A Merry Little Ex-Mas

STREAMING REVIEW:

Netflix;
Comedy;
Not rated;
Stars Alicia Silverstone, Oliver Hudson, Jameela Jamil, Melissa Joan Hart, Pierson Fode.

A good Christmas movie, whether it be the pure, childlike joy of Elf or the frantic, heartfelt family chaos of National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, should feel like a warm, spontaneous embrace. A Merry Little Ex-Mas, however, is not a charmingly bad holiday film but “a field guide for content created by committee,” where every element, from the script to the set design, fumbles like a cynical function rather than genuine entertainment.

It is worth noting that, amid the film’s structural shortcomings, the producing team did manage one clever beat: the title itself. While still cliché, A Merry Little Ex-Mas is a neat, instantly recognizable twist on the standard holiday phrase, perfectly packaging the film’s core theme of post-divorce conflict with a touch of seasonal wit.

However, the film quickly succumbs to a level of calculated contrivance that is arguably worse than its annual peers. While a standard saccharine Hallmark Christmas film commits to its earnest, simple fantasy, A Merry Little Ex-Mas attempts to be a savvy critique of the rom-com genre, only to fall flat on both counts. It introduces a modern dynamic — the pain of a midlife divorce — but then immediately degrades its own premise, leaning on painfully dated jokes, such as the repeated, unfunny reference to the separation as a “conscious uncoupling.” The film is so laden with predictable elements that, were there more clichés, this could easily be a textbook on cinematic clichés.

The entire production lacks authenticity, justifying the feeling that the production design itself is contrived. Much of the running time is spent around meticulously set dinner tables or in scenes of picturesque activities in the snow. These moments exist purely to maximize the film’s holiday aesthetic. Even the attempts at low-stakes humor fall flat, such as a bizarre sequence involving a drone being run over, which fails utterly as a relatable laugh for anyone. The charming, absurdly named small town of “Winterlight” feels less like a real place and more like an elaborate, synthetic movie set, reinforcing the impression that we are watching a film built solely to fill a slot on a holiday streaming slate.

Alicia Silverstone’s performance as Kate deserves a better vehicle. Kate’s story, sacrificing a career as an architect in Boston to become a “trad wife” in a small town for her workaholic doctor-husband, is the core of the film’s sentiment. This potentially interesting conflict, however, is undermined by reducing her character to a checklist of modern trends: She is into everything cliché about living healthily and being environmentally PC. The script and casting commit a cynical disservice by structuring the romance around her performing a “cutesy” repertoire of mannerisms. This dynamic, exacerbated by a jarringly younger love interest, feels utterly unearned and highlights the industry’s ongoing struggle to write authentic romantic tension for middle-aged women. Watching a star of Silverstone’s nostalgic status lend her talent to such aggressively disposable content borders on embarrassment, suggesting her handlers should have known better.

The ensemble cast only compounds the problem. The children exist to necessitate the family reunion, and the daughter’s complexity is reduced to her attending Oxford and having a “Harry Potter”-obsessed British boyfriend. Even more egregious are the ex-husband’s parents, the gay fathers, who are so contrived that they are challenging to watch, with one being Black solely to tick a diversity box. The appearance of Melissa Joan Hart as Kate’s best friend, April, adds further weight to this cynicism; given her role as a producer, her limited, undeveloped screen time feels like a blatant casting checkbox for a recognizable name rather than a necessary narrative addition. The core dramatic conflict with the ex-husband, Everett, and his younger, successful, model-like, multicultural girlfriend is agonizingly predictable, resolved with the emotional depth of a flowchart.

The entire endeavor attempts to satisfy everyone — the ’90s nostalgia crowd, the comfort viewers, and those seeking a slightly subversive relationship story — by ticking every item on a market research checklist. It is “a calculated piece of content” that never risks genuine emotion or a real laugh. Though Netflix does not release its numbers, my professional estimate is that the final working budget falls between $5 million and $7 million USD before Canadian tax credits. One can only wish that Netflix had discounted monthly subscriptions by lottery, or sent random subscribers some holiday funny money, rather than greenlighting this utterly humorless, instantly forgettable Christmas movie.

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DC League of Super-Pets

4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Warner;
Animated;
Box Office $93.6 million;
$34.98 DVD, $39.98 Blu-ray, $49.98 UHD BD;
Rated ‘PG’ for action, mile violence, language and rude humor.
Voices of Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Kate McKinnon, John Krasinski, Vanessa Bayer, Natasha Lyonne, Diego Luna, Marc Maron, Keanu Reeves, Thomas Middleditch, Ben Schwartz, Olivia Wilde, Jameela Jamil, Jemaine Clement, John Early, Daveed Diggs, Dascha Polanco, Yvette Nicole Brown, Dan Fogler, Busy Philipps, Keith David, Alfred Molina, Lena Headey.

In the annals of cinema history, DC League of Super-Pets might be the first superhero movie in which the day is saved by the main character’s bowel movement.

The animated movie follows the adventures of Krypto, Superman’s pet dog who traveled with young Kal-El to Earth when both were babies (which would make Krypto really old for a dog, but since he’s an alien dog with superpowers we don’t have to worry about that part). Voiced by Dwayne Johnson, Krypto now helps adult Superman fight crime in Metropolis, but starts to feel left out of Superman’s life due to his relationship with Lois Lane.

Superman (John Krasinski), Krypto and the rest of the Justice League stop Lex Luthor (Marc Maron) from obtaining some orange kryptonite (just go to Wikipedia to look up the history of the colored kryptonites, it’s a whole thing) that would give mortal earthlings superpowers. Unbeknownst to them, the magic rock is instead hauled in by Lulu (Kate McKinnon), an evil guinea pig from Luthor’s lab now living in an animal shelter. While she gains superpowers to aid in her plot for world domination, bringing the kryptonite into the shelter also inadvertently gives the other animals weird powers as well.

Meanwhile, Krypto ends up losing his powers due to eating a piece of cheese containing a piece of green kryptonite (the traditional kind). When Lulu captures Superman and the other members of the Justice League, Krypto is unable to rescue them, so he recruits the superpowered animals from the shelter.

Among them is Ace, a tough dog voiced by Kevin Hart, making this yet another Johnson/Hart collaboration. Since Ace in the comics is traditionally the name of Batman’s dog, it’s not hard to figure out how the plot is going to play out. It all turns, of course, on when Krypto can pass the kryptonite from his system and regain his powers to join the fight.

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DC League of Super-Pets is a vibrant animated adventure that continues Warner’s attempts to branch out its DC Comics characters into other media as it fumbles around with the creative direction of the DC live-action movie franchise (which should get a boost from the elevation of James Gunn and Peter Safran to lead that department). Focusing on the Justice League pets is certainly a novel approach to present the DC world from a different perspective and target the younger demographic, even if it at times seems like a superpowered version of The Secret Life of Pets (also featuring Hart).

Of course, echoing popular trends from similar genres is nothing new, and DC League of Super-Pets is certainly not the most bizarre example of it as far as recent DC adaptations go. That title would have to go to HBO Max’s “Batwheels,” an animated series that brings Batman’s vehicles to life as if they drove in from Disney’s “Cars” movies.

Krypto the Superdog, at the very least, is not a new concept in DC land, having been barking around comics since 1955. His name obviously derives from Superman’s home planet of Krypton, but recent events might conjure up different connotations for it (“Smallville” sidestepped the silliness of It by simply naming the character Shelby instead).

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DC League of Super-Pets comes with extras on Blu-ray and the retail digital version (in the 4K combo pack they are on the regular Blu-ray only).

There are roughly 20 minutes of deleted sequences, presented as storyboards with the original audio temps.

The making of the film is told several short featurettes. The 15-minute “Behind the Super Voices” gives the cast a chance to discuss the film, while the eight-minute “Super-Pets Animation 101” features a discussion from the filmmakers on how they developed the movie, and the seven-and-a-half-minute “The World of Super-Pets” delves into how the film taps in DC Comics history.

Along those lines, the four-minute “Find the Easter Eggs” shows off some of the background references to DC Comics lore.

Rounding out the fun is a seven-minute “How to Draw Krypto” tutorial with animation supervisor Dave Burgess.

Shout! Factory Sets Home Release Date for Complete ‘The Good Place’ Series

Shout! Factory has announced the May 19 home release of  The Good Place: The Complete Series.

The nine-disc Blu-ray Disc set will include all 53 episodes from the fantasy TV series about life in heaven, which ran on NBC from September 2016 to January 30, 2020.

From Michael Schur, executive producer of “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and “Parks and Recreation,” “The Good Place” stars Ted Danson in an Emmy Award-nominated performance, Kristen Bell, D’Arcy Carden, William Harper, Jameela Jamil and Manny Jacinto.

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Everyone wonders what happens after death, but when Eleanor (Bell) dies tragically, she finds out that the afterlife is amazing. Filled with frozen yogurt, soulmates, and wonderful people who have done admirable things in their lives, it is everything you could ever ask for. The only thing wrong is Eleanor herself, who isn’t supposed to be in “The Good Place.” She finds that due to a clerical error, she’d been given someone else’s reward and has to be good in order to make sure her secret is not exposed.

Bonus features include extended episodes, audio commentary on season one episodes “Everything is Fine/Flying” and “Mindy St. Claire/Michael’s Gambit” and season two’s “Dance Dance Resolution” with creator Schur, executive producer Drew Goddard, and co-stars Jameela Jamil and D’Arcy Carden. Other extras include the finale special hosted by Seth Meyers, the 2019 Comic-Con panel, gag reels, visual effects reels, and a table read for the season one episode “Mindy St. Claire.”

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