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A Blog About Watching Movies (AKA a Blog in Search of a Better Title)

A Private Life (2025)

Mac Boyle February 10, 2026

Director: Rebecca Ziotowski

Cast: Jodie Foster, Daniel Auteuil, Virginie Efira, Mathieu Amalric

Have I Seen it Before: Never.

Did I Like It: The movie could have been about almost anything, with the promises that poster is making, and I would have been on board. Foster is incapable of picking a worthless film, and even less constitutionally able to give a bad performance in a movie that maybe doesn’t qutie rank among her best.

You all see where I’m going with this one?

There’s an inconsistency at play here, and it can be just as singularly tied to that poster. We’re meant to believe that this is going to be an exceeding french romp—a cosy mystery*, even—with Jodie Foster running around outsmarting clever miscrients, using only card catalogs as her weapon.

I’m happy to report that Jodie Foster is indeed, in the film, and she is indeed quite good in it. Also, there is a scene that features a card catalog, and there is even an undercurrent throughout the film where Foster’s character, Lillian Steiner, is resolutely just behind the times when it comes to the media with which she records and organizes information, but it’s hardly a movie about card catalogs. It probably would be too much to hope for to have Foster wielding other antiques, especially a microfiche reader, as she was the star of one of the great microfiche reader sequences in all of moviedom in The Silence of the Lambs (1991).

This might all be easily, if even reflexively, forgiven. It’s unfair to judge any movie by its poster—except for, perhaps, The Rocketeer (1991)—but the mystery proffered leaves a bit to be desired. We spend long stretches of the film confident that something unpleasant is goin on, veer slightly as things move to the third act that Steiner is perhaps crazier than she lets on, all coalescing into an anti-climax.

*A term I am obliged to loath.

Tags a private life (2025), rebecca ziotowski, jodie foster, daniel auteuil, virginie efira, mathie amalric
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220px-Quantum_of_Solace_-_UK_cinema_poster.jpg

Quantum Of Solace (2008)

Mac Boyle March 30, 2020

Director: Mark Forster

 

Cast: Daniel Craig, Olga Kurylenko, Mathieu Amalric, Judi Dench

 

Have I Seen it Before: Oh, sure.

 

Did I Like It: But I only think I’ve seen it once in the theater, and then again when I acquired the DVD*. That’s telling. It is a step down from the absolute transcendence that was Casino Royale, and it’s storyline is all afterthought material from that preceding film. The Bond films have quite rightly not needed to feed into material from the previous film, and even only occasionally tried to have any kind of continuity at all. The best Bond films are so fully themselves that the confidence of the filmmakers and the confidence of the main character fuse into one entity. 

 

Also, the successor to Royale may have always been doomed to be a letdown simply because it follows what might very well be the best films of their series, see Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984), The Dark Knight Rises(2012), or Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi (1983) for other examples.

 

But, as with all of those perfectly fine films above, this film probably gets an objectively bad rap. The direction from Mark Forester, then most famous for Stranger Than Fiction (2006), brings a precise visual scheme to the proceedings makes this look like no other Bond film before or since. Also, while the story is beholden to another movie, it definitely taps into that pure Fleming essence that Craig has tapped into so thoroughly. And I love the opening titles and theme song. That alone can go a long way towards leading me to feel more favorable about a particular Bond outing.

 

Were this an entry in any other Bond actor tenure (including Sean Connery) it would have been one of the best Bond films of all time. Sadly, it must become Craig’s weak link. One movie would have to be, and if this is the nadir, Craig’s status as the greatest since Connery will stand for all time.

*You can tell (minus the weird exception of Diamonds are Forever (1971)) which Bond films I enjoy the most by which I own on blu-ray. Casino Royale (2006), Skyfall (2012), From Russia With Love (1963), A View To A Kill (1985). This one I only have on DVD.

Tags quantum of solace (2008), james bond series, mark forster, daniel craig, olga kurylenko, mathie amalric, judi dench
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Party Now, Apocalypse Later Industries

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.