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‘CAUGHT STEALING’ An Over-the-Plate Crime Saga from Aronofsky

Darren Aronofsky has had an interesting career thus far. After an auspicious beginning with his intriguing and minimalist debut Pi, the sadistic cult classic Requiem for a Dream, and the ambitious but ultimately unsuccessful sci-fi opus The Fountain, Aronofsky became a legitimate force with The Wrestler and Black Swan, both of which were serious awards contenders with huge audience appeal. Throughout his first decade working in film, he cemented himself as a performer’s dream director, guiding many of his stars to career-best work and a bundle of Oscars. Noah and mother! spelled out a new religious-themed ambitious streak, both divided audiences and failed to make much of a splash at the box office, despite their big swings. The Whale won Brendan Fraser a deserved Oscar but, performance championing aside, felt like a strange departure for the once-auteur with many calling it misery porn (which certainly wouldn’t be new territory). With Caught Stealing, a straightforward crime saga that plays like a Lower East Side Guy Ritchie knock-off, I am not entirely sure where the formal ambition and auteurist vision that once defined Aronofsky has gone but it seems we are yet again in unchartered territory. And not always in a good way.

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Exhaustingly Excessive Actioner ‘BULLET TRAIN’ is Pure Joyless Destruction 

Snakes On a Train

The scourge that is the 2022 summer movie season continues with the loud, ultra-violent, and ultimately entirely mindless Bullet Train. Best known for the John Wick franchise, Deadpool 2, and the Fast and Furious spin-off Hobbs and Shaw, writer-director David Leitch is a creator of quickly diminishing returns. Here, he delivers an algorithmic Guy Ritchie wanna-be crime whodunnit packed with movie stars and the popular “gun-fu” combat style the former stunt man helped pioneer but short on actual plot locomotion and charm. All set on a train! It’s not an entirely feckless ride, the game performances are just enough to power the film forward and keep the groans to a minimum, but it’s as disposable as it is bloated with wanton destruction. For a movie this unconcerned with logical collateral fallout, one that childishly gawks at violence, it sure does have a strange amount of references to Thomas the Tank Engine. Read More