Movie Review: Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story


The documentary “Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story” is a fathom event special, available in only a few theaters, and is more expensive than a typical movie release.

In the history of tragic celebrity deaths, Christopher Reeve’s tragic accident of falling off a horse on May 27, 1995, and death on October 10, 2004, is one of the worst examples. It could be argued that because Reeve suffered for so long, paralyzed from the neck down for over nine years, what he went through was worse than the deaths of Princess Diana, JFK Jr., Kobe Bryant, and other famous people who have died suddenly. Even more tragic with this story is that Christopher Reeve’s wife, Dana was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer just 10 months after Christopher died, even though she never smoked. Dana lost her battle with the disease 7 months later. Dana’s devotion to Christopher Reeve during his entire 9+ year ordeal is one of the most impressive parts of this great documentary. Reeve was not a very rich man despite his impressive acting career, and the cost of long-term care was an incredible 400K a year.

This great documentary stars Reeve’s three children, Matthew Reeve, Alexandra Reeve Givens, from his relationship with Gae Exton and Will Reeve the son Reeve had with Dana Reeve. Several celebrities make cameos throughout this film, including Glenn Close, Richard Donner, and Susan Sarandon with archive footage of Barack Obama, Johnny Carson, and Reeve’s lifelong friend, the late Robin Williams. The focus of this documentary is more on Will Reeve than the other two children, who in 2006 lost his father, grandmother, and mother in a period of eighteen months.

Many scenes show the medical nightmare that Reeve’s life was for the last 9 years of his life. Unable to move, rapidly ages the body, causing hair loss and many other medical issues, related to blood circulation. Reeve eventually died of heart failure at age 52, after slipping into a coma, and considering how severe his injury was, it is remarkable that he lived as long as he did.

Reeve’s last years were all about helping other disabled people, never about himself. His foundation now bears the name of himself and his wife and has raised many millions of dollars towards helping the cause of spinal injury. Like Olivia Newton-John with her Cancer Institute in Australia, and Michael J Fox with his Parkinson’s Disease Foundation, world famous celebrities have greatly advanced medical progress due to their fame.

Reeve directed 3 movies while quadriplegic and continued to act in movies and television shows – a remarkable achievement considering his extremely severe injury. Reeve’s acting career before his injury included four Superman movies, with the last two sequels nothing more than excuses to cash in on the franchise. As Reeve said in this documentary, each Superman sequel provided diminishing returns in quality.

All human beings have had their share of problems in life. But after seeing this outstanding documentary about Christopher Reeve, no problem could ever compare to what he went through for so long. This is the best documentary of its kind that I have ever seen and receives my highest recommendation.

Movie Review: The Substance


The message of the new movie “The Substance” starring Demi Moore, is that if you are an aging celebrity and trying to continue your career by getting plastic surgery, botox, or any number of other recommended medical solutions to slowing the aging process – far too often, these solutions fail and make the whole problem of aging worse than it would be otherwise. The best example of this is the late Micheal Jackson, who destroyed his looks by receiving way too many plastic surgeries for many years.

This story takes the ongoing problem of celebrity plastic surgeries and procedures to the ultimate level of crazy throughout this story, especially at the end, resulting in a disgusting and unnecessarily bloody, violent horror movie. I thought that the level of blood and gore was way over the top, changing the entire course of this movie into just another “seen before” massive experiment in movie makeup.

The Substance stars Demi Moore as Elizabeth Sparkle who is a fading celebrity desperate to prevent the end of her fame, due to her age. Margaret Qualley plays Sue who is the younger clone of Elizabeth who comes out of the body of Elizabeth as a result of a chemical process that requires a series of chemicals to keep the two women alive. The instructions say that they are both one person so that when one woman is alive in the world, the other woman has to remain unconscious. Predictably, things go very wrong mid way through this story, around the time when Sue becomes a huge star with a fitness TV show.

There is a great deal of nudity in this movie, making this role more risky for the career of 61-year-old Demi Moore. Time will tell if taking this role was a huge mistake or resulted in some level of a revival of her acting career.

Once again the way too high 89% Rotten Tomatoes rating for this film is wrong, with my rating only 50% mainly for the way too much blood violent and disgusting scenes throughout this movie. I do not recommend The Substance.

Movie Review: Speak No Evil


The movie “Speak No Evil” is one of those slow movie psychological horror movies that take a long time to develop. There are two married couples, each with one child who meet and decide to spend a weekend at a very old house in the country. Over dinner, conversations, and a series of discussions that even include parenting, the couple who lives in this old house are found at first to be annoying, inappropriate, and eventually dangerously insane.

The parts of the evil couple Paddy and Clara are played by James McAvoy and Aisling Franciosi, with McAvoy a standout at playing an extremely evil and sick person. The other couple in the wrong place at the wrong time are Louise and Ben, played by Mackenzie Davis and Scoot McNairy – who last appeared together in the great TV series “Halt and Catch Fire” about the dawn of information technology in the 1980s.

As this story goes on, the reality of the evil couple’s situation and their son, who we are told was born with a tongue too small to speak become known to the other couple, resulting in an ending that involves an extremely violent series of action scenes and a satisfying conclusion, given the abuse suffered by the young boy in this story named Ant, played by Dan Hough.

The acting in this film is good throughout, although I thought that the wife of Paddy, seemed miscast because she looks too much like a normal woman to play someone so sick and evil. Most people will find many of the scenes of crazy and annoying insanity and child abuse hard to sit through. The other issue is that it seemed to take too long to get to the point of how dangerous and sick these two people who own the house are.

Too many of us will recognize personality traits in Paddy that we have seen in people throughout our working and personal lives. You realize that sometimes there can be no measurable limit as to just how dangerous the wrong people we encounter in life can be.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings for this movie is a very solid 85% and I agree with this rating and do recommend this film.