Hollywood released 24 major
movies into the multiplexes this summer, in what feels like a perpetually
bigger and more desperate attempt to make a year’s worth of money in 3 ½ months.
I refer to summer as Greenlight Season, because the movies released are measured
not by the amount of great reviews or awards buzz they generate, but by the
number of subsequent movies that get green lit in their wake. I saw 15 of those
24 movies, missing a few because I just didn’t find the time (Terminator: Genisys, The Gift, Spy, and Magic Mike XXL),
a few because I just couldn’t justify paying to see them (Vacation and Pixels), and
a few because you literally couldn’t have paid me to see them (Hot Pursuit, Ted 2, and San Andreas).
But I saw almost all of the major players, so let’s look at how they stacked up
in terms of quality. And yes, I know that’s the most irrelevant way to measure
them. That’s why it’s fun.
1. Mad Max:
Fury Road (Grade: A)
This was
a summer with two all-time classic movies, and choosing which should rank
number one was an agonizing task that involved switching places more than once.
In the end, I opted against any illusion of objectivity and just went with what
I liked better.
Any
given generation typically gets just a few action movies that cause people to
speak with glowing reverence forever. Die
Hard. Raiders of the Lost Ark. The Matrix. They don’t happen often, but
Mad Max: Fury Road will be is one of those movies.
If
1981’s The Road Warrior (aka: Mad Max
2) set up the Platonic ideal of a Mad Max movie—introduce a bare bones plot in
the first half about transporting something important, and then resolve that
plot in a second-half-length car chase—then Fury
Road is the Platonic ideal of that
Platonic ideal. It spends the opening ten minutes setting up a barest bones
plot about transporting something, and then gives us a gonzo
hour-and-fifty-minute car chase to resolve a plot that barely registered in the
first place.
The
result is what feels like turning the best two minutes of a Fast & Furious movie into a two-hour
post-apocalyptic acid trip covered in sand, leather, and spikes. And in a year
where Furious 7 became one of the
highest grossing movies ever, Fury Road was
both faster and had the audacity to name its lead character Furiosa. The Fast & Furious franchise could (and
will!) go another seven movies, and they still won’t create anything this
perfect.
2. Inside
Out (Grade: A)
The
temptation to put this number one stems not just from how good it is, but from
the high likelihood that parents will watch this movie with their children (and
pretend not to sob in the background) until the end times.
This is
a case where accuracy of facts matters much less than accuracy of feelings. No,
the innards of Inside Out probably
aren’t a great facsimile of how our heads actually work, but goddamn if it doesn’t
feel like the pinnacle of accuracy while you’re watching. Creating that recognition of “Yes! That’s just what that feels like!” is what peak Pixar
excels at. The scene in Wall-E where
he shows EVA his cool shit (Here’s my eggbeater!) is exactly what it feels like
to try and impress a girl you like. The scene in Toy Story 3 where the kid gives up his toys is exactly as unfairly
traumatic on the screen as it was in real life. And so it is with Inside Out, where every new brain
location immediately looks emotionally recognizable yet visually brand new at
the same time.
Arguing
about the best Pixar movie is as useless as speculating who would win in
one-on-one between LeBron and Jordan. All we know is those are the two guys
that belong in the argument. With Inside
Out, we know it belongs in the argument.
3. Ant-Man
(Grade: B+)
All
three of this summer’s movies based on Marvel comics existed in very different
final versions than their creators intended. With Ant-Man, that control feud became so untenable that original
director Edgar Wright quit the project that he’d almost single-handedly
shepherded into existence. Yet the strength of his vision for the film was so
great, and the casting of Paul Rudd so perfect, that it succeeded in spite of
itself.
One
thing that Marvel does so well with their movies is allow them to be things
beyond merely super-hero movies. Guardians
of the Galaxy was space-opera, and Captain
America: Winter Soldier felt like a ‘70s conspiracy thriller (complete with
Robert Redford dutifully showing up in the cast). So it is with Ant-Man, which is essentially a heist
flick with super-heroes; It’s Ocean’s ‘15,
starring Ant-Man in the role of George Clooney.
We’ll probably
never know what Edgar Wright’s version of Ant-Man
would have looked like, or even if it would’ve been that different than
eventual director Peyton Reed’s finished product. (By all accounts, Wright’s
story remained fairly intact in the finished film.) But regardless of where
credit is due, the resultant movie is a testament to how much fun the Marvel
Cinematic Universe can continue to be even well into their “B” and “C-lists.”
4. Mission
Impossible: Rogue Nation (Grade: B+)
Speaking
of how much fun something can continue to be despite presumably diminishing
returns, there’s 53-year old Tom Cruise, hanging off the side of a plane five
minutes into yet another Mission
Impossible movie. Managing to stay fresh by adopting the James Bond tactic
of constantly changing directors and allowing each movie to be its own entity,
while simultaneously avoiding the James Bond rut of mandating each movie follow
the same story beats, the Mission
Impossible franchise has found a sweet spot that should theoretically last as
long as Tom Cruise can walk and remains crazy enough to do his own stunts. And
Tom’s craziness level isn’t going down.
5. Straight
Outta Compton (Grade: B)
Ever
since I heard Grantland’s Wesley Morris refer to this as “The hip-hop
Avengers,” I haven’t been able to get that perfect metaphor out of my head. Like
The Avengers, this is all about
mythologizing a gathering of heroes. In that regard, it succeeds perfectly. But
it’s also a slight disservice, because these were real people, and the
relevancy of this story deserved to be told in a more authentic way.
I
remember last summer having a conversation with a friend about the James Brown
biopic, Get On Up, and how he didn’t
want to see it because it was PG-13, and “James Brown didn’t live a PG-13 life.”
Despite the limiting rating, Get On Up still
figured out how to show James Brown’s life and character in a way that felt
true. Straight Outta Compton got the
R rating it needed (a single playing of “Fuck tha Police” ensured that), but it
somehow ended up the more sugar-coated and neutered of the two movies,
pretending that Dr. Dre speeding in a Ferrari was the most controversial thing
he ever did.
Those
omissions for the sake of commercial safety (or worse, saving face) are so
frustrating partially because the movie is otherwise so good. It’s compulsively
watchable, doesn’t drag despite it’s two-and-a-half hour runtime, and has a few
moments of true greatness. (On the other hand, there are also a few moments
that feel like outtakes from the Entourage
movie.) If it just cared a bit more about reality than myth building, it could
have been the best music biopic ever.
6. Trainwreck
(Grade: B)
This was
the summer’s funniest movie—and probably the funniest summer movie since Bridesmaids in 2011—but it doesn’t stand
up very well to actual analysis. The elephant in the room with the movie is
that the two main characters seem to only be interested in each other because
the plot needs them to be. Schumer apparently only likes Hader because he calls
her back, and he seemingly only likes her because she put out on the first date.
In a way, this is a minor complaint, because most comedies construct vaguely
outlandish plots merely as joke delivery systems, but the real problem here is
that it’s one of those core parts that shouldn’t have to be outlandish. Their
relationship isn’t a set piece; it’s the whole piece.
Beyond
that, the movie’s an 80/20 mix of hilarious scenes and scenes that fall
completely flat. Sadly, the bad scenes are so bad that they kind of dominate
your memory and make it feel more like a 60/40 ratio. The intervention scene
with Marv Albert is terrible, and the idea that LeBron plays one-on-one with
his doctor only makes sense if you also believe Usain Bolt races his dentist or
Ronda Rousey spars with her gardener.
Now,
having said all that, what works here (and it mostly does work) is really,
really good, and the movie absolutely succeeded in its three most important
goals: 1) It launched Amy Schumer to true stardom (regardless of whether she’s
hot enough). 2) It revitalized the directing career of Judd Apatow after two
very forgettable movies (Funny People and
This is 40). And 3) It became the
defining comedy of 2015.
7. The Man
From U.N.C.L.E. (Grade: B)
This was
actually a really fun spy movie, so it’s unfortunate that no one saw it. But
unfortunate and unexpected aren’t the same thing. It’s really unclear what
Warner Brothers was thinking here. How many current moviegoers have even heard
of this property, let alone were pining for its revival? Other than knowing
“The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” was a ‘60s spy show, I know nothing about it, and I
imagine most people know even less than that. What’s even more curious is that
the concept, whatever it actually is, is never even used or mentioned in the
movie until the final line of dialogue. I saw the movie, and I still couldn’t
tell you what the property is. So Warner Brothers essentially paid royalty
rights for a title and intellectual property that they didn’t really use, and
which actively caused fewer people to see their movie. Really, if you just cut
that final line, the movie could have been named Mission Impossible: First
Class (Or Mission Impossible: Episode I, Mission Impossible Begins, etc.), and
it would have made three times as much money.
Anyway, I recommend people check this out, as it is actually quite fun. Like most of Guy Ritchie’s films, the editing is tremendously exciting and the set pieces are wonderfully conceived, including a really cool climactic raid sequence shot almost entirely in moving and alternating split screens. Henry Cavill plays a better Clark Kent here than he did in Man of Steel, Armie Hammer is surprisingly agile with a Russian accent, and Alicia Vikander continues her title-streak of being the most beautiful person to grace a movie screen. Try and see this if you get a chance, because we’re definitely not getting a sequel.
Anyway, I recommend people check this out, as it is actually quite fun. Like most of Guy Ritchie’s films, the editing is tremendously exciting and the set pieces are wonderfully conceived, including a really cool climactic raid sequence shot almost entirely in moving and alternating split screens. Henry Cavill plays a better Clark Kent here than he did in Man of Steel, Armie Hammer is surprisingly agile with a Russian accent, and Alicia Vikander continues her title-streak of being the most beautiful person to grace a movie screen. Try and see this if you get a chance, because we’re definitely not getting a sequel.
8. Jurassic
World (Grade: B-)
The
middle of the list seems like the right place for a movie that financially
conquered the season, but artistically fought against its own existence. I
actually quite admire the ballsiness of the anti-studio-thinking approach that
writer/director Collin Trevorrow took to the material. He was being asked to
make a movie that’s only reason for existence was so a mega-corporation could
make a lot of money, so he made a movie about a mega-corporation creating
something they shouldn’t have just so they could make a lot of money. Good form.
But just
because you’ve been highly successful at arguing why you made something that shouldn’t
exist, that doesn’t mean you won the argument. It might actually mean the
opposite.
To be
fair, debate about how many summer movies have legitimate reason to exist is a
depressing path that takes the piss right out of all these things, so let’s try
and grade on a curve. This movie was fun. It wasn’t as much fun as the best of
the crop, but it was much more fun than most of them. Chris Pratt loudly ended
the skepticism that he’s a movie star, the dialogue and story beats were more or
less engaging, and it was at least marginally closer in quality to Jurassic Park than it was to Jurassic park III. That’s probably all
we could ask for.
9. Avengers:
Age of Ultron (Grade: B-)
A few
months back, writer Mark Harris questioned whether shared universe comic book
movies—after they check all of the fan-service boxes and include Easter eggs,
post-credit scenes, and set-up the next several installments—even have the time
and ability to be movies at all. By and large, I don’t agree that this is a major
problem, as I think movies like Ant-Man and
Guardians of the Galaxy have shown.
But Avengers: Age of Ultron sure as
hell made it feel like Harris’ theory is a full-blown epidemic.
Somewhere
within everything was an actual Joss Whedon movie, and at times it resembled a
very good one. The sequence with Hawkeye’s wife at their ranch (“You know I’ve
always supported your avenging”), much of the snappy patter, and the basic
Ultron plot all worked immensely well. But all of that was nearly drowned out
by everything Marvel demanded be thrown in on top. A long sequence in the
middle with Thor and a magic pond (it’s just as good as it sounds!) is
exclusively there to set up future installments and completely distracts from
the movie’s narrative, while a long set piece with Iron Man and the Hulk duking
it out in an eastern European city isn’t just CGI porn, it’s a full-on fanboy
gangbang.
Because
of all the obvious “one scene for you, one scene for me” garbage going on
between Whedon and Marvel, the most memorable moment of the movie ended up
being a not-so-subtle bit of Whedon knocking the business model. In pointing
out that Natalie Portman and Gwenyth Paltrow’s characters aren’t present for a
party scene (or in the movie at all), Whedon is basically telling us Marvel wouldn’t
pay their salaries to get them there. This problem will only get worse.
10. Tomorrowland (Grade: C)
The most
gratuitous violence of the summer movie season was the degree that Tomorrowland tried to bludgeon its
message into our collective heads. Had the whole “Don’t lose your sense of
wonder” message been deployed subtly, Tomorrowland
had the capacity to be a very good movie. It absolutely nailed the wonder
part, the production design was gorgeous and imaginative, and the dialogue had
a Pixar-y snap to it. But good God, this movie needed to get off its soapbox.
It’ll be
interesting to see where Brad Bird (The Iron
Giant, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, and
Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol) goes from here, as this is really his
first career misstep. Part of me hopes he takes on a super-hero movie now that
this unmitigated financial failure might make it difficult to get funding for
his passion projects. That same sense of wonder that got him in trouble here
could just kill it in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But after that system
chewed up and spit out Joss Whedon and Edgar Wright earlier this year, I
wouldn’t feel right wishing it upon someone so talented. We’ll see what happens
next.
11. Pitch Perfect 2 (Grade: C-)
Pitch Perfect 2 is to Pitch
Perfect as Season 8 of How I Met Your
Mother is to Season 1. Instead of bothering with several years of
diminishing returns while the characters gradually become nothing more than
caricatures of themselves, this franchise just took us there overnight.
As with Avengers: Age of Ultron, this hits all
of the beats the fans wanted, but without any illusion of there being something
more. It’s Pitch Perfect fan fiction.
12. Minions (Grade: C-)
This is,
without a doubt, the worst missed opportunity of the summer. Minions should have been great, but
Universal and its creators apparently took the “people will come anyway”
approach, and mailed it in. The term “All Ages” is frequently a misnomer. Minions is not an All Ages movie, it’s a
kids movie. Perhaps we should have known that going in, but I really believed
we’d be getting a Simpsons/Pixar-like
movie that truly was All Ages, which adults and children could enjoy alike.
That did not happen. What we got was 90 minutes of three funny looking yellow
blobs speaking in funny gibberish. If there was a third joke, I missed it.
Also, I fell asleep. Also, I wasn’t tired.
13. Fantastic Four (Grade: D+)
Fantastic Four actually wasn’t as irredeemable as the critics
made it out to be. Yes, it was awful, but if you squinted, you could see the
vague blueprint of a decent movie. I still maintain the casting was good, and
the decision to focus more on the appetite for wonder was also a wise one. The
problem is that this specific version of wonder was languidly non-wondrous. I
wish Tomorrowland—a movie which
nailed the wonder but little else—could have somehow been combined with Fantastic Four. Then we might have had
something. Instead, we got the loud death cry of a possible franchise, which (I
guess) was interesting in its own right.
14. Aloha (Grade: D)
I’d love
to call this a train-wreck, but that implies you’d feel compelled to look. It
was more like a tricycle crash that made no sound whatsoever. There are
fleeting bits that remind you Cameron Crowe can write a great line, or even a
great moment of human connection. But those moments have to be grounded in plot
and character to have any resonance, and there’s no such thing here. Bradley
Cooper and Emma Stone are two of the most charismatic actors on the planet
right now. That even they can’t sell this material says all you need to know
about how bad it is.
15. Entourage (Grade: F--)
If Pitch Perfect 2 was like the 8th
season of How I Met Your Mother, then
Entourage was like the 18th
season, which thank Christ we never actually got. There’s just nothing good to
be said here.
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