Movie Review: Lucy

This film is all over the place. It’s trippy, violent, philosophical, illogical, and has a hint of dark comedy. Scarlett Johansson is what makes this film work at all. She’s gorgeous to look at, and has a quality that makes you invested in her character as soon as you see her. Unfortunately, we don’t know much about her, including her last name, before the plot thickens. While she does a great job early of bringing an emotional performance early on, her Lucy becomes increasingly more detached as she gains new abilities. Her motivations become too vague, and barely make sense at the end. The remainder of the cast is just there to fill a role or two before the story moves on, and you only barely get invested in anybody else in the film besides Johansson. (And that includes Morgan Freeman’s character, who would fail to draw you in if it was any other actor.) I had hoped there would be more action in the film, especially as Lucy becomes more powerful, but only a car chase has any real excitement. The plot has massive holes in it, and is only able to cover those up by watching Johansson’s character evolve. The opening of the film is odd, intercutting stock footage to parallel the story, and has a finale that seems to intentionally go over the audience’s heads. Even worse, it’s anticlimactic and makes the entire strange journey the film takes seem like a dead end.

** out of *****

Movie Review: Sex Tape

Generally amusing, but never generates many laughs. Cameron Diaz’s Annie and Jason Segel’s Jay have good chemistry together. They both come off as likable and relatable. Their interactions generate some moments of realistic humor, that while not laugh-out-loud funny, feel natural and true-to-life. Most of the other characters, particularly Rob Lowe’s Hank, come off as a bit too over-the-top. The plot has a well-done set-up, but features poor execution. It starts off on what should be a grand quest of sorts, sputters out and goes a different direction…before sputtering out again. The ending wraps things up fairly well, but like a few other aspects of the film, comes off like a mediocre version of “The Hangover.”

** out of *****