REVIEW: Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising

Photo: Universal Pictures

Photo: Universal Pictures

Chris Luckett

Neighbors was a rare comedy, at once eliciting uproarious belly laughs with slapstick and farce, while also making an unexpectedly nuanced and mature statement about the male ego and insecurities about aging.

Of course, where studio heads are concerned, the most important thing is that it was profitable, meaning a sequel was immediately greenlit. Moreover, laughs are easier to elicit than insight is to encourage, so the odds were good that the second Neighbors would spend all its energy repeating a bunch of the same jokes while not bothering with the intelligence that helped the original be more than just funny.

In fairness to Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising, it actually does have something to say, just like the original, and this time it even-handedly turns the focus around to look at the female ego and societal double-standards. In fairness against it, though, it relies way too much on trying to repeat every superficially successful thing about Neighbors. Continue reading

REVIEW: The Equalizer

Photo: Columbia Pictures

Photo: Columbia Pictures

Chris Luckett

Despite his charm and natural charisma, Denzel Washington has made a career out of playing guys that shouldn’t be very likeable. From Philadelphia and Training Day to American Gangster and Flight, Washington has used his talent to make you care about his characters, no matter how uncaring or flawed they may be. His character in the violent The Equalizer, though, remains a hard-to-like cipher, earning no real sympathy during his entire quest of altruistic vengeance.

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REVIEW: Carrie (2013)

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Chris Luckett

As blasphemous as it is to say, 1976’s Carrie is not a great movie. Most of the acting is either wooden or exaggerated, its symbolism is overtly obvious, and it takes a long time for much of significance to happen. The one thing it does fantastically, though — so well, in fact, that many call Carrie a masterpiece — is deliver an emotional payoff. Continue reading