Thursday, July 9, 2026

Cheech & Chong's Last Movie (2024) * * *

 


Directed by:  David L. Bushell

The 2024 documentary Cheech & Chong's Last Movie is a documentary highlighting the comedy duo's start and their rise to movie stardom, while only scratching the surface of their breakup and eventual reunion.  The most frustrating aspect of Last Movie is how projects following Cheech Marin's solo Born in East LA and even Tommy Chong's federal prison stretch for selling bongs on the internet.  Yes, that really happened.  However, it was only covered with a post-credits news blurb.  What's here is worthwhile for any Cheech & Chong fan, but I would've loved to learn how they wound up in Martin Scorsese's After Hours and what led to their eventual reunion.  

We see they are clearly reunited and working together again.  They tell their stories as they are driving down the road together, commenting on the beginning of their stand-up career, their albums which produced top 40 hits and a Grammy, and then the movies beginning with Up in Smoke, which was a huge success and led to Cheech & Chong's Next Movie.  Their manager, legendary producer Lou Adler (who appears in the movie), directed Up in Smoke, but Tommy Chong took over the directorial reins starting with Next Movie, which strained the partnership over the course of several movies to the point that by the late 1980's, the team essentially disbanded.  We know the tensions that caused their demise, but how did they reunite?  

The stand-up and movie footage is classic Cheech & Chong, and it's fascinating to see the inspirations behind something as simple as "Dave", which was borne out of Chong breaking Cheech's balls on a hot day when Cheech knocked on the door to come in and Chong wouldn't let him.  The simplest situations lead to classic humor.  Their movies don't have plots, per se, but are stories of two guys who just want to hang out and smoke some weed while the universe conspires to prevent those two things from happening.  The duo went in a completely opposite direction with The Corsican Brothers, which oddly has more time devoted to it than After Hours...and that's a Martin Scorsese movie.  




Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Supergirl (2026) * 1/2

 


Directed by: Craig Gillespie

Starring:  Milly Alcock, David Corenswet, Eve Ridley, Matthias Schoenarts

Supergirl is a dreary, dull superhero movie with a lead actress who in the words of Fortune in Rudy: "You're five foot nothing, weigh one hundred and nothing".  Milly Alcock is listed in Google at 5'5" but that seems like a stretch.  I don't normally like to point out physical characteristics of an actor, but Alcock doesn't scream Supergirl when you see her.  She's just not physically impressive but that's not the main reason why Supergirl doesn't work.  

The bulk of Supergirl takes place on desolate planets you would see in Borderlands, and when a movie reminds you of Borderlands, it's clearly not going in the right direction.  Alcock's Supergirl is a hard-drinking, uninspired superhero still grieving from the loss of her parents and still simply lacking spirit about everything.  She lit out to a faraway planet with a red sun, which saps her of her superpowers and gives us another superhero movie (like last year's James Gunn Superman saga) in which the hero is bullied and beaten up.  

An adventure involving an orphan wanting to avenge her parents brings Supergirl reluctantly into the fray as she learns to care again.  We glimpse her parents' life as they escaped Krypton when it exploded and settled on another planet where she was born.  So, Superman wasn't the only survivor of the doomed planet.  Then, the planet where she grows up goes kaboom also and Supergirl is sent away to Earth to meet up with her cousin Clark Kent (Corenswet).  Very little screen time is spent on Earth and we instead are treated to dusty, deserted planets inhabited by creatures rejected from Star Wars.  Supergirl regains her empathy and the orphan is avenged without us being much moved. 

Alcock tries, but is adrift in a standard action movie which didn't need to even feature Supergirl.  I vaguely recall the 1985 version and while it was silly and campy, it was light and had a sense of fun, everything this version of Supergirl is not.