Noted kids director Christina Hodnet, formerly with Story, has signed with bicoastal Original Film….Anthony Edwards has joined Euro RSCG London as communications planning director. He comes over from Kameleon, a branded content start-up which he co-founded. Edwards had spent the lion’s share of his career at MindShare, where he last served as head of strategy….Troika Design Group, Hollywood, has brought Stan Lim aboard as art director, He joins the strategic branding and design agency after six years at Imaginary Forces where as an art director he contributed to assorted notable jobs, including Pepsi’s “Refresh Everything” campaign….Editor Jason Kileen, formerly with PS 260, N.Y., has entered into a non-exclusive relationship with post/editing/graphics/animation boutique Cause & [Effect], New York….Sound designer/engineer Brian Ruud, formerly with SoundHound, has joined Mindsmack, a new post boutique in N.Y. headed by Todd Feuer, co-founder of post house Bionic….
Review: Director Bong Joon Ho’s “Mickey 17” Starring Robert Pattinson
So you think YOUR job is bad?
Sorry if we seem to be lacking empathy here. But however crummy you think your 9-5 routine is, it'll never be as bad as Robert Pattinson's in Bong Joon Ho's "Mickey 17" — nor will any job, on Earth or any planet, approach this level of misery.
Mickey, you see, is an "Expendable," and by this we don't mean he's a cast member in yet another sequel to Sylvester Stallone's tired band of mercenaries ("Expend17ables"?). No, even worse! He's literally expendable, in that his job description requires that he die, over and over, in the worst possible ways, only to be "reprinted" once again as the next Mickey.
And from here stems the good news, besides the excellent Pattinson, whom we hope got hazard pay, about Bong's hotly anticipated follow-up to "Parasite." There's creativity to spare, and much of it surrounds the ways he finds for his lead character to expire — again and again.
The bad news, besides, well, all the death, is that much of this film devolves into narrative chaos, bloat and excess. In so many ways, the always inventive Bong just doesn't know where to stop. It hardly seems a surprise that the sci-fi novel, by Edward Ashton, he's adapting here is called "Mickey7" — Bong decided to add 10 more Mickeys.
The first act, though, is crackling. We begin with Mickey lying alone at the bottom of a crevasse, having barely survived a fall. It is the year 2058, and he's part of a colonizing expedition from Earth to a far-off planet. He's surely about to die. In fact, the outcome is so expected that his friend Timo (Steven Yeun), staring down the crevasse, asks casually: "Haven't you died yet?"
How did Mickey get here? We flash back to Earth, where Mickey and Timo ran afoul of a villainous loan... Read More