Movies For Staying In And Staying Safe

You’re stuck inside for long periods of time. It’s stressful and frightening. You worry about money, jobs, your life. May I suggest going out, wearing a homemade mask, and going for a walk? I’m often surprised at how much of a tonic taking a nice walk can be. Maintain intervals between others, at least six or ten feet, take allergy medicine if need be, but please do go and stretch your legs in the spring sunshine. It’s great for your nerves, it chases away depression, and can even end constipation: when you return home and cuss for lack of toilet paper, and find some Christmas paper napkins with holly from that horrible party your boss threw where no alcohol was allowed and someone insisted on playing that hippopotamus song, which pissed you off because you know hippopotamuses are really killers even if they don’t eat meat and therefore kill people for sport, relax. Time to settle in and read a book or watch a movie.

To wash away all reminders of hippopotami, here are some ideas for your consideration. Let’s see what we can get into, shall we?

Films

What are you in the mood for?

Fantasy

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (2017, Columbia-Sony)

Dwayne Johnson, Jack Black, Karen Gillan, Nick Jonas

Faced with a board game which is old school, a teen ignores it. Then he hears drums. You know that’s not good. The board game has been changed and has become more modern: a videogame cartridge. He decides to give it a go.

Years pass. Four students serving detention are charged with cleaning the school basement when they hear drums…

It’s okay to love Jack Black again. Not since School of Rock has he been unleashed to prove his acting chops like this. “King Kong” was a truly great remake, and I honestly loved it. But he was good in it; this time out, he’s great. Dwayne Johnson has a love of movies like this, or at least, he’s good with them. And guess what? The game cannot be played with the console and a controller. Nope. Like the title says, it transfers the players into a jungle. And guess what again: one of them is promptly eaten by a hippopotamus! No, don’t throw away your Christmas napkins! It’s okay. Put the napkins down. Cause what if you can’t find any TP this week?

Like videogames do, each character has more than one life. But they soon see dreadful evidence that if they run out of lives during gameplay, they’ll die in real life.

Jumanji:The Next Level (2019, Columbia-Sony)

The original cast returns, along with Danny DeVito and Danny Glover. Three years after the first game they barely beat, the four friends are reuniting for a casual dinner. One doesn’t show. You guessed it. He tried to repair the game that was smashed at the end of the previous game, and now he’s gone. Glover and DeVito are superb, adding a richness and ultimately a bittersweet element to the story. This is great fun with total silliness, suspense and and great character use. Must-see sequel. I’m not sure if I’ve ever used those words in the same sentence. Well I am now. And that brings us to…

Jumanji (1995 TriStar, Sony Pictures)

The original with Robin Williams, Kirsten Dunst, Bonnie Hunt, Bradley Pierce, Bebe Neuwirth (whose character actually turns up in Jumanji: The Next Level.

You need to see this one first. Because the Dwayne Johnson and Jack Black films are not remakes. They’re sequels. The first film with Williams gives a fleeting, scary history of the board game. Magnificent film series. Great fun. All three get perfect scores from me.

The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (2010, Walt Disney)

Nicholas Cage, Alfred Molina, Monica Bellucci, Jay Baruchel, Teresa Palmer, Alice Krige, narration: Ian McShane

All the way back to Merlin the great sorcerer, Balthazar (Cage) and Veronica (Bellucci) fell in love. Jealous and bitter, Horvath (Molina) turns against them and Merlin. Balthazar learns that the most evil sorceress, Morgana (Krige) can only be destroyed by the Prime Merlinian. It just so happens that after searching for a thousand years, he finds Dave (Baruchel). Wicked good fun and an especially evil and delicious turn by Molina (he played Doctor Octopus in Spider-Man 2 with a show-stealing performance). One of Cage’s best ever, Monica Bellucci is gorgeous and not at all a bad sorceress, and Jay Baruchel as the coming of age apprentice, scared, nervous and sweetly in love with Becky (Palmer) whose beauty would intimidate any guy like Dave.

Contains violence and adult themes but okay for TV-14 audiences. Worth it.

Classic Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror

Five Million Years To Earth (1968, 20th Century Fox) A forgotten black-and-white masterpiece of sci-fi and horror, both delivered equally well, this is a British film which deserves a spot in your DVD rack. It’s deep, and it covers a subject not often properly handled even in the dramatic genre. I’m not going to tell you. You’ll have to get there yourself.

When digging out a new section for the London underground, skeletons are found. They’re determined to be hominids but five million years old, which seems to fly in the face of science, so scientists are consulted. Then part of a large metal object is revealed in the dig, and it’s guessed by military experts to be part of an old Nazi German V-weapon.

Except that’s a very wrong assumption. And of course, that means trouble.

This film is a classic. You may find a copy under the UK title, “Quartermass and the Pit”, but either way, it’s relatively rare. If you love classic Science Fiction and Horror, this one’s definitely worthy of your efforts to see. I haven’t seen it since 1978, and I still remember the scenes that had me curling up in a ball.

Invaders From Mars (1953, 20th Century Fox)

One of the best sci-fi horror flicks of the fifties, with a relentless buildup and an ending that will have you holding your breath. For classic science fiction, it’s hard to top this one.

20 Million Miles To Earth (1957, Columbia Pictures)

Astronauts return to Earth with reptilian eggs. One hatches and everyone in the universe wishes it hadn’t. With monster effects by Ray Harryhausen, originally filmed in black-and-white but colorized later, either version is the same basic film, and it’s delicious stop-action goodness stacked with horror. A worthy film for casual viewers or hardcore sci-fi fans.

Journey To The Center Of The Earth (1959, 20th Century Fox)

James Mason, Pat Boone, Arlene Dahl

Mason plays a geologist who obviously goes on a journey to the Earth’s center. This is a wonderful film, with plenty of action and suspense. You’ll love it if you’ve never seen it, but if you have, you know it’s a great one to watch again after all these years.

Comedy, Horror And Everything In-between

Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948, Universal)

Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Lon Chaney Jr, Bela Lugosi, Glenn Strange

This one’s both scary and a hoot. It was the first crossover between the comedians and Universal’s classic creature features. Someone decided that comedy and horror went well together, and they were right. And the Frankenstein monster, the Wolf-Man and Count Dracula in the same flick? You don’t get any better than that. Although Boris Karloff had long since ended his stint as the Monster, no worries there. Glenn Strange does the job with a creepy near-silent turn and it makes the Monster seem much more frightening. Perfect score, no doubt Abbott it.

An American Werewolf In London (1981, Universal)

David Naughton, Griffin Dunne, Jenny Agutter.

David (Naughton) and Jack (Dunne) are Americans backpacking through the English countryside. I can’t imagine why two American lads would do such a thing, but back then, it was a thing. Stumbling through a rainy night, they leave the road and wind up on the moors, which hostile locals had warned them away from. They hear an awful noise as the clouds break, allowing the full moon to become visible. That’s when the attack comes. With ground breaking effects even by today’s standards, cheeky British humor and a nightmare sequence worthy of an award by itself, this one’s a classic and even boasts a good soundtrack.

The Mummy (1999, Universal)

Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, Arnold Vasloo as Imhotep, the mummy accidentally resurrected by Evelyn.

Hamunaptra, the ancient Egyptian city of the dead. It’s here that Rick O’Connell, a mercenary for the French Foreign Legion, is introduced. During battle he is captured and sentenced to death by hanging. Evelyn, in search of Hamunaptra, comes to see him in prison and tries to buy his freedom.

Eventually he’s released and guides Evelyn and her brother to the city of the dead, where she accidentally raises the evil priest Imhotep, who had been mummified alive for his crimes. Imhotep begins to regenerate using the bodies of mortals which he consumes. He sets about trying to use Evelyn’s body to resurrect Anck-su-namun who was Seti I’s mistress but Imhotep’s secret lover.

Lots of chills and humor, a classic which was included in Universal’s attempt to reimagine the creature features of yore.

The Mummy Returns (2001, Universal)

Main cast returns, with Vosloo turning in an awesome job as Imhotep and Patricia Velásquez sexy and evil as Anck-su-namun reincarnated. The plot is that in the Year of the Scorpion, Imhotep’s resurrection is sought by those who know he is the only one who can defeat the Scorpion King, who is a slave to Anubis. While questing to put Anck-su-namun’s soul into her reincarnated body, Imhotep also wants to defeat the Scorpion King and command the Army of Anubis for himself. Plenty of laughs, a few chills and a woeful CGI character that in itself is unintentionally funny.

Arachnophobia (1990, Buena Vista)

Jeff Daniels, John Goodman, Mark L. Taylor as Manley, with Julian Sands as Atherton.

Now this is a good flick. If you have arachnophobia for real, I’ll warn you that this is not for you. It actually seemed to help me. The film is about invading spiders, hybrids between a common house spider and a new Venezuelan species discovered by Atherton. John Goodman is the comic relief as an exterminator, and is outrageous. Classic horror-comedy.

Something For The Kids?

The New Adventures Of Pippi Longstocking (1988, Columbia)

Tami Erin, John Schuck, Eileen Brennan, Dick Van Patten

My kids loved this one. Even now I can hear that infectious song, “Pippi Longstocking is Coming into Your Town!”

I’m not giving you any plot. It’s too delightful and you should go headlong into a wonderful childhood adventure film that will remind you of long-ago adventures when you had all summer to imagine and chase everything. Go on; trust me.

The Muppet Movie (1979, Henson/ITC

This was a hit during the great movie summer of ’79, and had loads of competition. What a summer that was! Starring the whole Muppet cast and too many cameos to list, this is the one that started it all. Brilliant and funny, rarely shown, well worth the price of a disc.

Drama, Romance and Action

North Dallas Forty (1979, Paramount)

Nick Nolte, Dayle Haddon, Mac Davis, John Matuszak

Nolte is a pro football player for the team the North Dallas Bulls. The film satisfies on several levels, mostly the hilarious relationship between quarterback Seth (Davis) and Phil (Nolte). The training room scenes, Phil’s very real need for painkillers and his habit of urinating in the whirlpool have him on the trainer’s shit list. Seth calls him “poot”, at that time a southern word for “fart”.

Phil begins an unlikely relationship with Charlotte (Haddon, whom I’m desperately in love with to this day) and despite arguments and her lack of understanding of such a brutal sport, they manage to come across as two people who are hurt and just plain need each other. The last game gets messy and extremely dirty with cheap shots, and in the 60s and early 70s this was not rare. No perfect score here, but worthy and with a decent but dated soundtrack.

Falling Down (1993, Warner)

Michael Douglas, Robert Duvall, Barbara Hershey, Tuesday Weld

Douglas shines as a man pushed too far. He goes on a hike across the city to attend the birthday party of his daughter despite a restraining order against him by his ex. Tour de force by Douglas, one of his very finest roles.

Binge

The Bourne Collection

The Bourne Identity (2002, Universal)

Matt Damon, Franka Potente, Julia Stiles, Brian Cox

A fishing vessel pulls a man (Damon) in a wetsuit, unconscious, from the sea. He’s been shot, and when a crew member digs out the slugs, he finds a laser that flashes a cryptic number on the wall. The man regains consciousness, but doesn’t remember who he is. He quests to find his identity, but only has flashes of memories which cause physical pain. He pays a woman (Potente) to drive him across Europe, but it seems that someone keeps homing in on him and trying to kill him. Unlikely fight scenes, car chases and firefights don’t undermine Jason Bourne’s resolve to find his identity.

The Bourne Supremacy (2004, Universal)

Matt Damon, Franka Potente, Julia Stiles, Karl Urban, Brian Cox

As the series gets darker, Bourne finds that the CIA had a black ops program called “Treadstone” and we’re introduced to Pamela Landy (Joan Allen), Deputy Director of CIA. The chase goes from Europe to Russia and Bourne finally remembers his first mission.

The Bourne Ultimatum (2007, Universal)

Matt Damon, Joan Allen, Scott Carpenter, Julia Stiles, Albert Finney

Pamela Landy is seriously in doubt as to just how much of a threat Jason is, believing that if left alone, he would vanish. But he calls her and she reveals his real name, and his memory begins to cascade back to him. Finney is outstanding as the man behind the monster, the head of the former Treadstone operation.

Jason Bourne (2016, Universal)

Matt Damon, Julia Stiles, Tommy Lee Jones

After 2012’s The Bourne Legacy, worthless because Damon isn’t featured as Jason Bourne, Damon returned in this picture, far overdue. In Legacy we find out what happened to Pam Landy, and get flashbacks of Finney’s character. Otherwise I see no reason to watch it. Julia Stiles as Nikki Parsons tracks down Bourne after some hardcore hacking. She informs him of an event during Treadstone that brings Bourne out of hiding and sets him on a mission to get the man who ordered it. A satisfying end, if that’s what it is, to the Bourne saga.

Best Movies To Help You Stay Home

Based on No particular criteria, here’s a list of films that you may enjoy during your long days and nights at home. Some can be seen free of charge on cable, some for rent.

What are you in the mood for?

Action

Faster (2010, CBS, Castle Rock) Dwayne Johnson and Billy Bob Thornton. Johnson is released from prison after the warden (Tom Berenger) goes through an unnecessary list of injuries he endured in a decade of hard time. Johnson plays Driver, a wheelman in a bank robbery in which his brother, Gary participated. Another crew finds out about their score and wants it. Gary is killed. Once outside the prison walls, Driver wastes no time starting his campaign for revenge.

This is a stellar small budget film. It explores revenge and forgiveness with a relentless score and a lot of suspense. Score: 8 of 10.

Fantasy, Family

Christopher Robin (2018, Walt Disney) Ewan McGregor is a grown Christopher Robin, whose job and nasty boss have him in a tight place. He must neglect his family and work too hard. He’s long forgotten the Hundred Acre Wood, and he doesn’t remember the day he left his best friends to go to boarding school. Until one day, someone from that long ago, an old friend comes looking for him. With Hayley Atwell and Brad Garrett. Definitely watch this one with your kids. You’ll surprise yourself. And it’s better than I thought it would be.

Drama

Silver Linings Playbook (2012, Weinstein) Two characters, Pat Solitano Jr. (Bradley Cooper) and Tiffany Maxwell (Jennifer Lawrence) are reintroduced after Pat gets out of a Baltimore hospital and moves in with his parents. Pat and Tiffany are strongly attracted to each other, but that causes trouble. Because Pat’s just not right. He caught his wife cheating on him and nearly beat the other man to death, and a court ordered him to inpatient treatment for Bipolar Disorder. His wife has moved and has a restraining order against him, but he’s determined to get her back by reading books and losing weight. But he agrees to help Tiffany in a dance competition in exchange for her giving a letter from Pat to his wife, whom Tiffany’s sister is friends with. Meanwhile, Pat’s father (Robert De Niro) is an Eagles fan whose superstitions don’t go well with his bookmaking, and he’s convinced Tiffany is hexing the team. This film is a masterpiece from the opening scene to the credits and the soundtrack. Every character is perfect, including a nice turn by Julia Stiles as Tiffany’s sister and Chris Tucker as Danny, a friend of Pat’s from the hospital. Not a single line is off. The script is excellent and everyone pulls you into their character’s world with ease. It’s my number one favorite film, and I’m extremely critical. It’s funny, sad, handles the theme of mental illness perfectly for the characters. And really. Who doesn’t love Jennifer Lawrence?

War

Platoon (1986, Orion Pictures

Cast: Charlie Sheen, Tom Berenger, Willem Dafoe, Dale Dye, Johnny Depp, John C. McGinley, Kevin Dillon, Keith David, Forest Whitaker.

The definitive film about (and against) the Vietnam War by Oliver Stone, based on his experiences as a veteran. The grittiness, the incomparable cinematography and sound put you there with characters that aren’t just convincing but will hold you in their grip until the credits roll. Stone wanted to show something more immediate, terrifying and sickening than John Wayne’s Green Berets, a film I’ve found laughable. But Platoon delivers on every level. If you’ve never seen it, you should. You’ll cry. You’ll be exhausted when it’s over. It’s intense, so be careful.

Missing Baseball?

It Happens Every Spring (1949, 20th Century Fox)

The incredible, inimitable Ray Milland is college professor Vernon Simpson, struggling to find a formula that will defend wood against insects. And what he comes up with is hilarious. A true blue classic. Worth it.

Comedy

The ‘Burbs (1989, Universal)

Tom Hanks, Carrie Fisher, Bruce Dern, Corey Feldman, Rick Docummun, Gale Gordon, Henry Gibson, Courtney Gains, Brother Theodore, Wendy Schaal, Robert Picardo.

In a neighborhood cul-de-sac, something’s going on with the new neighbors, and three friends don’t like it at all. They try to get to the bottom of it and demonstrate life in suburban America so realistically that it’s one of the biggest cult comedies of all time. Beautiful film start to finish.

It’s Time For Superheroes

Marvel Cinematic Universe And Fox Crossovers

No need to go into detail. I have my favorites, others have theirs. But with over 20 films, binge away and remember that microwave popcorn is very bad for you. Try a hot air popper.

In order of Marvel Chronology, not release date:

Captain America: The First Avenger (finally, they got Cap right)

Captain Marvel

Iron Man

The Incredible Hulk (maligned but better than you think. And loaded with Easter eggs)

Iron Man 2

Thor (ok)

The Avengers (iconic classic)

Iron Man 3

Thor: The Dark World (crap)

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (fan favorite)

Avengers: Age Of Ultron (crap but necessary to see Scarlet Witch and Vision’s origin)

Ant-Man (brilliant and fun)

Captain America: Civil War (essential and pretty damn good)

Spder-Man: Homecoming

Doctor Strange (one of the most underrated)

Black Panther (must see spectacle)

Deadpool (Funny, extreme gore and a classic. What’s not to love?)

Thor: Ragnarok (essential and the only good Thor movie)

Guardians of the Galaxy volume one

Guardians of the Galaxy volume two

(The Guardians films are the best of the whole series)

Avengers: Infinity War

Ant-Man and the Wasp

Avengers: Endgame (a three hour, satisfying payoff for loyal fans)

Spider-Man Far From Home (for Mysterio fans only)

Deadpool 2

How About Some Music?

A Hard Days Night (1964, United Artists)

The Beatles in glorious black-and-white, during a few days of a fictional tour. Great fun and one of the best soundtracks ever made. And it’s full of wonderful dry British humor; worthy of any collection.

All That Jazz (1979, 20th Century Fox)

Roy Scheider, Jessica Lange, Leland Palmer in a tripping Broadway story, and you have to trust me on this one.

American Graffiti (1973, Universal)

Ron Howard, Harrison Ford, Candy Clark, Cindy Williams, Charlie Martin-Smith, Wolfman Jack, Richard Dreyfuss, Mackenzie Phillips and Paul Le Mat as John Milner in one of the greatest musical-comedies of all time. You’ll be hooked a few seconds in when Bill Haley and the Comets come on the radio with Mel’s Diner in the backdrop. It’s about teen love, cruising and music in 1962 California, a true icon of American film and culture from a period so profoundly romanticized, but never better than right here. But on that note…

Grease (1978, Paramount)

John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, Stockard Channing, Jeff Conaway (no, that is not Kevin Bacon. Stop it).

It was on stage before American Graffiti was released. Different but similar. High school seniors, love and racing, but unique from musicals because of its ridiculous casting, low brow comedy and a weird fan theory regarding the final scene that won’t go away. Don’t overthink it. Enjoy it for what it is.

That’s just a start. More to come. It’s important to stay home and be safe. Movies can be great therapy, so take advantage of them and enjoy. And don’t forget: microwave popcorn is bad for you. Get an air popper.