Movie Review: Ella McCay


James L. Brooks is arguably one of the greatest screenwriters of all time. Starting with “Terms of Endearment” (1983) and followed by “Broadcast News” (1987) and then with “As Good as it Gets” (1997) his movies – the combination of great comedy and drama, have set a standard of excellence that have made films like these in a category all on their own, a “James L. Brooks type” movie. Due to Brook’s dedication and hard work, it takes years to write a new screenplay, painstakingly rewriting and improving it over time.

Unfortunately, there is no better example of how difficult it is to write a great screenplay than the career of James L. Brooks. With his huge high high-quality hits ending in 1997, there was a glitch in 1994 with “I’ll Do Anything”, and starting in 2004, with the below-average “Spanglish”, his screenplays ever since the outstanding As Good as it Gets, have declined, ending with the bad new movie “Ella McCay”. One would think that, waiting 15 years since “How Do You Know,” this new movie would have returned to the quality that Brooks achieved with As Good as it Gets.

The critics are at their worst with their reviews of this film. Joshua Mbonu: “With constant misses in the film’s attempts at comedy and performances that are as absent as the film itself, Ella McCay, at the very least, sticks out as one of the more baffling films you’ll watch unfold this year.” Brian Orndorf: “Sadly, brightness of spirit is buried in a mess of a movie, watching Brooks build a maze of characters and motivations he ultimately can’t find his way out of.” Jim Schembri: “A surprisingly spiritless and flustered stumblebum of a comedy.” Marshall Shaffer: “But the screenplay is an otherwise calamitous creation that demonstrates more than just a lack of Brooks’ previous genius. It stands in complete disregard for the most basic principles of screenwriting.” For someone as talented as Brooks, now 88 years old, to see reviews this bad at this late stage in his career has to hurt. This is the life of anyone in Hollywood who places years of work in front of the eyes of critics, who at times can be overly cruel.

The most hard to understand aspect of this film is why there were no checks and balances, and numerous eyes from other directors, producers, and screenwriters who said to Brooks, “This needs about 10 more rewrites.” There is nothing wrong with writing a bad screenplay; the problem is when you have so much fame, money, and clout that you can put out a bad movie like this one, without making sure that it is actually good enough to release.

Ella McCay stars Emma Mackey as Ella McCay, Woody Harrelson as Ella’s father, Eddie McCay, who is a serial cheater, Rebecca Hall as Ella’s mother, Jamie Lee Curtis as Ella’s aunt Hellen, and Spike Fearn as Ella’s younger brother, Casey. Kumail Nanjiani has a strange part as a State Trooper in a role that makes very little sense, with very few lines. Ayo Edebiri has a small part in this movie as the former girlfriend of Casey, with scenes that seem to be nothing more than making the running time over two hours. Julie Kavner has an acting/narration role that also makes very little sense, because there seems to be no reason for this movie to have any narration. Albert Brooks is also in this movie as the Governor of an unknown State, and once he decides to take a cabinet position, Ella takes over as the Governor, in her early 30s. Of course, none of this makes any sense. Given that Ella is so young as Lieutenant Governor, it is unlikely that a Governor of a State would leave his job under these conditions. There is a scene at the end of this movie with Ella and her aunt Helen standing and screaming out their frustrations to each other, which gives an ironic twist, because this is exactly what any fan of James L. Brooks wants to do after sitting through this waste of two hours.

This movie is a series of mostly disconnected stories that try to be funny or interesting, but when thrown together, do not seem to have any direct point or overall message. The plot is very difficult to fully describe because there is no definable plot that you would expect within a major movie release.

In terms of the actors and the great screenwriter involved, this huge miss is one of the biggest surprises I have seen since last year’s complete disaster “Megalopolis”, which redefined the definition of what a bad movie is. The Rotten Tomatoes ratings of 20% for this amazingly bad film are correct. This one should be missed at all costs.

The Grid below is a list of all the great, average, and bad James L. Brooks movies since his massive hit in 1983 with Terms of Endearment, which won for best picture, best director, best actress Shirley Maclaine, Jack Nicholson for best supporting actor, and best adapted screenplay.

YearFilmRT TomatometerOscar NominationsOscar Wins
1983Terms of Endearment81%115
1987Broadcast News98%70
1994I’ll Do Anything65%00
1997As Good as It Gets86%72
2004Spanglish54%00
2010How Do You Know31%00
2025Ella McCay20%00

Movie Review: Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire


If any moviegoer of the latest Godzilla movie, “Movie Review: Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire”, after seeing this giant mess were to be asked about the story, or his/her understanding of what they saw during these two hours; to a person, they would have no clue. This disaster of a film is nothing more than pre-canned computer-generated action scenes involving King Kong, and Godzilla, that were thrown together making a total of 2 hours of another forgettable and bad action movie. Unfortunately, this process of making bad action films seems to be the latest trend in the movie industry, including the latest and also bad Ghostbuster sequel.

There are several CGI movie companies that every year, spend millions of dollars to create monster movie graphics and to make back the money they spend on development, all of these scenes are thrown together into ridiculous disconnected scenes in action movies. Then some screenwriter has to try and assemble all of these scenes into a story that has no chance of making any sense. This latest Godzilla movie is one of the best examples of this ongoing stupid method of movie production.

One of the best reviews on Rotten Tomatoes I have seen about this film is from Odie Henderson of the Boston Globe: The problem with “Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire” is the same as so many of these franchise-based films: They’re all soulless special-effects extravaganzas where CGI takes the place of character development, good writing, and emotional connection. This one sentence describes the entire problem with movies like this perfectly.

The main character in this latest bad action movie is Rebecca Hall, who plays scientist Ilene Andrews whose entire purpose is to try and narrate this impossible series of monster events. Brian Tyree Henry plays a podcaster, who for some reason goes along for the ride and like the rest of us is trying to understand what is going on. Kaylee Hottle plays Jia, a young girl who is the standard young child who has some kind of a mental connection to King Kong. Considering how bad this story is, who cares about this?

When you consider movie franchises like “Toy Story” and others like it, so much money is spent on outstanding CGI technology that a great screenplay has to be created first, to honor how much hard work is required for the CGI. This continuing trend of CGI first, nobody cares about the screenplay, disrespects the movie-going audience – the most unfortunate aspect of having to waste 2 hours sitting through these horrendous movies.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this film is too high 54%, with my rating only 10%, only for some of the CGI scenes, and a big miss this mess recommendation.