Tag Archives: Christian Bale

Behold the worst movie of the year

The new movie “Amsterdam” has been shrouded in secrecy for months. We now know why — it’s unwatchable.

Multiple times during Wednesday night’s press screening of David O. Russell’s colossal clunker, I considered walking out. One major critic got up from his chair after 45 minutes, never to return. Meet the luckiest man in the world!

But, no, I stayed for the drama that was as befuddling emotionally as it was astoundingly tedious and impossible to follow. That’s bizarre, because the film, on paper, appears to be a recipe for greatness.


movie review

Zero stars. Running time: 134 minutes. Rated R (brief violence and bloody images). In theaters Oct. 7.

Its director and writer, Russell (“Silver Linings Playbook,” “The Fighter,” “American Hustle”), is a typically skilled storyteller. And he assembled a formidable roster of A-list stars: Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, John David Washington, Rami Malek, Robert De Niro, Chris Rock, Anya Taylor-Joy . . . Taylor Swift! The intriguing plot concerns a should-be fascinating, little-known piece of American history about a foiled coup to overthrow the government and install a fascist dictator. Neat.

“Amsterdam” has every advantage imaginable. Doesn’t matter. It’s the worst movie of the year so far, and I will bow down to whatever comes along and tops it.

Robert De Niro isn’t awful in “Amsterdam” — he’s merely present.
20th Century Studios
Christian Bale, Margot Robbie and John David Washington star in “Amsterdam,” the year’s worst movie.
Merie Weismiller Wallace; SMPSP

The floperoo begins in 1933 New York City, where Burt (Bale), a World War I vet, works as a doctor helping to repair soldiers injured in battle. His best pal from the 369th Infantry Regiment, Harold (Washington), is a lawyer, and both are summoned, film-noir style, by Liz (Swift, who will have a hard time shaking this one off) to give her dead politician father a graphic autopsy. (Zoe Saldana has a thankless role as a nurse fiddling with intestines.) Liz wants to get to the bottom of his mysterious death.

Then Burt and Harold are caught up in a different murder investigation, and we’re whisked back to 1918 France, where a weirdo nurse named Valerie (Margot Robbie), who collects bullets and shrapnel, is aiding the boys in their recovery. The trio become friends and jet off to Amsterdam; Valerie and Harold start canoodling, and everybody dances and makes vague paintings.

All the while, we catch onto Russell’s worrisome directorial identity crisis. In making a multidecade tale of battlefields, history and prosthetics, he’s channeling Robert Zemeckis. Badly. And in enlisting a Vanity Fair Oscars party of celebrities to play dry eccentrics in a washed-out color scheme, he’s trying to be Wes Anderson. Badly, again. Its annoying smugness is highly reminiscent of Adam McKay’s “The Big Short” and “Vice.”

Rami Malek (left) and Anya Taylor-Joy (center) make no impression as the wealthy Vozes.
Courtesy of 20th Century Studios
Taylor Swift makes an appearance in this stinker.
20th Century Studios

Everything Russell is so admired for is missing. Where is the indie heart of “Playbook”? The rawness of “The Fighter”? The sensuality and fun of “American Hustle”? Beats me. The only quality to be found in “Amsterdam” is ineptitude.

The story is no easier to track when we return to the 1930s and meet CIA and MI-5 agents (Michael Shannon and Mike Myers), who have front jobs as glass-eye salesmen and a passion for taxidermy birds, or after the wealthy Vozes arrive, played by Malek and Taylor-Joy, who are strange, powerful, sinister and boring.

De Niro is later introduced as a general who Burt wants to give a speech at his upcoming gala for veterans in Manhattan, while other forces desire him to help rise up against the US government. 

The plot wanders between 1918 and 1933.
Merie Weismiller Wallace, SMPSP

Rock plays another vet named Milton who occasionally makes lofty admonishments against racism in his usual stand-up cadence. Everybody on the screen tells jokes; nobody in the theater laughs at them. We’re too busy trying to figure out what the hell is going on.

Suffice it to say, the most powerful Swiffer in the world could not clean up this mess — nor can Swift, who is not an actress.

Many of the actors she appears with, on the other hand, are usually excellent but come off like amateurs here. Bale yuks it up, while Washington recedes. Malek and Taylor-Joy cannot resist their addiction to behaving like Martians, and Robbie gives us Harley Quinn-lite. De Niro isn’t awful — merely present.

Really, there’s nothing the cast could do with the hack-job script Russell has written and the shapeless tone he suddenly prefers. Everybody speaks detachedly, as though they’re reading off of cue cards. The blanket noncommittal attitude must have been an instruction. “Blander! Blander!” Russell screamed.

It’s been seven years since the director’s last movie, “Joy.” Here’s hoping that when the next one comes along, he rediscovers joy, and humor, and tension, and structure, and character development, and dialogue and . . .

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No One’s Happy About the Star-Studded David O. Russell Movie

Margot Robbie, Christian Bale, and John David Washington are heading to Amsterdam, but folks aren’t happy about it. No matter how star-studded the cast may be, these days, no one’s particularly excited to watch a David O. Russell film. Still, the maligned director—who first made headlines for sexual assault allegations eight years ago—has managed to convince the best of the best to work with him on his new flick, Amsterdam.

The main trio are the core of the film, a random group of three friends (imagine these three actors befriending one another in Hollywood today!) who journey to Amsterdam and witness a murder. As they become suspects themselves, they’re forced to band together and find the real murderer—even if he or she is hiding amongst the three of them.

“So, two soldiers and a nurse found ourselves in Amsterdam,” Bale’s gruff soldier narrates. “We formed a pact, and we swore to protect each other no matter what.”

The comedy is set in the 1930s, following the hijinks of our two soldiers, one nurse, but also a stacked supporting cast of pop culture’s biggest names. While frequent Russell collaborators like Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper have passed on appearing this time around, Christian Bale (who won an Oscar for his turn in Russell’s The Fighter) and Robert De Niro are returning for duty.

If Adam McKay thought he had Hollywood’s best of the best in Don’t Look Up, Amsterdam is one-upping him. Robbie, Bale, and Washington are the film’s leads, but Rami Malek, Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Rock, Zoe Saldaña, Mike Myers, Michael Shannon, Timothy Olyphant, Andrea Riseborough, Matthias Schoenaerts, Alessandro Nivola, Robert De Niro, and … Taylor Swift also make appearances.

Which begs the question: Why did all of these Hollywood darlings want to work with David O. Russell, of all people? After the trailer dropped today, social media users took no time to bring up the director’s shady past, which is tainted with one bombshell allegation of sexual harassment. There’s a reason Russell has been on a break for seven years.

“I want to freak out over the movie with Margot Robbie and Taylor Swift, but it’s more important to point out the heinous things that David O. Russell has been accused of,” wrote one, echoing a common sentiment. Others explicitly reminded followers of the accusations made against Russell several years ago.

Back in 2012, Russell’s 19-year-old niece Nicole Peloquin accused the director of fondling her breasts and placing his hands near her genitals. Adding to the abhorrence, Russell prodded his niece about her ongoing transition—after she had described the hormones she was using, the director slipped his hands under her shirt to feel her breasts.

The director didn’t dispute the incident, only adding that Peloquin was “acting very provocative towards him.” He did not face any charges.

And yet, the show must go on? Amsterdam will premiere in theaters on November 4.



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Thor Love and Thunder Trailer Taika Waititi, Hemsworth, Portman

Say hello to the Mighty Thor.
Gif: Marvel Studios

After Thor: Ragnarok, fans obviously expected Thor: Love and Thunder to be wild. Just off-the-walls bonkers nonsense from the man who does that better than anyone: writer-director Taika Waititi. Now, the first trailer is here, and it delivers on that promise and more. The Marvel Cinematic Universe is, indeed, bringing the thunder. And we love it.

Thor: Love and Thunder opens July 8 in theaters only. It brings back Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie, and Natalie Portman as Jane Foster, as well as all of the Guardians of the Galaxy, Oscar winners Christian Bale and Russell Crowe, and a whole lot more. Many of which you see right here in this incredible trailer.

When last we saw the God of Thunder, he’d left New Asgard in the capable hands of Valkyrie, and set off back into the cosmos with the Guardians of the Galaxy at the end of Avengers: Endgame. As you can see this movie picks up from there and goes into places we’d never expect. Well, except for that whole Jane Foster becoming the Mighty Thor thing—that was revealed waaaay back at San Diego Comic-Con 2019 when Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige laid out the plan for Phase 4. At that time, Thor: Love and Thunder was one of the last entries. Now it’s finally coming and it will, from what we can tell, certainly be setting things up for the future.

Oh, and isn’t it wild that Thor: Love and Thunder is the first fourth Marvel Studios character movie? The Avengers got four movies but Iron Man and Captain America only got three. Does that make Thor the current crown jewel of the Marvel Cinematic Universe? Or is it just that Marvel couldn’t say no to another Waititi movie when he basically has his choice of projects, including Star Wars? Probably a bit of both. In the meantime, check out a new poster for the movie too.

Image: Marvel Studios

Tell us what you think of the trailer below. Love and Thunder opens July 8.


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