Whiplash (2014)
3.30 out of 4stars
"A promising young drummer enrolls at a cut-throat music conservatory where his dreams of greatness are mentored by an instructor who will stop at nothing to realize a student's potential."
My favorite Chazelle film, it's a powerful intense journey on the dedication and mentoring of a possible jazz prodigy, yet oddly it works quite well also as a purely dark comedy given the over the top-ness, major "turning point" events and conversations had, and one liners spouted out throughout the movie. Altogether bringing back the never-ending discussion on how does one achieve greatness and what is the true cost of greatness, not only in sports/instrumental-excellence shown here? How much dedication, sacrifice, determination, and combined natural skill/talent does it truly take to create masterful symphonies, solos, championships, accolades/awards, or even wealth? Are mind games, emotional and mental distress, verbal abuse, and overly harsh discipline/standards a necessary or even reasonable style of mentoring to push a student to their max potential or does it do more harm than good or somewhere in-between? There is no cookie cutter answer and this is a gray area situation. Are military-esque training tactics and discipline necessary when not preparing for a life or death situation? Easy example on the topic, Jordan's teammates had a love/hate relationship with him because of this style of leadership. That said, Jordan has 6 rings, 6 finals MVPs, and 5 regular season MVPs, alongside being considered the greatest player and greatest scorer in NBA history.
Poltergeist (1982)
3.10 out of 4stars
"A family's home is haunted by a host of demonic ghosts that abduct their daughter."
It's Paranormal Activity on Incredible Hulk level steroids, yet came out 25years prior to it. A really fun and excellently filmed must see haunted house story. I really don't want to ruin anything for those who haven't seen it, but the script is tight and event filled, the performances are solid, the paranormal investigators/experts are great (Zelda Rubinstein's perfect), there are excellent accoutrement touches all over the place, and the solution/all encompassing ending ties everything up in an overly gratifying enjoyable way.
A Ghost Story (2017)
2.60 out of 4stars
"In this singular exploration of legacy, love, loss, and the enormity of existence, a recently deceased, white-sheeted ghost returns to his suburban home to try to reconnect with his bereft wife."
A very slow and deliberate artsy style film by David Lowery, this film is a perfect example why some consider him a lesser Terrence Malick. I have a lot of problems with the filmmaking, including the important inaudible song that plays a few times throughout the movie, a few long takes that don't deserve the screentime/audience overly contemplating what they are seeing/just saw/what the character(s) are thinking/experiencing, and altogether an overly pessimistic tale of death, legacy, existence, other musings on the subject that for the most part becomes force fed into the viewers mind through a 5minute monologue at a point during the film. Honestly, this movie doesn't connect to me much at all, so that could be a large part of my issue too. I have no fixation on my direct or indirect legacy on earth, I am not an overly attaching person, I am optimistic yet realistic on life/afterlife but do not meditate on true sadness or darkness, and possibly my favorite point relating to this subject....why do people fixate and overly analyze something that is way beyond their control/no one will ever find a direct answer to/something that should have minimal impact on their lives due to it's ambiguity, living in the present and making the most out of your life in the best way you possibly can moment to moment and day to day is always the correct answer to any life related question. I'll end with this movie is definitely overrated and imperfect imo, but it's above average intelligence depressing subject fodder.