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Arts Culture

In the trenches

Sprawling cinematic stories of drug abuse and crime sprees are nothing new. Martin Scorsese has honed this sub­genre of brittle masculinity and confessional narration throughout his long career, and many others have tried to ascend to his platform for storytelling. Cherry never quite climbs to that rank, but it is an empathetic look at one man’s seemingly inescapable demise.

Directors Anthony and Joe Russo chose to return to their hometown of Cleveland, Ohio, with Cherry, though they arguably never left. Their previous films, Avengers and Captain America, used the Ohio location as a stand-in for larger, more expensive cities on screen. Heck, even Fate of the Furious was filmed there, so it is very likely you have been watching Cleveland for years without realizing it. This time, the Russos forego dressing up the city, and instead take a long, hard look at what it was in the early 2000s. Cleveland is tough and can be unforgiving, but it is not unworthy of its own moment in the spotlight.

Tom Holland, with a wavering American accent, stars as Cherry, a young man who has fallen into a life of crime—when we first meet him, he is holding up a bank while explaining to us, via voiceover, how he goes about doing the job. No man starts out in life with a bandana around his face and a gun in his hand, and he takes us through the years that lead him to that moment.

If you haven’t already guessed, Cherry is a nickname, and the explanation of this moniker comes to us as we see him sink into his cozy criminality. Going back to his university days, he dabbles in drugs, and, in the midst of a most excellent ecstasy trip, Cherry meets Emily (Ciara Bravo).

Emily is a fellow student whose beauty is only matched by her fear of emotional vulnerability and commitment. During a wild overreaction to Cherry confessing his feelings for her, she says she’s moving away. His equally disproportionate response is to join the army and run from the woman who broke him, and the city that reminds him of her.

These different stages in Cherry’s life are divided by title cards, which let us know that Cherry is entering a new chapter. Not only do the Russos establish the mile markers along the way to call attention to the stages in the story, the film’s camera style, score, and even aspect ratio change from segment to segment. In college, the score is quaint, with almost cartoonish classical movements; basic training has more rock and roll; and Van Morrison takes the reins to steer us into Cherry’s life at war and away from home.

The film is brutally honest about the effects of war, and selectively dips into gore to prove its point. Considering how drastically this experience changes Cherry for the worse, it makes sense to show some of what will haunt him for the rest of his life.

Cherry never makes the argument that the main character’s descent into drug dependency or crime is inevitable, but it does make it feel inescapable. Each circumstance leads to the next, and before long, the next best choice for Cherry is to start robbing banks. He is not hopeless or flailing through his own hell, he is just trudging forward on an increasingly dark path. Cherry also stops short of ever feeling like a sermon or public service announcement. We see how awful war and chemical dependency is, but as with Cherry and Emily, those are lessons to be learned by experience and not instruction.

Accent aside, Holland brings this evolving character to life. Bravo adds some charm, but ultimately is given little to do besides stare adoringly, and it seems a disservice to try to measure her beyond that. The film does maintain a certain affection for Cherry’s love for Emily, connecting the dots to his swan dive into crime, but Cherry never excuses Cherry for what he has done.

Categories
Arts

Movie review: Marvel notches another win with Avengers: Infinity War

Cutting right to the chase, Avengers: Infinity War is pretty damn good and may even be unpredictable for the Easter egg-hunting, online theory crowd —but how the hell do you even begin to describe a movie like this? Installment to installment, the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies work more or less as individual stories with just enough narrative crossover for each title to stand on its own. It’s helpful to know what happens in Civil War before seeing Black Panther, but if not, you’ll still get on board pretty quickly. Spider-Man: Homecoming ties into the aftermath of the first Avengers team-up but its story is appropriately self-contained. You may want to look up Loki and Odin before seeing Thor: Ragnarok, but let’s face it, the third Thor movie eliminates any reason to rewatch the first two.

Avengers: Infinity War
PG-13, 156 minutes
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX, Violet Crown Cinema

So here we are with perhaps the most ambitious blockbuster in history featuring not only some of today’s most expensive talent but the weight of 10 years of story building. Going on the assumption that you know who Dr. Strange, the Guardians of the Galaxy, Vision and Scarlet Witch are, and how they got here, Infinity War still works as a standalone story of a true believer dedicated to the mission at all costs. The villain, Thanos (Josh Brolin), holds it all together, and even with all of the twists and turns, is the biggest revelation of all.

Explaining how we got here would be like watching the series finale of “Lost” while answering the questions of someone who’s never seen it before, but the simmering background plot of the entire MCU has been the location of the Infinity Stones. Possession of one means mastery of one of the fundamental truths of all existence: space, time, power, reality, mind and soul. Thanos, the Titan responsible for the alien attack on New York, has been pursuing them in order to achieve what he believes will be ultimate order in the universe. The disparate corners of the MCU, including those who have not met, team up to try to slow his efforts by either taking him on directly or battling his powerful minions.

MCU vets the Russo brothers, directors of Winter Soldier, Civil War and now Infinity War, show skill in combining established lore with new story elements and creating intrigue in situations that ought to have been predictable. Their understanding of the characters on a deep level means no one is wasted, even in a cast this large. And most refreshing of all, the action sequences, though frenetic, have clear stakes and make complete visual sense.

But no amount of technical wizardry could have brought this together as effectively as the character at its core, Thanos. Underneath all of the motion capture and special effects, Brolin brings a real physicality and tragedy to him and his mission. Watching him explain his methods to those who stand in his way is gripping, and his integrity is never cheapened by some revelation or crucial plot point that was simply hidden until an opportune moment. He is a monster, but he is not a hypocrite, which makes him that much more dangerous and compelling to watch. Viewers will feel different levels of attachment to the various characters, but Thanos is the reason to see this as quickly as possible.

There will come a day when it is no longer a given that a Marvel movie will be good, but the success of Infinity War means all bets are off as to when, why or how.


Playing this week

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
377 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056

A Quiet Place, I Feel Pretty, Super Troopers 2

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

A Quiet Place, Black Panther, Chappaquiddick, I Feel Pretty, Isle of Dogs, Labyrinth, Rampage, Ready Player One, Super Troopers 2, Traffik, Truth or Dare

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000

A Quiet Place, Bungo Stray Dogs: Dead Apple, The Death of Stalin, I Feel Pretty, Isle of Dogs, Lean on Pete