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: Materialists


The new movie “Materialists” is about dating through the eyes of people who join expensive dating services, and through the eyes of professional matchmakers, in this case, the main character Lucy, played by Dakota Johnson. It is good to see Dakota Johnson in a very good acting role, and recovering from last year’s disastrous “Madame Web”. Johnson demonstrates in this film some of the best acting of her career.

Of all the difficult professions that exist in the world, being a high-end matchmaker with a fee as high as $50,000 has to be one of the all-time emotional worst. There are several scenes in this movie where a client sits in a restaurant quoting a long list of unrealistic expectations about the person they think they deserve. All of these clients forget that any dating service cannot accept a long list of expectations and then generate the perfect person like it’s an AI-human-being-creator. This is because any dating service, regardless of the cost, is only as good as the people who join. No perfect person exists anywhere in the world for anyone.

As part of this long list of wants and do-not-wants, there is a great deal of talk about how much people earn in salary, as if that is one of the most important requirements for the perfect long-term partner. One of the main messages in this very good movie is the long-term on-and-off-again relationship of Lucy and her very broke waiter, trying to be an actor boyfriend, John, played very well by Chris Evans. The contrast between Lucy’s current rich boyfriend Harry, played by Pedro Pascal, and John, along with Lucy’s eventual decision about them, is one of the best parts of this extremely well-written screenplay.

As several critics have said that screenwriter-director Celine Song paints a very bleak and depressing story about the realities of dating in this world, but most would agree that her point of view is more about the reality of trying to find love, and much less about just being negative about all of the heartache, and depression involved. Dating will always involve putting your heart and soul into the hands of a total stranger, and then trying to accept the consequences when a person you might potentially love does not feel the same way about you.

For me, the actor who steals this entire movie is Sophie, played by Zoe Winters. Her repeated comments about “dying alone” and one scene where the pain in her eyes when she hears that the previous person she went out with did not feel the same way about her are great acting moments in this movie. Later, Sophie’s conversation with Lucy after the latest in a string of 10 bad dates attacked her, included a moment when she breathlessly tells Lucy that she “deserves love”. In my opinion, Winters is worthy of an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actress for these two scenes alone.

The one thing I hated about this movie is the chain-smoking that Lucy does with several other characters. Smoking happens in movies because cigarette companies finance the production despite the downside that includes too many people continuing to smoke or taking it up as a new, stupid hobby. As we all know, smoking causes a long list of Cancers, and showing smoking in movies should have been banned decades ago.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings are a very high 87%, with my rating 95% and a 100% rating for this category of movie, showing what it is like for so many millions of us, who try to find true love in our lifetimes.

Movie Review: Kajillionaire

Movie Review: Kajillionaire


The new movie “Kajillionaire” is for any person in the world, who thinks that being broke, heavily in debt or even being close to homeless is not a big deal. Not only is all of this a big deal, but for so many millions of people in the world, it can be a fate worse than death.

The story of Kajillionaire is about an older man and woman and their 20-something daughter who are on the outer fringes of living on the streets. They run scams, some of them very complex that involve faking lost luggage at the airport. They duck under a fence to avoid their landlord who is renting them a former small office room that leaks foam from a next door car wash. This film stretches to a highly unusual level of storytelling that in some areas barely make sense with storylines that in some ways seem connected but then drift away. Many times when I see movies that try so hard to be different – they do not work, but this movie works and for the most part well done.

Kajillionaire stars Evan Rachel Wood, Debra Winger, Richard Jenkins and Gina Rodriguez. This is movie is not a comedy, it is a dark drama about the harsh realities of life in this country for people with no money. Over time, people become desperate animals just to survive one day to the next – and all of this makes Kajillionaire a difficult story to watch. The acting is very solid throughout, with Rodgriguez character joining this group of 3 drifters in the middle of this story – a part of the story I found to be somewhat unbelievable.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings for Kajillionaire are a very high 88% but a very low 54% audience rating. I am more in the middle, around 72%, with a passing rating. This is not the great movie some of the critics are raving about because some parts of this story did fail and other areas are so disjointed that they do not seem to make sense. Trying to be unusual too often in any story can ruin the final production – the best recent example of this is the movie Tenet. Overall, I do recommend this movie for its stark and depressing reality of people living on the edge.