Monthly Archives: November 2019

A Few Minutes Ago, in a Galaxy Down the Street

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The Force appears strong with this one.

Anchored by a solid debut of The Mandalorian, Star Wars‘ first live-action series, Disney entered the on-demand fray with a glitchy bang. And the splash may alter the future of Star Wars, Netflix and the streaming universe.

The company’s new streaming service, Disney+, has already seen 10 million sign-ups since launching Tuesday, the company announced Wednesday. Disney’s stock was up more than 7% on the news. Netflix shares were down more than 3%.

Even a technical bug didn’t dampen the debut. The launch Tuesday was beset with technical errors that prevented some users from connecting with the service (I was disconnected three times). But that didn’t stop customers from flooding the sign-up page.

At $6.99 per month, or $69.99 per year, Disney+ is significantly cheaper than competitors such as Netflix, which charges $12.99 for its most popular standard HD plan.The membership fee for Amazon Prime is $119 per year, or $12.99 per month. That gap will likely narrow as Disney + lures more subscribers, but other changes seem inevitable in wake of the report:

Disney will be your kids favorite channel in a month. Even a cursory glance through the studio’s immense catalog suggests this race is already over. The library alone will favor Disney+ in the youth and young parents market. And that doesn’t include it’s catalog under the Pixar, Marvel and Star Wars brands.Image result for bambi

Netflix will become the HBO of streamers. For the past two years Netflix has been in a headlong chase for a Best Picture Oscar, last year with Roma and this year with The Irishman. The service, which already excels at documentaries and horror films, may look to become the go-to streamer for adults.

Star Wars may be headed for a TV universe. Mandalorian was an unmitigated success with fans and critics, early reviews show. The series, the brainchild of Jon Favreau, is some of the best Star Wars material to hit screens, big or small, in decades. And at its heart, Star Wars was always a soap opera deep down. Mandalorian actually looks better on a smaller screen, which is more forgiving of the series’ reliance on digital effects.Image result for mandalorian

Measuring Disney’s splash is still up in the air. The studio is offering a seven-day free trial, so likely not all of the sign-ups represent customers who will continue to pay for the service. Verizon is also offering its customers a free year of Disney+, which could further boost its subscriber numbers.

But there’s no denying the impressive opener. Disney+ has already achieved huge sign-up numbers, while competitors such as Netflix and Hulu needed years to build their subscriber bases. Disney has already signed up more than 10% of the high end of its forecast of 60 million to 90 million subscribers by the end of 2024. And Disney+ has yet to roll out to many countries beyond the U.S., Canada and the Netherlands, which were included in Tuesday’s launch. The platform will be available in Australia and New Zealand on Nov. 19. More countries will get Disney+ in the coming months.

For comparison, it took CBS about five years to reach 8 million streaming subscribers combined for CBS All Access and Showtime. Disney-owned Hulu, which has an advertising-based streaming model, claimed more than 28 million subscribers in May. Of those subscribers, 26.8 million are monthly paying customers, while the remaining have promotional accounts. Netflix claimed more than 60 million paid domestic members in its third quarter of 2019 and more than 97 million international paid members.

In other words, the mouse came to brawl. And the battle could be cutthroat, Pat Esser, the president of Cox Communications, the nation’s third-largest cable carrier, told the New York Times.

“They’re about to enter a space where the consumer, with a click of a button, will decide to be your customer or not to be your customer,” he said.

Fucking Up Motherfuckers

For the amount of cursing, vulgarity and nudity in Dolemite Is My Name, it might come as a surprise that it’s actually a pretty sweet and heartfelt film.

Dolemite is not here to shock and scandalize. It’s simply a loving, R-rated portrait of Rudy Ray Moore, a nobody who had the guts to believe in himself when no one else did, featuring a killer comeback Eddie Murphy performance.

The self-proclaimed “godfather of rap,” Moore was an Army veteran, stand up comedian, musician and born performer who in the 1970’s came to niche prominence for his rhythmic and raunchy Dolemite act. That character would beget both stand up albums and the 1975 blaxploitation film Dolemite, a low-budget production (reports say it cost around $100,000 to make) that made some $10 million at the box office.Image result for rudy ray moore

But it’s almost irrelevant whether you know Moore’s name well, and how he inspired the likes of Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, or are learning about him for the first time: Dolemite Is My Name is just a good piece of entertainment. And it’s the kind of film that will help his legacy live on (Moore died in 2008 at age 81).

Directed by Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow), Dolemite Is My Name transports you to Moore’s 1970s Los Angeles, thanks to Ruth E. Carter’s evocative costumes and Clay Griffith’s production design. There’s nothing terribly interesting about the way it’s told; it’s just a straightforward underdog story with a big beating heart.

Murphy plays Moore with a wide-eyed eagerness we typically only see on screen in much younger characters. He’s constantly told no or to stay in his lane. Even his friends (Craig Robinson, Mike Epps and Tituss Burgess among them) look at him with that kind of half-pitying/half-supportive smile that will leave the audience wondering if this is just a big dreamer who might not actually make it.Image result for Craig Robinson, Mike Epps and Tituss Burgess

But he has an eye for talent and at a low point borrows some material from a local homeless man about a larger-than-life character named Dolemite, and finally he’s got people’s attention. But there are still many, many no’s he’ll have to overcome to get an album made and then released. And we haven’t even gotten to the cult classic movie yet.

While it’s a joy spending time with Moore as he ascends in the comedy world, the film really kicks into gear when he gets the idea to make a film one night after he and his buddies decide to see a movie — something funny — and are left scratching their heads at a packed showing of Billy Wilder’s 1974 remake of The Front Page with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, wondering what the appeal is.Image result for the front page 1974

So they decide to make something that they want to see (kung-fu, boobs and action are a few of the requirements). Moore scrapes together money, friends, acquaintances, some strangers (a playwright played by Keegan-Michael Key, and actor D’Urville Martin, played by Wesley Snipes) and a few film school students and sets off to make a feature. The only problem? None of them really know how to make a movie. But they do their best which is often funny and always endearing.Image result for D’Urville Martin, played by Wesley Snipes

Aside from Murphy, who eases back into stardom seamlessly, the other standout performance comes from Da’Vine Joy Randolph, a Tony-nominated stage actress who bursts off the screen as comedian Lady Reed. Moore “discovers” her one night on tour as someone with presence.

“Some people walk around with their own personal spotlight,” Murphy’s Moore tells her. The same could be said of Randolph, or Moore himself, and it’s a lovely thing to have a charming  film like Dolemite Is My Name to show off both.

To paraphrase Dolemite, Rudy Ray Moore is his name, and exceeding expectations is his game.