I was in the mood to turn my brain off witch an action movie I hadn't seen before, so did just that.
I won't do a full review since I'm only 30 minutes in, but the movie is Ambulance, 2022; Jake Gyllenhaal, some black dude, and some hispanic chick.
It's competent enough so far, generally. It's not doing anything too fancy, but I appreciate that from an action movie. But the Modern Audiences™ nonsense is unavoidable. I wish I didn't notice this but, once you know, you know.
Every black person is competent and in a position of power. Every white person is some combination of psychopath, loser, or incompetent. There's only been one woman in focus so far, but she's - no kidding - "the best paramedic in the city," and extremely competent. Hobbled with some newbie white dweeb...who's probably going to die or otherwise get damseled, at a guess.
Gyllenhaal and Black Dude are brothers. Black Dude was adopted by, wait for it, Gyllenhaal's psychotic criminal father. Black Dude is a patriotic veteran who's trying to get his life together, while his white brother is a criminal who drags him into shit. Gyllenhaal's criminal crew are, I believe, all white...and some of the most ridiculously incompetent or insane people around. Hilariously, they're also a very diverse set of whites for some reason; you have I believe an Italian, Irishman, and some sandal-wearing hippy hacker or something. It's bizarre.
It's all so tiresome.
I watch only anime and old shows for the most part now. Play only indie games, might get a PS5 to play Stellar Blade. Been to the theater only to see Godzilla x Kong. Don't even really bother to keep up with sports any more. Don't even go out much anymore. Name of the game nowadays.
Same. And now I'm reminded why.
I hope there's a decent movie that grabs my attention at some point...I don't think I've been to a theater in almost a decade.
I noticed that my theater is part of a "Flashback Cinema" program that cycles an old classic (some not so old, but undeniably great) every week.
Personally, I hope one day it cycles Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990).
I think all theater chains do that now.