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TxMike's rating
June Squibb is an interesting actress, today as I write this she is 95, she was 93 when this movie was shot. She started acting in theatrical productions in her 20s, even played a stripper when she was 30. She didn't start her movie career until she was 61. This movie, "Thelma", is built around her.
She is Thelma, living alone in the L. A. area, her family encourages her to always wear her emergency monitor, in case she falls and they will be notified. But she is stubborn, she doesn't always wear it and tells her grandson that is why she is careful and avoids falling.
One day she gets a call, presumably from her grandson who says he was in a car accident, he hit a pregnant lady, then puts "the lawyer" on the phone. He says it is very serious, she needs to go to the bank and take out $10,000 in cash and mail it to the address he provides.
This is a serious crime in real life, almost every day we hear in the news of a man or woman, usually elderly, losing thousands in sophisticated phone scams. The one depicted in this movie is rather amateurish but the caper makes for a funny story.
Richard Roundtree of "Shaft" fame all those years ago is a good addition as old friend Ben. He is in assisted living now (sadly in real life he passed away just last year) and has a three-wheeled two-person electric scooter that comes in handy to look up the P. O. box where the cash was sent.
The first six minutes of the movie are very slow, establishing the characters. The hunt caper on the scooter goes on a bit too long, but the last 15 to 20 minutes are very entertaining.
At home on DVD from our public library, with two short "extras" that aren't very interesting. My wife and I enjoyed the movie as light entertainment. June Squibb is still very energetic in her 90s.
She is Thelma, living alone in the L. A. area, her family encourages her to always wear her emergency monitor, in case she falls and they will be notified. But she is stubborn, she doesn't always wear it and tells her grandson that is why she is careful and avoids falling.
One day she gets a call, presumably from her grandson who says he was in a car accident, he hit a pregnant lady, then puts "the lawyer" on the phone. He says it is very serious, she needs to go to the bank and take out $10,000 in cash and mail it to the address he provides.
This is a serious crime in real life, almost every day we hear in the news of a man or woman, usually elderly, losing thousands in sophisticated phone scams. The one depicted in this movie is rather amateurish but the caper makes for a funny story.
Richard Roundtree of "Shaft" fame all those years ago is a good addition as old friend Ben. He is in assisted living now (sadly in real life he passed away just last year) and has a three-wheeled two-person electric scooter that comes in handy to look up the P. O. box where the cash was sent.
The first six minutes of the movie are very slow, establishing the characters. The hunt caper on the scooter goes on a bit too long, but the last 15 to 20 minutes are very entertaining.
At home on DVD from our public library, with two short "extras" that aren't very interesting. My wife and I enjoyed the movie as light entertainment. June Squibb is still very energetic in her 90s.
The first thing I want to say is, my wife and I enjoyed this movie more than we thought we would going into it, at home, streaming, after our weekly steak and wine dinner. It is dialog and situationally funny without going for much in the way of slapstick. A high point is that it doesn't have Will Ferrell in it. (That's a joke, readers. We also watch "Elf" every year.)
J. K. Simmons is Nick., aka Santa Claus. Everything is going as normal at the North Pole, preparing for the gift run. Then a nefarious band find the edge of the invisible dome over the village, cut a hole in it, and kidnap Nick.
Dwayne Johnson is Callum Drift, the head of security for Santa, and it is his job to find him and bring him bac so that the millions waiting on his will not be disappointed. Johnson is always great and he is here.
All and all an entertaining movie with a fine cast.
J. K. Simmons is Nick., aka Santa Claus. Everything is going as normal at the North Pole, preparing for the gift run. Then a nefarious band find the edge of the invisible dome over the village, cut a hole in it, and kidnap Nick.
Dwayne Johnson is Callum Drift, the head of security for Santa, and it is his job to find him and bring him bac so that the millions waiting on his will not be disappointed. Johnson is always great and he is here.
All and all an entertaining movie with a fine cast.
I came across this six-part mini-series on a set of DVDs that my public library just added. On the surface it has several good things going for it. First I love New Orleans, I have been there many times, my wife grew up there, I used to live in a community just a few miles west of New Orleans. It is filmed there, I recognize the locations.
Plus I am big fans of two of the actors, the rest I don't know. Giancarlo Esposito was wonderful as Gus Fring in "Breaking Bad" which owes a lot of its popularity to his role. Here he plays the lead character, a driver, named 'Gray' Parish. The other is Skeet Ulrich as Colin.
The premise is thin, Gray and his wife discuss their lack of finances and fear they will lose their New Orleans home. She is suggesting they look at a less expensive, 2000-sq-ft home in Covington, just across the lake north of New Orleans. So he decides to do a driving job for some South African gangsters. There is a short chase scene on foot and they encounter a parade, an all too common cliche' for New Orleans locations.
After one episode I don't know how much more I will continue with. While the locations and cinematography are bonuses, the script and action don't have much subtlety. The story doesn't flow very well and the script is plain vanilla. With so many competing choices I don't know if I will spend the rest of the time to watch it all.
I will update my review if I do.
Plus I am big fans of two of the actors, the rest I don't know. Giancarlo Esposito was wonderful as Gus Fring in "Breaking Bad" which owes a lot of its popularity to his role. Here he plays the lead character, a driver, named 'Gray' Parish. The other is Skeet Ulrich as Colin.
The premise is thin, Gray and his wife discuss their lack of finances and fear they will lose their New Orleans home. She is suggesting they look at a less expensive, 2000-sq-ft home in Covington, just across the lake north of New Orleans. So he decides to do a driving job for some South African gangsters. There is a short chase scene on foot and they encounter a parade, an all too common cliche' for New Orleans locations.
After one episode I don't know how much more I will continue with. While the locations and cinematography are bonuses, the script and action don't have much subtlety. The story doesn't flow very well and the script is plain vanilla. With so many competing choices I don't know if I will spend the rest of the time to watch it all.
I will update my review if I do.