CARS (2006)

Directed By: John Lasseter and Joe Ranft 

Original Story By: John Lasseter, Joe Ranft and Jorgen Klubien 

Written By: John Lasseter, Joe Ranft, Jorgen Klubien, Dan Fogelman, Kiel Murray and Phil Lorin 

Cinematography: Jean-Claude Kalache 

Editor: Ken Schretzmann 

Cast: (Voices) Owen Wilson, Paul Newman, Bonnie Hunt, Larry The Cable Guy, Tony Shaloub, John Ratzenberger, Cheech Marin, Jenifer Lewis, George Carlin, Michael Keaton, Paul Dooley, Katherine Helmond, Edie McClurg, Bob Costas, Jeremy Piven

While traveling to California for the dispute of the final race of the Piston Cup against The King and Chick Hicks, the famous Lightning McQueen accidentally damages the road of the small town Radiator Springs and is sentenced to repair it. Lightning McQueen has to work hard and finds friendship and love in the simple locals, changing its values during his stay in the small town and becoming a true winner.


I can understand the appeal of this Pixar animated film. At its core, it’s pure Americana: a glossy, well-meaning fable about loyalty, humility, and using your fame and talent for something larger than yourself. Those are solid morals, clearly communicated, and for its intended audience they land without much friction.

That said, the film feels like a throwback, almost as if it were designed in the mold of a 1980s family movie. It’s the kind of project that might have felt more innovative if it had arrived during Pixar’s early years. By the time it actually came out, however, it already felt a bit behind the curve. While undeniably a huge hit, its priorities seem tilted more toward younger kids and families, and unsurprisingly for Disney toward merchandising and franchise potential rather than pushing storytelling or filmmaking forward.

There’s nothing here you haven’t seen before. The story is traditional to a fault, the themes are familiar, and the animation, while sleek and polished, feels more simplified and childlike than truly impressive. It lacks the sense of boundary-pushing that once defined Pixar as essential, must-see cinema. Watching it now, it’s still entertaining, but it also feels basic, pleasant in the moment and oddly disposable afterward, even considering it spawned multiple sequels.

I’ll admit I’m not the biggest animation fan, but this film does reinforce an important idea: any story can be told in countless ways, and it doesn’t always need human characters to resonate. Still, this particular execution feels engineered to appeal across as many audience quadrants as possible, which makes its success and its expansion into sequels, spin-offs, and entire sub-franchises feel inevitable. This was clearly the start of a cash cow, one that meant a great deal to many viewers.

For me, though, it ultimately plays like standard blockbuster entertainment: competently made, intermittently heartfelt, and easy to watch, but also hard to fully trust. It delivers warmth and familiarity, yet offers little that lingers once the credits roll.

One just expects more especially for a film that had six screenwriters. 

Grade: B- 

TAPAWINGO (2023)

Directed By: Dylan K. Narang 

Written By: Dylan K. Narang and Brad Demerea

Cinematography: Jarrod Russell

Editor: Rex M. Teese 

Cast: Jon Heder, Jay Pichardo, Kim Matula, Gina Gershon, Sawyer Williams, Amanda Bearse, John Ratzenberger, Billy Zane, Chad Dukes 

An oddball becomes the bodyguard for a misfit teenager and finds himself in the crosshairs of the town’s family of bullies.


This film plays like a sequel, continuation or feels like it takes place in the same world as the feature film NAOPLEON DYNAMITE. As well as THE SASQUATCH GANG (which felt like a live action Beavis & Butthead inspired film, only with a lot more innocence) which having John heater starring the film only helps fit into that framework

This film is slightly crazy, but still kind of innocent and clean with Ernest characters passing time in a kind of Arrested Development. It all feels

A bit dated and that they are slowly Catching up but still stuck.

Feels like it could’ve been from Greg Garcia, the creator and show-runner of shows like MY NAME IS EARL and RAISING HOPE. Where it feels a little episodic, but comes together in the end, but you watch these characters who seem kind of stuck in a kind of child like innocence, no matter how adults the behavior.

Though unlike those other films and characters. They might be odd and quirky but here at laws the characters feel a bit more lived in a the filmmakers. As well as the actors have a soft spot for them.

With a main character who is living a relatively normal life and then made into a misfit.

Rather than starting off that way. 

Where it feels like it’s not a fantasy, but it feels like a world that has been built and you’re wondering through and you can’t help but be charmed even with a kind of crime tale set in the middle you still can’t really tell what’s gonna happen next, but you can’t wait to see.

It’s a harmless film

Grade: B-

ONE NIGHT STAND (1997)

onenight

Written, Music & Directed By: Mike Figgis
Cinematography: Declan Quinn
Editor: John Smith 

Cast: Wesley Snipes, Robert Downey Jr., Natassja Kinski, Ming-Na Wen, Kyle Maclachlan, Amanda Donohoe, Marcus T. Paulk, Vincent Ward, John Calley, Glenn Plummer, Thomas Haden Church, John Ratzenberger, Annabelle Gurwitch, Julian Sands, Saffron Burrows, Ione Skye, Donovan Leitch, Xander Berkeley 


Los Angeles advertisement director Max visits his friend, artist Charlie, who was diagnosed with A.I.D.S. in New York City. There he meets Karen, they are attracted to each other and after they meet later that day at the concert, they have a passionate night. Then he returns home to Los Angeles to his family, and wife Mimi. A year later, Max returns to New York City again to visit Charlie, who is now dying, and there he meets Karen again, who is married to Charlie’s brother Vernon.

Continue reading “ONE NIGHT STAND (1997)”