Showing posts with label Bel Powley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bel Powley. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2024

"MASTERS OF THE AIR" DELIVERS A LOAD OF HYPE...

πŸŽ₯🎞️Series Review🎞️πŸŽ₯ - MASTERS OF THE AIR [2024] - PG13 - AppleTV - Produced by Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, Gary Goetzman. Created by John Shiban, John Orloff. Based on Masters of the Air by Donald L. Miller. Starring Austin Butler, Callum Turner, Barry Keoghan, Nate Mann, Anthony Boyle, Bel Powley, Francis Lovehall, and Ncuti Gatwa. 9 episodes. Budget $250 Million.

Based on the historical legacy of the 100th Bomb Group during WWII, just a few months prior to D-Day, this series follows several air crews who partook in some dangerous, and many times deadly, missions to bomb sites against the Germans. At the beginning of the heavy bombing campaigns, thousands of young pilots and their crews were given missions that offered very little safety, air cover, and a plethora of personnel who were ill trained to prepare themselves for capture and eventual imprisonment by hostile forces that didn't have any honor in treating prisoners. By the end of the war, many pilots who were considered killed are found to be alive and instant heroes of the war.

THE GOOD - Incredible details in production bringing back the 1940's with stunning wardrobe, air planes, and locations. The air battle sequences were intense, again showing just how bad some of those brave young men had to deal with being attacked by enemy forces. The CGI was pristine and the movie production did an outstanding job in presenting flight operations that looked very real, capturing the essence of being in tight spaces, and the aftermath of returning home in a damaged plane, only to seeing the plane and the crews, patch up the aluminum aircraft and head out again on another dangerous bombing run. There were some epic bomber fly-by scenes that screamed for attention by the viewer of the magnificence of those huge military planes.

THE BAD - There is a LOT of bad acting and mumbling by the actors in this film. Butler does an okay job in his role of Major Gale "Buck" Cleven, but his overall delivery in the series is anything but that of a glorified extra. Most of the film is narrated by Boyle's character Major Crosby, but it isn't made quite clear until the latter episodes. The air battles were short and could have been extended. There's bad character development and the names of all of the other characters, and believe me there were many, aren't even memorable. The series seems to just touch the surface of a good story arc and then toss you in another direction without any explanation. With the exception of the narrator some events, there is no continuity of time and some of the main characters in the beginning of the series just disappear until mid way through the series; there's no flashback story, which would have been a big part of explaining what happened in the series.

POST MORTEM - Masters of the Air is an okay series, but honestly there's nothing to brag about and I feel that more effort was put into the production of "Band of Brothers." I understand that this series was based on a book, but the underlying truth is that a lot happened in-between episodes that surely should have been presented, at least in flash backs, to give a better understanding of what happened to many of the air crews after they were shot down. I think that more time could have been expended on clearing up all of the mumbling dialog and clearing up the sound from other scenes. I wouldn't spend too much time trying to watch all of the episodes in just one day, you might be disappointed in what you experience.

⭐️⭐️⭐️πŸ’«[3.5 of 5 Stars]

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

"A SMALL LIGHT" TUGS AT HEART WITH THIS DRAMATIC SERIES

πŸŽ₯🎞️Series Review🎞️πŸŽ₯A SMALL LIGHT [2023] - Disney+ - [PG] - Directed by Susanna Fogel, Tony Phelan, and Leslie Hope. Written by Tony Phelan, Joan Rater, William Harper, and Ben Esler. Stars Bel Powley, Liev Schreiber, Joe Cole and Amira Casar. Primarily produced by the National Geographic Channel, this series was filmed in Amsterdam, Prague, and in the Czech Republic. The series is based on the true story of Miep Gies, a Dutch woman who risked her life to create an underground railroad with her husband to help save the lives of a family of Jews for two years during WWII.

Otto Frank [Schreiber] is a Jewish-Dutch business man who hires Miep Gies [Powley] build his jam jelly company during the start of WWII. After the war starts to eat up and German forces move into Amsterdam, Otto is forced to hide his family and with the aide of Gies and her husband, hide in a hidden upstairs apartment for two years. Gies does her best to help other Jewish families also escape Holland for neutral countries. There are some dangerous moments that she has to face alone to outsmart the German SS, try to live a semi-normal life, while ensuring the safety of several Jewish families under her care.

THE GOOD - National Geographic did a great job bringing 1940's Holland back to life. The details concerning modern living for that time was impeccable and the costumes deserve a nomination somewhere down the line. I was very impressed with Bev Powley's performance an emotional baggage she carried throughout the series; she should win an award or two for best actress in a mini-series. Her pain was believable and her emotional state during some tense dramatic scenes carried naturally in just her eyes. But I was truly impressed with Liev Schreiber in his performance as mild-mannered Otto Frank. I am not  big fan of Schreiber, but her really took his role to part and his acting was spot on with that of an older man trying to defend his family in the only passive means allowed to him by his religion.

THE BAD - It felt like the entire series was tied down to only a handful of locations during it's production; but keeping things small worked as a mini-series. I understand that the series was based on a book, but I feel like the directors and writers should have took some liberties to show what the German SS was doing behind the scenes. Throughout the mini-series, it just felt like the German SS was running aimlessly throughout the town, finding Jews by accident. Presenting the German SS as the cold, murdering occupational force that they were, planning their next set of arrests and presenting that informants were being forced to provide information, would have made the series far more dramatic and possibly unbearable to watch.

POST MORTEM - This was a brilliant mini-series with many remarkable performances by new upcoming actors. There was a lot of emotional distress caught on camera and the actors [plus the production crew] should be rewarded for their hard work in bringing such a daring and courageous book [and life story] to life. 

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️[5 of 5 Stars]