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: Fly Me to the Moon


On July 20, 1969, after 10 years of effort and the work of over 400 thousand workers from numerous external vendors who assembled and tested thousands of parts in one of the most dangerous and ambitious missions in human history, NASA (The National Aeronautics and Space Administration) landed two men on the moon.

Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were the first two men on the moon for Apollo 11. After Apollo 11 five more successful missions to the moon happened, ending with Apollo 17 on December 7, 1972. The one failure, Apollo 13 on April 11, 1970, did not make it to the moon due to an explosion, that turned out to be one of NASA’s finest moments when they saved the lives of three Astronauts and brought them home despite impossible odds, the subject of Ron Howard’s great film, “Apollo 13” (1995).

Since the last moon landing in 1972, five movies have been released suggesting that the moon landings were all faked. “Capricorn One” (1978), “Astronauts Gone Wild” (2004), “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon” (2001), “Dark Side of the Moon” (2002), “Room 237” (2012). The last movie, Room 237 was a documentary about Stanley Kubrick’s “The Shining” (1980) that had clues about Kubrick’s involvement in possibly faking the moon landings.

Considering the ongoing conspiracy theories documentaries and movies that still proclaim that the NASA moon landings were faked, it makes no sense that now after over 50 years NASA has not come up with a huge marketing campaign that includes two-hour documentaries, segments on 60 minutes, books, magazines that finally put to rest forever, these constant lies about the moon landings being faked.

Rather than an aggressive marketing campaign putting all of the conspiracy theories to rest, NASA policy through the years has been “Overall, NASA provides ample evidence and relies on the scientific community to support the reality of the moon landings, focusing its efforts on continuing space exploration and scientific discovery.” However, taking the high road for over 50 years has not killed the ongoing lies about the moon landings. The new movie “Fly Me to the Moon” is yet another film that includes a storyline about Apollo 11 being faked by a Hollywood producer and director.

Fly Me to the Moon stars Scarlett Johansson as Kelly Jones, an advertising executive hired by NASA to promote the space agency and raise money for the space program by linking the agency to as many products as possible. Channing Tatum plays Cole Davis a NASA mission administrator who is in constant conflict with Kelly Jones as she tries to market NASA to make money for the space program. The original idea of this film is at first very good, with some good drama and comedy as ongoing problems and arguments between the two main characters carry this story. During the last 1/3 of this movie, Moe Berkus, a government official working directly with the White House, played by Woody Harrelson comes up with an idea to have a fail-safe video feed that NASA will show the world, in case something goes wrong if/when the Astronauts land on the moon. The good part of this is that this movie does not proclaim that the moon landing was faked, only that the attempt to fake it did exist to save NASA from potential embarrassment. What follows is what comes off as mostly a comedic parody ending that saves this story from being just another conspiracy theory movie and in some ways tries to make fun of the 50+ year “the moon landings were faked” conspiracy theories.

As far as the movie, that acting was good, some of the comedy did work, some other parts did not. The Rotten Tomatoes rating of only 67% is too low, with my rating a solid 75% and a recommendation because this film is entertaining enough to recommend.

Movie Review: Magic Mike’s Last Dance


The good news about the latest “Magic Mike” movie is that the title implies this is the last one. Let’s hope so.

Were it not for this blog and its high ranking on Feedspot and other websites that rank movie review blogs, this is one movie I never would have seen on my own.

The story this time around has to do with a wealthy woman Maxandra Mendoza, played by Salma Hayek about to divorce her very wealthy husband and a new idea based on a conversation with a bartender, played by Channing Tatum (Mike Lane) – where an ongoing play in London will be changed to include exotic male dancers, and Mike would be the director. Impossible to make something like this up, much less make a movie about this. Of course, the entire Magic Mike series is idiotic and ridiculous, something you expect when you walk into the movie theater. The producers and director (once again Steven Soderbergh) this time around tried to throw in the high-functioning genius daughter of Maxandra, Zadie (played very well by Jemelia George). Her performance as a genius child completely steals this mostly bad movie. The attempt to “smarten up” a stupid story idea and screenplay worked only with scenes where Zadie appears.

What most fans of this series probably already realize is that Channing Tatum himself was an exotic dancer like Mike Lane, the character he plays in these 3 movies. One can only wonder and hope that Channing knows how lucky he is to be so wealthy and famous an actor after such meager beginnings.

This time around the low Rotten Tomatoes rating of 46% is correct – and this one is definitely a pass.