It’s hard to believe, but it’s been three years since critics fawned over filmmaker Steven Soderbergh’s “male entertainer” drama, Magic Mike. While the movie sparked the rejuvenation of Matthew McConaughey’s career, one that ultimately landed him in Oscar history after his Best Actor win for Dallas Buyers Club, I was one of the rare voices that recommended audiences to look elsewhere. However, with a continuation of Magic Mike XXL that’s sure to bring the ladies to movie theaters in massive numbers, I must admit that this second go-around is a more fun and engaging adventure than the original.

The story picks up in real time and Mike’s (Channing Tatum) been out of the stripping game for a trio of years, working hard to keep up with production and costs at his custom furniture company. But after a shocking voicemail puts him back in touch with some “Kings of Tampa” friends from his old job, he learns that the remaining guys plan to take their talents to the Myrtle Beach strippers convention for one last money-raining blowout. Torn between whether or not to join them on the trip, Mike decides he can’t say “no” to a final adventure with his boys.

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First things first, I need to give credit where credit it fully due. As someone who religiously bashed Channing Tatum throughout the early stages of his career, it’s about time that I vocalize my new-found respect for him as an actor. Tatum stood toe-to-toe with the Oscar nominated performances of both Steve Carell and Mark Ruffalo in last year’s Foxcatcher, and he backs it up with a funny and heartwarming reprise in Magic Mike XXL. The sequel succeeds as a wild bachelor-style road trip where hysterical bro-mance banter paves the way for countless unforgettable onscreen moments. Yes, at the end of the day Magic Mike XXL targets lustful female moviegoers, but there are enough hilarious “boys will be boys” moments to keep the after-thought boyfriends and husbands content with the selection as well.

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Despite the film’s modest ceiling, there aren’t many hindrances to Magic Mike XXL‘s overall quality. Clocking in at a lofty 115 minutes of screen time, the movie is paced surprisingly well. Although there’s a noticeable lull in the feature’s mid-section that’s held together by a cameo from former NFL Hall of Famer, Michael Strahan, like you’ve never seen him before, it becomes a distant memory once the story picks back up. Outside of that tiny blemish, my only other miscue would be that Magic Mike XXL provides a somewhat anti-climactic finale. However, these shortcomings are merely bumps in the road for an otherwise effective film.

The franchise’s first installment harped on a more dramatic angle while this new inclusion allows the guys to let loose. As a result, we’re given a highly entertaining and laugh out loud experience. Channing Tatum’s largely developed acting skills lead a collection of odd-ball characters that audiences of all genders will connect with automatically. Magic Mike XXL isn’t anything groundbreaking, but it embraces its absurdity and delivers all the necessary ingredients of a fun-filled summer-time title.

GRADE: 3.5/5

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This year’s Closing Night selection at the Philadelphia Film Festival was Jean-Marc Vallee’s latest effort, Wild. Vallee has quickly climbed the ranks as a premier filmmaker thanks to the overwhelming success of last year’s Dallas Buyers Club, which went on to collect 3 Academy Awards during its memorable run. While Wild clearly doesn’t have the same impact and staying-power as his previous work, Vallee once again delivers a soulful true story that stands tall enough on its own.

Reese Witherspoon stars as Cheryl Strayed, a divorcee whose life begins to spiral out of control following the loss of her best friend and mother (played by Laura Dern). Unable to regain her composure, Cheryl embarks on an 1,100 mile solo hike across the Pacific Crest Trail in order to confront her demons and correct her path. Yet, nothing can prepared her for the mental and physical anguish she’s set to endure along the way.

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It’s become abundantly clear that Jean-Marc Vallee has a unique way of drawing the best possible performances out of his actors. After leading both Matthew McConaughey and Jared Leto to their first Oscars, Vallee evokes yet another transcending performance from his leading star, Reese Witherspoon. And although she’s already earned a Best Actress statue with 2005’s Walk the Line, Witherspoon has never been better than she is right now, which should be enough to land her in Oscar contention once again. Wild is brilliantly acted on all accounts and supporting star Laura Dern is deserving of a mention as well. While Dern’s chances at seeing some awards season recognition seem less likely, you can no longer count out a big-time performance in a Vallee picture. And speaking of the director, praises are due for the humble manor in which he approaches the subject matter. While Vallee has demonstrated that he’s capable of tackling difficult directorial feats, he refuses to stroke his ego with flashy filming techniques and allows his talented cast to bring this tender true story to life.

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Like the movie’s protagonist, Cheryl Strayed, Wild is saddled with flaws as well. For a film dead-set on telling a heart-breaking story of a woman who falls into the darkest depths of despair and commits various unspeakable acts, Vallee only scratches the surface of these atrocities. Cheryl is clearly broken, but to make her pilgrimage of self-worth more effective the film would have been better suited addressing her origins in a more detailed way than the occasional flashback. Furthermore, there are a few artificial moments in Wild where the film is desperate to draw pity and sadness from the viewer rather than working hard enough to earn such feelings.

The fall and winter months always become infested with superbly acted roles in middling movies. While I feel Wild is a clear step above such a label, it certainly isn’t the Best Picture contender that many were hoping it would be. Through Vallee’s direction, Witherspoon gives a gutsy and authentic performance that allows this powerful story to push forward along every step of her journey.

GRADE: 4/5

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2014 kicked off its DVD release in style with a wide selection of notable titles in January. Now that the Oscar Nominations have been handed out, February and March should continue to offer many of the year’s finest on DVD and Video On-Demand. In fact, my top three picks of the month all land in my Top 10 Films of 2013.

#1. About Time

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Somewhat mislabeled as a romantic comedy, About Time is a charming drama set on reinforcing an appreciation for every-day life. Love Actually director, Richard Curtis, has publicly stated that this will be his last feature and he truly goes out on top with a remarkably sincere and effectively sentimental piece of work. Fast-rising star Domhnall Gleeson and the always wonderful Bill Nighy give tender performances as a son and father who share a family secret that they can travel in time. You’ll experience every range of emotion in this hilarious and earnest tale of love and family, justifying About Time as one of the finest films of 2013. (February 4th)

#2. Dallas Buyers Club

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By now everyone is aware of just how good Matthew McConaughey is in the Best Picture Nominee, Dallas Buyers Club. McConaughey was My Personal Pick for Best Actor of the year with a gripping performance as Ron Woodroof, a Texas bull rider whose lifelong history of partying and drugs catch up to him when he discovers he has HIV. The revelation and will to live set him on a mission to smuggle unapproved prescription drugs from Mexico into the U.S. to combat the effects of the illness. Jared Leto also gives an unforgettable supporting turn as Woodroof’s unlikely sidekick. (February 4th)

#3. Gravity

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Closing out my Top 10 Films of 2013 and #1 on Greg Rouleau’s List was Alfonso Cuaron’s space adventure, Gravity. Cuaron has found himself at the head of the Best Director class for his examination of a routine space repair mission that ends up going terribly wrong at the hands of fast-flying and destructive debris. Floating around and lost in space, astronaut Ryan Stone (Sandra Bullock) struggles to survive this nightmarish ordeal. Definitely a film intended to be witnessed on the big screen, it’s still worth settling on the at-home experience in order to see one of 2013’s most talked about films. (February 25th)

Honorable Mention: Two independent selections from the Philadelphia Film Festival include Best Picture Nominee Nebraska (2/25) and the survival tale All Is Lost (2/11), both of which landed in my honorable mention for the cinematic year. Although I haven’t seen Thor: The Dark World (2/25) or Ender’s Game (2/11), both seem to interest the action-junky in me. Also, it’s worth noting the box-office flop from Ridley Scott, The Counselor (2/11), and Cannes Film Festival Palme d’Or Winner foreign film Blue Is the Warmest Color (2/25) also are available.

It’s the type of news story the media adores. When word spread like wildfire that heartthrob Matthew McConaughey was planning to shed the pounds for a daring Oscar-bait role, all eyes focused on the Texas native. But there’s an even bigger story at hand, the former romantic comedy star finds himself in the midst of a remarkably impressive string of fine dramatic turns, including his latest effort in Dallas Buyers Club. Forget about the excessive weight-loss, McConaughey channels his southern roots and delivers a dynamite performance that stands tall against any other acting role of 2013.

Dallas Buyers Club tells the real life story of Ron Woodruff (McConaughey), an electrician who lives life by breaking all the rules. And in 1985, after years of binge drinking, cocaine use and unprotected sex with countless women, Ron discovers that he’s HIV-positive. The life-altering realization sends Woodruff on a renegade mission of illegally transporting the latest unapproved AIDS treatments from all over the world to his home state of Texas. And with the assistance of a transsexual named Rayon (Jared Leto), Woodruff opens up the exclusive and expensive treatment providing Dallas Buyers Club.

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Director Jean-Marc Vallée’s character driven Dallas Buyers Club is a fine cinematic conquest that provides arguably the most notable acting ensemble of the year. There’s no question, McConaughey is absolutely electric in his role. So good, in fact, I can say without reservation it’s the best lead performance I’ve witnessed all year. Whether the Academy agrees, we’ll just have to wait and see. If there’s one obstacle standing in McConaughey’s way, it’s his own onscreen sidekick, Jared Leto. Leto’s emotional supporting turn as a drug-addicted transsexual is brilliant enough to almost overshadow McConaughey, which should make for a very interesting awards season. But Dallas Buyers Club is more than just a showcase for towering performances, it’s a platform for a captivating and authentic true story. Vallée does a profound job of placing the viewer into the heart of 1980s Texas, where HIV runs rampant throughout the homosexual community and fear is in the front of everyone’s mind. Due to a strong collaborative effort from the cast, director and screenwriters Craig Borten and Melisa Wallack, Dallas Buyers Club brings a realistic and engaging true story to life.

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Although the film is a successful effort for nearly all parties involved, Dallas Buyers Club does include a few notable miscues. For example, Jennifer Garner doesn’t warrant the amount of screen time her character is given. And as her face time mounts, she leaves plenty to be desired. In Garner’s defense, it’s difficult to pinpoint whether her character is under-developed or if she just squanders the opportunity, but either way it’s ineffective. In addition, one of the biggest disappointments in Dallas Buyers Club revolves around the fact that Ron Woodruff is never allowed that quintessential moment of triumph. While this slowly-paced drama falls into a repetitious coma where Woodruff is halted by the authorities and then finds a way to circumvent their roadblocks (and so begins the cycle), the finale finds itself rather anti-climactic. Leaving nothing more to savor than a wonderful character arc for McConaughey.

Jean-Marc Vallée’s Dallas Buyers Club culminates like almost every other highly anticipated film released this year, extremely commendable, but far from perfect. While this feature is one of the better ones, Dallas Buyers Club is an exceptional character study that admittedly moves slow and lacks a knockout punch. Fans of groundbreaking performances and superior filmmaking will find much to enjoy. But if you’re looking for an entertaining blockbuster, then look elsewhere.

GRADE: 4/5

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While not the opening salvo of Oscar season, Dallas Buyers Club quickly sets itself up as a forerunner. A stunning performance by Matthew McConaughey–who is barely recognizable as himself –with the equally brilliant Jared Leto, and a quiet, understated, but not to be overlooked, performance by Jennifer Gardner, combined with an almost flawless story of the triumph of human spirit during one of the darker times in recent US history all combine to create a truly remarkable cinematic experience.

Matthew McConaughey stars as Ron Woodroof in Jean-Marc Vallée's fact-based drama, DALLAS BUYERS CLUB, a Focus Features release. Photo Credit: Anne Marie Fox/Focus Features
Matthew McConaughey stars as Ron Woodroof in Jean-Marc Vallée’s fact-based drama, DALLAS BUYERS CLUB, a Focus Features release.
Photo Credit: Anne Marie Fox/Focus Features

Based on the true story of Ron Woodroof (McConaughey), an electrician and a rodeo cowboy in Dallas, Texas–a blue-collar hero who works hard and parties harder–who is diagnosed with AIDS and given one month to live. An opening sequence of bull riding, graphic sex, cocaine use and gambling give, in under five minutes, a whole picture of the man before: a bigoted, addicted, homophobic good ol’ boy, living in a trailer and listening to Willie Nelson.

Everything changes when after Woodroof’s diagnosis. This is 1985—only a few years after HIV/AIDS had stopped being referred to as GRID (Gay-Related Immune Deficiency) and was still considered by most of the country as a homosexual disease—and Woodroof reacts characteristically, shouting at the doctors (Denis O’Hare as Dr. Sevard and Jennifer Garner as Dr. Eve Saks) that he isn’t a ‘motherf*cking faggot.’

The movie then explores how this cowboy with a heart of coal became the runner of one of the largest buyer clubs in the US; a club known for its outrageous risks, and some say, its high cost. Buyer clubs were essentially HIV/AIDS medication co-ops; people diagnosed with the disease—mostly gay men—would buy a membership, and with the money, the clubs would purchase medicine not available in the United States (types of medication range from herbs like milk thistle to experimental treatments like DDC and Compound Q but also antibiotics like clarithromycin) due to restrictions imposed by the FDA—some claim unfair restrictions set by the FDA as a ‘favor’ to Big Pharma in order for their drug, AZT, to be sold. AZT was known to be highly toxic with limited efficacy, and was also the most expensive medication on the market at $10,000 a year for a prescription.

McConaughey’s Woodroof rages against his fate and then digs in, applying his logical mind and burning intensity to solving the problem of how to live with HIV/AIDs. He discovers alternative remedies available across the border in Mexico (namely Peptide-T) and sees not only the possibility of not-dying, but also a money making opportunity. His cowboy persona and clear dislike of the homosexual culture scares off the majority of his potential customer base—loaded down with drugs, and able to offer a management of the disease—and looking at making a possible fortune; Woodroof turns to Rayon (Jared Leto) a fellow AIDS patient of Dr. Eve Saks (Jennifer Garner)–and a transsexual–to help bridge a connection to a gay community in Dallas. The two eventually form the Dallas Buyers Club, which at its height has a reported 7000 members in the Dallas area.

McConaughey lost a reported 50 pounds for this film, and Leto 35. The two are emaciated for most of the movie. That quality—that translucent thinness—that marked so many people in the 80’s and early 90’s haunts the film throughout, not just in McConaughey and Leto but in the men and women who come through the club.  The image of the lesion-covered, skeletal AIDS patient has faded from our social consciousness and The Dallas Buyers Club brings it back, unremorsefully but rarely self-righteously.

Jared Leto as Rayon (L) and Matthew McConaughey (R) as Ron Woodruff in Focus Features Dallas Buyers Club.
Jared Leto as Rayon (L) and Matthew McConaughey (R) as Ron Woodruff in Focus Features Dallas Buyers Club.

McConaughey’s lightning grin and easy charm are all but burnt out in Woodroof; by his lifestyle and the disease—they flash out occasionally, disarmingly, finding you unawares and making you catch your breath—and his journey through Woodroof’s life—from diagnosis to denial to vocal opponent of the FDA’s drug approval practices—is whole and lived in. It is one of McConaughey’s great performances, in a year filled with them, in a movie filled with them.

Leto, who had semi-retired from acting to follow his music career (he and his brother are members of the band 30 Seconds from Mars), came back to Hollywood because of the power and depth of this role. As Woodroof’s partner in the Dallas Buyer’s Club, Rayon, Leto fills the screen with a manic gaiety that only thinly covers the panicked fear—and anger–of a dying man. Though Leto walks dangerously close to a cliché at times, he redeems it with a heartbreaking and sincere understanding of his plight.

Very little is done to soften the lifestyle lived by either man, rather the movie shows them flawed—and somewhat proud of their flaws—fighting only to be seen as not so much dying from a disease, but rather trying to live with it.

Garner gives what would be in any other movie a tour-de-force (if a little underwritten) performance as the quiet, logical doctor assigned to both Rayon and Woodruff, who slowly changes from a doubting-but-following-the-rules doctor of the establishment to fully speaking out against the treatment options for HIV/AIDS patients in the US. However, her performance is so quiet, so soft, that it is easy to overlook it amongst McConaughey’s and Leto’s flamboyant acts.

If some of the other supporting cast seem somewhat one-dimensional, fulfilling predictable plot points routinely; and if the FDA is cast as a the bad guy somewhat against historical record, the movie manages to breeze past these snags, mostly on the strength of its three leads.

Aside from one or two minor finger wagging moments, director Jean Marc Vallee ensures that the film doesn’t preach, and he and cinematographer Yves Belanger create a vivid world of Wranglers and Dodge trucks, queens and cocaine, rodeo and the FDA, culminating in a  well-conceived, crafted and excellently acted film.

Dallas Buyers Club is a Focus Features release, and is rated R by the Motion Picture Association of America for ‘‘pervasive language, some strong sexual content, nudity and drug use.’’  The film opens in select theaters on November 1st and opens wide on November 22nd.

4/5