

#Madcap theaters movie#
The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson famously defended them by saying “Lucas made a gorgeous 7 hour long movie for children about how entitlement and fear of loss turns good people into fascists, and did it while spearheading nearly every technical sea change in modern filmmaking of the past 30 years.” For whatever other faults in may have, this home is most directly driven home in the trilogy’s middle chapter, where that anger, hate and fear most directly send our would-be hero down a dark and fascistic path.įor as much fun as Captain Marvel is – both on the big screen and on the page – my heart has always been with her Pakistani protégé, Ms. With the January 6 hearings well and truly underway in Washington, the long-derided prequel trilogy hits a little differently back when they first came out. So, naturally, I’ve moved on to the “later” movies in the franchise.

With May – the 4 th, as well as Revenge of the 5 th – firmly behind us, I still haven’t been able to shake the Star Warsy mood that those kitschy little holidays have put me in. Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002) It gives all of the toys more to do than most of the other installments, with Woody especially having a dark and memorable turn in the face of his own looming mortality (a character arc so good that they repeated it for the rest of the cast in Toy Story 3).

The best of the bunch, however, has always been the second installment, which best blended the converging strands of comedy and heart that the franchise was known for. Those original Toy Stories really do hold up, though, from the more roughly-animated first entry to the unnecessary (yet improbably welcome) forth entry that capped their initial run. Word on the street is that Lightyear, the alleged story of the actual Buzz Lightyear who inspired the toy line from the Toy Story movies, is… well, not good: meticulously designed by committee and, ironically, the only Pixar movie to feel like it was made for direct-to-streaming when it’s actually the first Pixar movie back in theaters since the start of the Pandemic (justice for Onward!). From Bob Hoskin’s delightfully gruff, genre-perfect performance as a hard-boiled detective with a colorful past to Robert Zemeckis’s perfectly choreographed direction to every laugh-a-minute gag straight out of the old-school cartoon playbook, it’s the perfect entryway to a whole world of older films and shorts for younger viewers, and an incredible second life for those who grew up watching them.

If you somehow haven’t seen the movie before – or, at least, haven’t seen in a while – the film absolutely holds up as one of the great technical achievements in motion pictures: as perfectly realized today as it was when it debuted five decades ago. While the results were received with mixed (but mostly confused) responses from fans and critics alike, the film couldn’t help but to draw comparisons to the equally insane Robert Zemeckis animation / live action hybrid crossover neo-noir comedy from Chip ‘n Dale’s television heyday. Last month saw the release of the utterly bonkers Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers, a madcap meta-comedy resurrecting the popular (but not really all that) popular 80’s reboot of a couple of D-list Disney animal jokesters. Marvel to a string of new Baymax shorts, there’s more than enough to make your subscription worthwhile.
#Madcap theaters series#
From last month’s latecomer Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers to new series Obi-Wan Kenobi and Ms. June is certainly no different for them, for while their LGBT+ content for Pride Month is regrettably lacking, there is plenty of exciting new content to dive headlong into this month. Their deep catalog of old favorites and regular influx of brand new must-see entertainment has kept them on (or at least very near) the top of the streaming heap since they opened shop in December 2019. As per usual, Disney+ is streaming par excellence.
