Kyle Chandler

First Man

Fist Hit: Compelling reenactment of an audaciously brave time in the 1960’s where we were challenged by President Kennedy to go to the moon.

When the first man walked on the moon I was packing my bags and heading to Vietnam from Alameda Naval Air Station in San Francisco Bay. Our walking on the moon was an amazing accomplishment. This film gives us a rendition of the challenges these men faced while we made mistake after mistake learning how to build rockets, space suits, and all the other paraphernalia required to send three men in a rocket ship all the way to the moon and return them safely.

I don’t have any point of reference to what Neil Armstrong (Ryan Gosling) was like in real life, but Gosling brought a stoic, determined, quite man to the screen. The back story to his quietness seemed to be made up of two things; it was his default way of being in the world and that he was heartbroken when his young daughter, Karen, died of a brain tumor. He didn’t speak about the loss, but it did not deter him from following orders and doing what he needed to do to be prepared for the event of the century. It was his wife Janet (Claire Foy) that kept his family life and home life grounded and together.

The film begins in 1961 when Neil flying an experimental rocket plane called the X-15 bounces off the atmosphere. He manages to land the plane safely on a dry desert lake bed, however the people he works for think he’s distracted by his daughter’s plight. What struck me about the scenes inside the X-15 cockpit was how basic and utilitarian all the switches and instruments were. The rattling in the cockpit was enough for me to lose faith in man's ability to create a safe rocket.

Armstrong applies to and gets accepted into the Gemini program based in Houston. This program is what NASA has put together to attempt to send someone to the moon as ordered by the President. The family consisting of Neil, Janet and their oldest boy Rick, pick up everything and move to Houston. Arriving in Houston, Claire gets pregnant and they have another boy named Mark.

During the development of these rockets some of the selected astronauts are killed in plane crashes and testing of the equipment. In fact, Neil wasn’t originally part of the fist Apollo crew, but when Ed White (Jason Clarke), Gus Grissom (Shea Whigham), and Roger Chaffee (Cory Michael Smith) are killed inside a capsule during a plug test, the Apollo program leader, Deke Slayton (Kyle Chandler), informs him that Armstrong will head up the first crew to land and walk on the moon. The first crew to go to the moon was Neil, Buzz Aldrin (Corey Stoll), and Jim Lovell (Pablo Schreiber).

There are numerous amazing scenes in this film; from Neil’s boys roughhousing and playing in the pool, to space capsules spinning uncontrollably in space, to the awe of standing on the moon.

Gosling was excellent in this role. His natural air of solitude worked perfectly for a man driven by adventure, duty, danger, and precise engineering. Foy was fantastic as the woman holding everybody and everything together in their lives. The scene when she instructs Neil to tell the boys that they may never see him again is powerful and poignantly clear. Clarke, Whigham, Smith, Chandler, Stoll, and Schreiber were excellent as part of the Gemini and Apollo teams. Josh Singer wrote an excellent screenplay. Damien Chazelle did a magnificent job of bringing the look, feel, and the technology of the 1960’s to life. The artistic shots against the front reflective face shields of the space helmets were hypnotizing.

Overall: This film is a wonderful interpretation of how we achieved an, almost, unthinkable goal.

Game Night

First Hit: This film was funny from the get go and I laughed out loud all the way through.

I haven’t played games in years, so I didn’t relate to Max and Annie’s (Jason Bateman and Rachel McAdams respectively) way of life.

Every week they hold game night with their friends Ryan (Billy Magnussen), Kevin (Lamorne Morris), and his wife Michelle (Kylie Bunbury). They meet up at Max and Annie's house to play all sorts of games.

Each week, Ryan would bring a different girl which was part of the joke with the group because they all must look the same and they aren’t very smart.

Annie and Max's neighbor Gary (Jesse Plemons) , who is a policeman with a very hardened personality. He and his wife participated in game nights but since they divorced, Max and Annie don’t invite him and find odd and funny excuses to not invite him to game night.

When Max’s brother Brooks (Kyle Chandler) shows up, Brooks invites the group over to his house for game night. However, he has a plan that they are going to solve a kidnapping that is being put on by a company Brooks’ knows.

Unbeknownst to the group, Brooks has been a crook most his life and is wanted by The Bulgarian (Michael C. Hall). The Bulgarian’s men stage a kidnapping just before the fake kidnapping but the game night group doesn’t know the difference.

This mix up causes some very funny scenes and mix-ups which make this film work.

There is enough farce and realism in this film to make it work and I found that the funniest parts and segments had Rachel McAdams in them.

Bateman was excellent as the competitive husband Max. His reverence for the games and love for his wife Annie was well balanced. McAdams was the star of this film in that her quips and way of expressing her determination and fearlessness in an amusing way was perfect. Magnussen was very good as the guy who was mostly clueless to his women preferences. Sharon Horgan as Sarah, Ryan’s girlfriend for the big game night, was perfect. She was smart and showed determination to see the events through. Plemons was perfect as the really strange policeman neighbor who was pining for his wife. Chandler was strong as the jealous brother who over compensated by living large. Morris was great, especially when he was quizzing his wife about the movie star his wife slept with. Bunbury was excellent as Morris’ wife. She showed her strength and love in a very believable way. Hall was perfect as The Bulgarian. He was appropriately ruthless. Mark Perez wrote an excellent funny script. John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein did a good job of directing this ensemble cast to elicit a funny film.

Overall:  This film was definitely worth the price of admission.

Manchester by the Sea

First Hit:  A powerful and emotionally impactful story about learning how to care again.

This film tells a deeply moving story is about how tragedy changes the complexion of relationships and finding a way to move forward.

The backdrop is a small north east coastal town in Massachusetts called "Manchester by the Sea" or Manchester for short. As the film opens we find Lee and Joe Chandler (Casey Affleck and Kyle Chandler respectively) fishing with young Patrick Chandler (Ben O’Brian) who is Joe’s son. The tone of this scene is wonderful as Patrick is playfully being asked who is a better all-around man, his uncle Lee or his dad. Patrick of course answers “Dad”, and it is the close playfulness of this scene that sets the table for this story.

About ten years have passed and Lee is working as a maintenance man in residential buildings. He is living alone and in solitude, has a noticeable chip on his shoulder, and seems disengaged from life. He gets a call and must return to Manchester because his brother Joe is dying.

He’s met at the hospital by lifelong friend George (C.J. Wilson) and discovers that Joe has already passed. Clearly sad, he and George speak about whom to contact and what needs to be done. Speaking in matter of fact tones, his pain and sadness is being buried within.

During the reading of the will, he’s informed that he has been appointed guardian for, the now 16-year-old, Patrick (Lucas Hedges – older Patrick). The audience feels his resistance. What is obvious is that the resistance is not because of Patrick but because he must move back to Manchester. But why?

It is here that the film begins to unfold letting the audience into the story as to why Lee is so unhappy and sad and why he left Manchester for the life of a loner.

Each scene is shot with exquisite taste while parceling out just a little bit more of the deeply rooted angst carried by Lee. We get scenes of his happier days with his buddies. We get a glimpse of his previous marriage to Randi (Michelle Williams), and his children. We get a scene expressing his deep self-hatred in police station. We see the depth of his caring for Patrick and friend George. We have an amazing scene with Randi and see the difficulty he has in forgiving himself.

Not only was the dialogue in these scenes amazing, the feel of the community and each scene was extremely well shot with impeccable backdrops and sets like the downstairs where the guys were playing ping-pong - guy fun. The coziness of Patrick’s home - filled with family intimacy. The neighborhoods and town center of Manchester, the docks and bay, and the bar scenes were wonderfully real, gritty and engaging.

Affleck was sublime. His portrayal of this character was incredible, and wonderfully delivered. He will get an award nomination for this performance. Williams in her brief and powerful scenes was extraordinarily amazing. The scene with Affleck on the street haunts me days after seeing the film. She will probably receive a supporting award nomination for this role. Hedges shows a nice range from angst, to joy, to smart-alecky, to kindly thoughtful in this role. Wilson is very good and delivers a wonderful performance as a lifelong friend of Lee. The scene of him on the boat with Patrick and Lee explaining why he cannot be Patrick's guardian is spot on perfect. Kenneth Lonergan wrote and directed this amazing film and although the actors were amazingly great, his vision and the delivery of this vision will earn him an award nomination. This was a very finely crafted film.

Overall:  The screenplay, direction, and acting in this deeply moving film was exquisite.

The Spectactular Now

First Hit:  I thoroughly enjoyed this film and thought it was well crafted.

I had a friend in high school who acted a lot like Sutter (played by Miles Teller). My friend had a quick smile, drank quite a bit to become the life of the party, and didn’t seem to want to plan something for his future. He became a drunk and died, for the most part, alone.

Sutter drinks all the time. He’s a very young functional alcoholic. He goes to school, he works and attempts to have relationships, but all his girlfriends end up seeing the light that there is no future for them with him, so they drop him and move on.

This film is about his beginning to see how he is screwing up his life. What helps him? Aimee (Shailene Woodley) is a girl he actually begins to care about. In helping her stand up to her mom, she helps him find out about his dad Tommy (Kyle Chandler) as he begins to reconcile the truth and his mom’s version of the truth of his father.

His mom Sara (Jennifer Jason Leigh), had kept Sutter sheltered from his father because, his father didn’t care, drank too much, and never cared about the future. When he glimpses his future through his father he begins to realize that his life of drinking, blackouts, and non-commitment won’t work.

Teller was fantastic as the guy who doesn’t care except to have a good time, only to find out his life may add up to little in the end. Woodley is sublime. Her subtle opening up as the plain unpopular girl have her first time boyfriend was extraordinary. Chandler was perfect as the good-time guy who didn’t and won’t make anything of his life. Leigh was great in her one major scene as her son begins to figure out that if he keeps doing what he’s doing, he’ll keep getting what he is getting. Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber wrote a very strong pointed screenplay. James Ponsoldt crisply and confidently directed this story and the actors.

Overall:  This was a very thoughtful film and experience.

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