Movie Review: Song Sung Blue


The new movie “Song Sung Blue” is about the true story of Mike and Claire Sardina and their ongoing struggles to become “intermediate celebrities” in the Midwest as singer impersonators and interpreters. This story shines a light on facts that many already know: that trying to make it in show business is a nightmare, no-money grind that can last many years with no payoff for too many thousands of people who have a dream that is never realized.

Whenever I see a rare film like this, which is about the impossible dream of show business, I think of actors like George Clooney, who in 1982 moved to Hollywood at age 21, and had to beg people he knew to sleep on their couch for 5 years. Clooney begged them for money and was completely broke at 27. Clooney finally got his first big break at age 33 in 1994 when he was cast as a young doctor on ER. How many of us would ever have the courage and perseverance to live a life like this, even if they knew in advance that they would wind up like George Clooney, who at age 64 is now worth over 500 million dollars? The famous story about Clooney is that in 2013, he invited 14 longtime friends to dinner and gave each one a million dollars in cash, to thank them for the significant help they had provided him during those years of financial desperation.

The most amazing about George Clooney is not only how he survived these nightmare years but how he was able to find 14 friends who helped him during this impossible time in his life. This is the reality of following your dream in show business. We always know about the lucky few who make it, but rarely about the tens of thousands who are always on the “outside looking in”.

Mike Sardina is played by Hugh Jackman, who is perfectly suited for this role with solid acting and many scenes of singing either as a solo artist or with his wife Claire, played by Kate Hudson, who proves in this movie that she is a very good singer. Mike and Claire meet at a local fair and eventually marry, starting a group that tours local bars and small venues, calling themselves “Thunder and Lightning”, where Mike impersonates Neil Diamond and Clair impersonates Patsy Cline. The Neil Diamond songs are almost always dominated by his most popular hit, “Sweet Caroline,” and who knows how many thousands of times Diamond sang this song during his career.

Throughout this well-told story, Mike’s struggles to survive financially are well documented, as he takes odd jobs as a mechanic and carpenter just to be very close to financial ruin, always several mortgage payments behind in his below-average house that is right next to a major airport, where huge planes constantly fly over. Mike also has a severe ongoing heart problem that appears in several scenes, will eventually take his life.

Thunder and Lightning is a major hit in the Midwest, with the group eventually opening for the band Pearl Jam. Then real life takes over, and there is a tragedy that puts Mike and Claire’s success on hold for a long time, until there is an unlikely comeback, and a conclusion that is both tragic and expected.

Song Sung Blue includes actor Jim Belushi, who is very good in his role as the group’s travel agent, and Fisher Stevens, who is a close friend of Mike’s and eventually becomes a member of the group. This story does a very good job of showing the stark reality of trying to travel the United States and play broken-down bars to crowds as small as 25 people for very little money. It is no wonder that most people give up their dream after just a few years of trying to pursue an unlikely miracle.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings for this movie are too low at 76% with my rating 85% for the true story, and the singing and acting of Jackman and Hudson. I give a strong recommendation to this story about pursuing your dreams, no matter what the cost. Below are the movie trailer and the documentary that inspired this movie.

Movie Review: Deadpool & Wolverine


If someone interviews any number of moviegoers leaving the movie “Deadpool & Wolverine” and asks, “So what was this movie about?” – no one would be able to answer this question. There is no evidence of a movie here, just a series of events, action scenes, fight scenes, time travel, insane explanations, sarcastic dialogue from Deadpool, played by Ryan Reynolds, and non-stop inexplicable inanity. It is hard to understand why the screenwriters and director decided to make a Marvel movie this off-the-wall crazy, with no real plot or screenplay. What is the point of this?

The most important part of making a new Marvel superhero sequel is to create a good enough film, with enough box office so that another one can be made in the future. Recent Marvel releases, including the horrendous, “Madam Web” (2024) and “The Marvels” (2023) are great examples of exactly how not to make a superhero movie. These two very bad films guaranteed that there would never be a sequel, resulting in many millions of potential movie revenue lost. In the case of this new Marvel movie, there were 3 screenwriters, including Ryan Reynolds. It seemed that throughout these two hours, none of the 3 writers knew or even cared what the other writer was creating. These entire two hours were slapped together without any regard or respect for the audience with the ongoing idea that special effects can fix any bad action movie.

The addition of Hugh Jackman as Wolverine might have been an attempt to save the box office for what would have been reviewed as a bad Deadpool sequel, once production money was spent and they realized this was going to be a badly reviewed movie. We have all seen this tactic before with highly marketed movies, where they think they can add bankable stars to the cast to drum up the box office after the bad reviews are released. This movie includes Wesley Snipes as Blade, Jennifer Garner as Electra, and Channing Tatum as a new Marvel character Gambit, who throws playing cards as weapons. Their presence along with Jackman is not enough to fix all that is wrong with this film.

There are a few laughs with the non-stop sarcastic comments from Ryan Reynolds, but not nearly enough to rescue an overly long, boring, and crazy Deadpool sequel.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this movie are a way too high 81%, with my rating 68% only because of some of the action sequences.

Movie Review: Reminiscence


The new movie “Reminiscence”, starring Hugh Jackman is one of those rare bad movies that it is extremely hard to review, because it is so bad. I have often wondered, how many bad movies can a very famous actor can make before their career goes south? Without a doubt, this is the worst movie Hugh Jackman has ever made, so bad that its impossible to understand how he could have read the script and agreed to act in this film. I have always known that there are actor/studio contracts that are signed and favors that are agreed to in Hollywood. I have seen way too many movies like this one, where a named actor has made a movie that they should have known from the script, was too bad to make.

The plot is absurd, the story starting sometime in the future, with the city of Miami completely flooded because of Global Warming. In the future, there is a machine that can read peoples brain waves displaying their thoughts on a computer screen. This idea reminded me of the 1983 movie “Brainstorm”, the last movie for Natalie Wood. In that movie, they were able to record brain images for people at the moment they died, resulting in some memorable scenes and a pretty good film. In this movie, the main character Nick Bannister played by Jackman is trying to find out what has happened to his girlfriend Mae, played by Rebecca Ferguson, by using this brain wave machine. Actress Thandiwe Newton plays Emily, Nick’s friend who throughout this film, tries to talk him out of everything he is doing. Admittedly while watching this film on HBO Max, I fast-forwarded the movie too many times, at 15 second intervals, because this movie was so hard to sit through.

By the time you are 85% through this very bad movie, you are more interested in it ending, than ever caring enough to fully understand what is happening in this very poorly told story.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this film is an extremely low 37%, and I agree with this assessment, suggesting that this movie should just die in a DVD graveyard.