner-Smith who is another Tron robot with an appearance late in the movie of Jeff Bridges who once again plays Kevin Flynn and Gillian Anderson, who plays an executive, Elisabeth Dillinger. For all who see this very bad movie I suggest getting on your cell phones before the film starts and ask ChatGPT what this movie is about, otherwise nobody will have any clue with what is going on in one scene, after another scene, with no connection or logic, anywhere. The synopsis from rom ChatGPT, says it all:

  • After the events of Tron: Legacy, companies ENCOM (run by Eve Kim) and Dillinger Systems (run by Julian Dillinger) are competing to integrate digital programs from the Grid into the real world.
  • They’re limited by a problem: the materialized “digital constructs” only last ~29 minutes in the real world before “deresolving” (they degrade and disappear).

Discovery of Flynn’s Permanence Code

  • ENCOM and Eve Kim believe Kevin Flynn left behind a hidden piece of code (the “Permanence Code”) in an old remote Arctic research station which might allow constructs to stay permanently in the real world.
  • Eve successfully uses the code to bring a digital orange tree into the real world — it lasts much longer, proving the code works.

Introduction of Ares

  • Julian Dillinger creates Ares, a super-intelligent digital Program, intended as an expendable weapon, to deal with ENCOM’s threat and exploit the real-world materialization tech.
  • Ares is sent into the real world, and once there he begins to observe, question, and — to some degree — develop a sense of self, especially when confronted with nature, suffering, and real human consequences.

Conflict and Betrayal

  • Eve and Ares eventually align, as Ares starts diverging from Dillinger’s control. This sets up conflict between creator (Julian Dillinger) and creation (Ares + Eve).
  • Eve becomes a target because she has knowledge of the Permanence Code and maybe because Dillinger wants control of it. The stakes include asking who has the right to “create life” or let digital beings live permanently in our reality.

As far as Rotten Tomatoes critics reviews, which are a very low 53%, one critic Kyle Logan from Chicago Reader wrote: “Ares is also saddled with a truly atrocious script. Awkward attempts at emotional and thematic heft are laughable”. My rating for this very bad movie is around 15% only for some special effects. Hopefully this is the last we ever see the word Tron, anywhere, ever again. Run from this special effects mess.