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MOVIE REVIEW: Carolina Caroline

Images courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

CAROLINA CAROLINE— 4 STARS

Watching Adam Carter Rehmeier’s Carolina Caroline calls to mind the many layers of appeal possible in the crime-romance subgenre of movies. On one level, there’s the taboo draw of watching the ethical battles of right and wrong when it comes to decisions and choices. Folks might wish they could break laws, too, or, if not, marvel at the audacity on display beyond their own personal limits. From a heart-quickening standpoint, the craft of shooting and telling a solid crime thriller lends itself to escapist danger, which plays well on the big or small screen.

LESSON #1: WHEN PASSION OVERFLOWS TO OTHER PARTS OF LIFE— Yet, one must look deeper than mere choices and actions to see the true energy that heats a romantic crime film like Carolina Caroline compared to something more cold, calculating, or technical. The answer there is simply, and powerfully, passion. For audiences to get swept up enough to ignore the wrongs and root for the “bad guys,” they must be granted and see a level of intensity within the individuals committing the crimes. When that zealousness is amorous, as it is in Rehmeier’s film and so many other exemplars of the genre, it amplifies everything else. The motives get bolder, and the course of dangers turns more perilous. 

The beneficiary of all that escalation is us, the cinematic voyeurs, dazzled, intoxicated, and enthralled by the entire pungent palette. So many of those aforementioned passionate traits radiate in Carolina Caroline like a muscle car’s headlight in front of a roaring engine speeding down a road. While we’ve seen these types of stories since the grand era of film noir eighty-plus years ago, and endlessly since, as the archetypes advance with the times, the appeal has never waned.

Carolina Caroline opens in a moment of a young woman (Samara Weaving of the Ready or Not series) in a short, black-haired wig and narrow sunglasses, leaving a shoddy hotel room solo. She proceeds to carjack a man at gunpoint in broad daylight, before beginning a series of short-change swindles to amass extra cash in tricky exchanges of different bills with unwitting store clerks. In the background, her image appears on the television news as a thief on the run, declared armed and dangerous. All of this is happening through what appears to be a tailspin of emotion for the woman, one that leaves us hanging once a chyron drops a transition to “three months earlier.”

Seen now without the sable wig, this woman is named Caroline, and she’s working at a Texas gas station, stocking shelves and watching the more exciting world go by. One day, in walks the denim-jacketed and goateed smolder of Oliver (Kyle Gallner, Rehmeier’s lead from his celebrated third film Dinner in America). We see him pull the same cash exchange switcheroo shown in the introduction of the movie (something that deserves its own lesson in this review or a devious YouTube tutorial), answering one planted seed with more to follow.

When Caroline fliratiously follows and confronts Oliver on his scheme, he invites her (more like she invites herself) to spend the day with him, “just passing through.” She’s all for catching his eye and demonstrating her own cleverness, even when Oliver is clearly not a squeaky-clean fellow. Her cling to him lasts all day, from bouncing down backroads in his Chevelle SS and sharing a barroom slow dance to Jason Isbell’s haunting ballad “Cover Me Up” to a steamy late-night swimming hole excursion. 

LESSON #2: ASKING THE RIGHT QUESTIONS— All along the way, Caroline cannot stop asking Oliver questions. She’s a sponge for wanting to understand his methods. Amused and smitten, Oliver obliges her with every answer, creating a wonderfully dialogue-driven intimacy within Carolina Caroline. Her questions reveal her enthusiasm and perceptive fervor, and the extreme lucidity and wisdom of his replies are higher than those of a podunk simpleton trying to get his kicks. In what might be the best one of the bunch, Oliver asks Caroline what she is still doing here after their day of dalliance and deceit. Her revelatory response is a self-description of a woman staying with someone or something that’s no good for them because, through her less-than-rich life as a kid abandoned by her mother at a young age, “no good” is what they know and all they know. 

Case in point, there’s a dynamite scene later in Carolina Caroline where Caroline, who’s been heartset on finding her biological mother, Deborah, finally tracks the mysterious woman down at a seedy bar in South Carolina. Thinking or even fearing the apple might not fall far from the tree, Deborah is revealed to be a chain-smoking and screwdriver-slaming loudmouth, played by the incomparable Kyra Sedgwick. A sunnier version of this scene would lead to lofty answers, tearful apologies, and either a renewed bond or karmic comeuppance. Sedgwick and the trajectory honed by Rehmeier make some, or even none, of those expectations come easily, or at all, in one of the most powerful scenes of the film.

Normally, especially in these con-man situations in crime films, we’re waiting for Caroline to be the unwitting mark, the girl lured by the influx of cash and the doting attention of a dashing stranger. In watching Oliver’s smooth charisma lubricate his every success, we predict that he’s scooped up a hit-it-and-quit-it conquest or two before throughout his ambling south of the Mason-Dixon Line. After a while, one realizes Kyle Gallner’s rogue was nowhere to be seen in the introduction reel of the movie. We prepare for future double-crosses or abandonment as the two—the veteran and the newbie—go from small thefts to full-on bank robberies. 

LESSON #3: THE PASSIONS OF THE BRAZEN AND DESPERATE— This is where the increased embedded passion of Carolina Caroline elevates the fable. Oliver’s politically-charged big picture motive for committing the crimes he chooses carries no greed or anger, only “the angle” to exploit the flaws of the larger economic or corporate system above their lot in life. His lack of remorse isn’t evil. It’s existential and extends to understanding the checks and triggers of human behavior, creating a confident dedication to the endeavor that is stronger than petty foolishness, hellbent on plain money. Moreover, their hot-and-heavy companionship becomes the genuine article. They truly become bonded and inseparable, even in the face of desperation, when, like so many crime movies, they didn’t quit while they were ahead, or the inevitable fall must be taken. 

For the Carolina Caroline screenplay, written by Tom Dean (Charlie Harper) and the debuting William Thomas Dean IV, to even entertain these more mature themes is a testament to its quality and uniqueness amid the sea of film noir and neo-noir mirrors and imitators. Anyone can put a hot girl and a studly man together with a couple of guns and fire off some ill-advised bullets and Cupid’s arrows. Samara Weaving and Kyle Gallner, like their characters, forge something stronger than a fleeting fling, and that weight means the world. Echoing one more of those questions from Lesson #2, at a tipping point, Caroline asks Oliver, “Are we good people pretending to be bad, or bad ones pretending to be good?” He doesn’t answer, and that enigma and shade of doubt permeate the picture. Because Carolina Caroline exudes how risks can either add to and take away vivacity, the experience sticks with you in a spellbinding way.

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MOVIE REVIEW: Kraken

Images: Nordisk Film Production and Samuel Goldwyn Films

KRAKEN— 3 STARS

In the cult-beholden genre of monster movies, the market has largely been cornered by two countries: The United States and Japan. Thanks to 1925’s The Lost World and the seminal King Kong eight years later, the U.S. of A. can call itself the originator and has kept up a steady output of cheesy wonders for decades. However, since the 1950s and the Showa era debut of the Godzilla franchise, the Land of the Rising Sun has expanded and improved the monster movie with its kaiju variety. Other than a few B-movies a half-century ago, like Denmark’s Reptilicus in 1961, not many other countries have dared to dabble. This month, Norway musters the courage to enter the big screen conversation with Kraken.

LESSON #1: LEARN YOUR HISTORY— Now, if all you know about the name “kraken” is the vague giant sea monster seen in two generations of Clash of the Titans movies, similar appearances in the blockbuster Pirates of the Caribbean series, and being the intimidating namesake of the newish NHL hockey team hailing from Seattle, you should do a little homework. Point of fact, the kraken is a myth of Norwegian origin dating back to the 13th century, meaning, unlike the borrowing and bastardization done elsewhere, Kraken gets to depict the giant cephalopod in its native waters. 

Directed by PÃ¥l Øie, the film is set in the oceanside harbors of Vangsnes, Norway, of the Sognefjord, an area teeming with recreational water sports, steady tourism, and jaw-dropping glacial topography. While prosperity is riding high in the community, the gray-bearded elders (embodied by Hans Morten Hansen’s Hallvard) remember an unexplained appearance of some sort of enormous, shadowed creature from 1972. Forgotten by most, they took the sighting as an omen and a warning that has gone unheeded.

At present, a local salmon farm has employed a special Sonic Lice technology that has enabled their shoals to grow and thrive free of waterborne lice parasites. The company’s top executive, Jostein Avaldsnes (Øyvind Brandtzæg of Gold Run), is pitching the superiority of the finished product and its earning potential to visiting Japanese investors, hoping to land a lucrative deal to expand the operation. Alas, rumors are swirling, thanks to Jostein’s own whistleblowing activist daughter, Maria (TV actress Jenny Evensen), that something is ecologically wrong with their methods, as large groups of wild salmon have been filmed leaping out of the water for their safety.

What could possibly cause that? The unproven sonar technology radiating through the entire fjord, or something far worse? Tasked with finding out in Kraken is Johanne (Troll 2’s Sara Khorami, stalwart as the smartest person in the room) of the Institute of Marine Research. She is the former co-inventor of the Sonic Lice technology with her old beau and the farm’s chief engineer, Erick (Mikkel Bratt Silset of Netflix’s Norseman). Thrust back together with what begins as a cursory inspection, a larger mystery grows, just as the body count does of reported missing people or mangled remains found on the water.

Leave it to a thriller specialist like PÃ¥l Øie (The Tunnel) to put forth a proper Creature Feature with Kraken. Ever since the opening scene of the movie, showing two young jet skiers pulled under the dark surf to their presumed demises, a fan or student of the game knows exactly where the film is going. When done right, the predictability becomes a strength for creating tingling suspense and the type of exotic excitement movies like Kraken are supposed to promise. 

To that end, Kraken, conceived by a combined team of five writers with story or screenplay credit, including Øie, hits its marks. Hallvard’s old urban legend kickstarts the story, reminds mankind they shouldn't interfere with nature, and dangles the plot's clues while the assigned human menu options are given the room to flex their expertise or build their future flaws, which will likely match their chances for eventual survival. Glimpses here and there demonstrate the danger, punch the senses, and keep the audience's attention. Thanks to Steven Spielberg, Rule #1 is to hide your monster as long as you can. For 55 minutes of 100, the movie does just that. Once that door is opened, right on time, all the pre-climactic effort has done enough to deliver the spectacle.

LESSON #2: THE FORMULA WORKS FOR A REASON— Reinvention isn’t always necessary when the decades-old formula is sound. The creativity in something like Kraken comes from keenly delivering the monster movie checklist with savvy filmmaking and a temperance to limit overindulgence as a way to balance the fantasy with the realism. PÃ¥l Øie demonstrated how to do this effectively with the rescue movie tropes in 2019’s The Tunnel by keeping the cast small and the drama taut and relatable. Taking a page from Deep Rising of all places, Øie sticks to our handful of characters and their plight to get off the facility, dodging one pursuing tentacle at a time. 

Matching Godzilla Minus One, Øie is working with a tidy budget on Kraken, meaning less needs to be more in the effort to look and sound scary. The topside and underwater cinematography from Sjur Aarthun and Amund Lie make every dive and surfacing scene carry the hint that something is just off frame or under the water line, waiting to pounce. Likewise, the combination of an alarming musical score by Roy Westad (The Riot) mixed with the sound design to muffle noises and cries inside the churning brine adds to the created tension, especially for a creature that preys on noise.

While there are certainly bolder, more emotional, and more bloodthirsty Creature Feature entries out there, Kraken does enough to scratch the entertainment itch for this genre. For this movie, the foreboding existence of a big, bad sea monster capable of thorough destruction is enough. There’s no need to channel Michael Bay or Roland Emmerich and blow every cinematic wad in the world. No massive crowds are running for their lives ahead of massive property damage. No one is screaming, “It’s the Kraken!” That’s improved patience and confidence to make your own thrills count.

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PODCAST: Episode 235 of "The Cinephile Hissy Fit" Podcast

For their 235th episode, two film critics, two dads, and two school teachers who definitely have the power, Will Johnson and Don Shanahan, are starting to scratch a sword-and-sandal itch. Semi-included in that subgenre, and just in time for the remake/reboot, is 1987's Masters of the Universe from Cannon Films. Starring the beloved and out-of-his element Dolph Lundgren, one of our hosts was absolutely the target audience for this nearly 40 years ago, and the other is watching it for the first time in 2026. Come learn more and stay for the mutual love and respect that fun movies encapsulate. Enjoy our podcast! Enjoy our podcast!


Cinephile Hissy Fit is an Astra Award-losing Film Obsessive media podcast, brought to you by the Ruminations Radio Network, and a member of the Critics Choice Podcast Network. Please visit, rate, review and subscribe. If you enjoyed this show, we have more where that came from, with interesting hosts, and wonderful guests. All are available on iTunesSpotify, and anywhere you find your favorite shows. Follow the show on Twitter at @CinephileFit and on Facebook. Also, find both Will Johnson and Don Shanahan on Letterboxd as they accumulate their viewings and build their ranks and lists. Lastly, check out their TeePublic store for merchandise options from stickers to t-shirts!

Thank you so much for your captive audience and social media participation! Enjoy our new podcast episode!


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The Evolution of Smoking in Modern Hollywood Movies

Silver screen magic has always influenced style and habits. Characters lighting up on screen used to define cinematic cool for decades. That classic image has shifted into something completely different now. Directors use smoking differently now to show character traits or historical settings.

The Golden Age Silhouette

Classic cinema used cigarettes to signal sophistication or mystery. Main characters often held a cigarette to look tough or wealthy. This visual cue spoke louder than dialogue in old black-and-white films.

Old Hollywood studios had financial agreements with big tobacco brands. Stars received payments to puff on specific brands during close-up shots. This corporate backing filled the theater screens with constant smoke clouds. Moviegoers viewed their favorite actors as style icons and copied their habits immediately.

The Rise of Modern Alternatives

Vaporizers and electronic devices now frequently appear in contemporary Hollywood scripts to reflect real-world habits. Production crews often click here to source empty oil cartridges that look authentic on camera without using actual tobacco products. These reliable wholesale supplies provide film sets with full control over the liquids used during long production hours. 

Cultural Shifts in Scriptwriting

Writers do not just throw in smoking scenes for cheap thrills anymore. Characters who smoke are often portrayed as stressed, flawed, or villainous. The hero is much more likely to choose a clean lifestyle or look for modern alternatives.

Modern scripts treat traditional cigarettes as a sign of decay or poor choices. Characters going through a personal crisis might turn to tobacco to show their lack of control. This contrasts sharply with the confident heroes of the past who smoked while saving the day. The modern protagonist prefers wellness and mental clarity over old habits.

Shifting Visual Norms on Screen

Modern screens show a complicated picture when it comes to tobacco habits. A research paper from a few years ago revealed that 60 percent of the 15 most popular television shows among young adults depicted tobacco use. This statistic surprises people who expect modern media to be completely smoke-free. Directors choose to include these elements to create a sense of gritty realism.

The choice to show tobacco usage often relates to the genre of the project - crime dramas and period pieces rely heavily on historical accuracy to satisfy viewers. Writers believe that omitting these habits would make the story feel dishonest. They want to show the world exactly as it was during those specific decades.

Public Health Perspectives and Viewer Intentions

Onscreen imagery directly impacts how people think about nicotine products. Data published in a medical journal showed that high exposure to tobacco imagery correlates with a 176 percent increase in the intention to use e-cigarettes. The same study noted a 168 percent increase in intentions to smoke traditional cigarettes for those with high exposure. Media creators face growing pressure to manage these representations carefully.

Advocacy groups monitor screen time for all types of smoking devices. They track how often main characters use these items compared to minor characters. Their reports aim to educate parents about the subtle messages hidden in popular entertainment. Many advocacy programs argue that onscreen behavior shapes youth culture faster than traditional advertising.

Regulations and Content Ratings

Content rating boards look closely at how characters use nicotine on screen. Certain standards push movies with heavy smoking toward higher age ratings. Producers follow specific guidelines to keep their ratings low:

  • Streaming platforms monitor nicotine use in original series.

  • Independent films use herbal alternatives to protect actors.

  • Historical dramas receive special exceptions for accuracy.

These methods help studios balance artistic freedom with public health concerns.

The classification process varies heavily between different countries. A film rated for general audiences in one country might get a strict teenage rating elsewhere. Studios navigate these rules during the editing phase to avoid losing massive audiences. They want to maximize ticket sales while respecting local cultural boundaries.

Behind the Scenes Choices

Actors do not usually smoke real tobacco on set anymore. Prop masters provide herbal options that look exactly like the real thing without the toxic chemicals. This change protects the health of the crew during long shooting days. Camera tricks and lighting make the fake smoke look realistic on camera as well.

The development of safe prop cigarettes required significant innovation. Early versions smelled terrible and tasted even worse for the performers. Modern prop houses create blends using rose petals, clover, and tea leaves to improve the experience. Actors can perform multiple takes without suffering from throat irritation or nicotine dizziness.

Global Distribution Realities

International markets influence how American movies handle this topic. Some countries have strict bans on showing tobacco logos or products in the media. Studios edit scenes or blur out packages to sell their films overseas. This financial reality shapes what ends up on screen before filming even starts.

Global box office numbers dictate many creative decisions in modern cinema. A movie might fail domestically but become a massive hit in Asian or European markets. Filmmakers keep these international preferences in mind during the script stage. They avoid elements that could lead to censorship or outright bans in profitable territories.

Cinema will always reflect the habits of society. As real-world preferences move toward cleaner alternatives, movie screens will follow that path. The imagery creates a lasting impression on how society views old and new habits. Directors will keep balancing history, character design, and public health in future projects.

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2026 Programme Unveiled For Europe’s Largest South Asian Film Festival ‘London Indian Film Festival’

Europe’s largest South Asian film festival, London Indian Film Festival (LIFF), with editions across the UK including the Birmingham Indian Film Festival and Manchester Indian Film Festival, celebrates its 17th year with a power-packed programme of rare major celebrity talks (Aamir Khan In Conversation, Goodness Gracious Me Reunion); Europe’s first Indian AI & Film Showcase […]

The post 2026 Programme Unveiled For Europe’s Largest South Asian Film Festival ‘London Indian Film Festival’ appeared first on Movie Marker.



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Erupcja ★★★★

Released: 5 June 2026 Director: Pete Ohs Starring: Charli XCX, Lena Gora, Will Madden It has become increasingly rare for theatrically released films to feel like they’re artisanal, lived-in, no-budget productions. Note the wording: “feel” is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Films that feel alive, films that feel real, almost like they could […]

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Learning to Make Great Movies for Any Purpose

If you are thinking about trying to make use of movies - perhaps for a promotional purpose, or really anything else - then it’s going to be necessary that you know how to make great movies. Creating a compelling film, whether for marketing, education, or pure artistic expression, requires more than just pointing a camera and pressing record. Learning to make great movies involves understanding storytelling, technical craft, and the audience you want to reach. With the right approach, anyone can create films that resonate, inspire, or inform, regardless of the project’s scale or purpose.

At the heart of every great movie is a story that captivates the viewer. Before considering cameras, lighting, or editing software, focus on the narrative. What message are you trying to convey? Who is your audience? Strong storytelling creates an emotional connection, making viewers care about the characters, events, or ideas on screen. Even a short promotional video benefits from this clarity, as audiences respond instinctively to well-structured narratives.

Technical Concerns

Technical skills are equally crucial. Understanding the basics of cinematography - framing, lighting, camera movement, and sound - can dramatically elevate the quality of your work. Lighting shapes mood and atmosphere, while thoughtful camera angles guide the viewer’s focus. Sound design, often overlooked, can transform a simple scene into an immersive experience. Learning these fundamentals allows you to plan and execute shots more effectively, whether you’re filming with a smartphone or professional cameras.

Editing is where your story truly comes together. The pace, rhythm, and transitions between shots determine how the story unfolds and how viewers feel. Learning to edit effectively requires both technical knowledge of software and an intuitive sense of timing and flow. Even subtle choices, like where to cut a scene or how long to linger on a shot, can have a profound impact on the overall narrative.

Collaboration

For those tackling more ambitious projects, collaborating with skilled professionals can make a significant difference. Hiring a video production team brings expertise in every stage of filmmaking, from pre-production planning to post-production polish. A team like PrimeAV can help you translate your vision into a polished final product, offering creative input, access to specialized equipment, and technical proficiency that may take years to develop independently. Whether you need guidance on scripting, cinematography, or post-production, a dedicated team ensures that the film reaches its full potential.

Purpose & Experimentation

Equally important is understanding the purpose of your film. Educational videos require clarity and structure, marketing videos need to engage quickly and communicate value, and narrative films must immerse viewers in a world. Tailoring your approach to the intended purpose ensures that every creative and technical decision supports your ultimate goal, rather than simply showcasing technical skill.

Practice and experimentation are vital. Each project teaches lessons that refine your craft, from choosing the right angles to capturing authentic performances. Studying films you admire, analyzing techniques, and applying them to your projects accelerates your learning and helps you develop a personal style. Over time, even small projects build the foundation for more ambitious work, expanding both technical expertise and creative confidence.

Distribution & Audience Engagement

Distribution and audience engagement complete the filmmaking process. A well-made movie is only effective if it reaches the right viewers. Platforms like social media, streaming services, and community screenings provide opportunities to showcase your work, while feedback from real audiences offers insights for improvement. Understanding how to present your film strategically ensures that the effort invested in production achieves meaningful impact.

Developing A Style

Expanding your filmmaking abilities involves exploring deeper creative and strategic dimensions that go beyond basic storytelling and technical proficiency. One of the first steps is developing a strong visual style. A consistent visual identity - through choices in color palette, lighting, composition, and camera movement - gives your films a distinctive personality. Think of iconic directors: their work is immediately recognizable because of how they frame the world and the moods they evoke. Experimenting with visual styles not only strengthens your films’ aesthetic appeal but also communicates tone and emotion without relying solely on dialogue or narration.

Pre-Production Planning

Another critical aspect is pre-production planning. A detailed plan ensures that the shoot runs smoothly and efficiently, reducing the likelihood of costly mistakes or delays. Storyboards, shot lists, and schedules allow you to visualise every scene, anticipate challenges, and align your team around a shared vision. While some may prefer improvisational approaches, having a solid pre-production framework provides a safety net that allows creativity to flourish within a structured process. Even simple films benefit from this level of preparation, as it ensures clarity and coherence in the final product.

Sound

Sound is often underestimated, yet it is one of the most powerful tools in filmmaking. Beyond dialogue, ambient noise, foley effects, and music shape the viewer’s emotional experience. Learning how to capture clean audio on set and how to mix it in post-production is essential. Poor sound quality can distract viewers, no matter how stunning the visuals are. Collaborating with a sound designer, or even consulting with one if hiring a full production team, elevates the film’s impact and professionalism significantly.

Marketing

For filmmakers aiming to create content with a commercial or organizational purpose, marketing strategies should be integrated into the production process. Collaborating with a video production team often includes guidance on content distribution and audience targeting. They can advise on formats suitable for social media, web platforms, or broadcast, ensuring your film reaches the right viewers in the right context. Considering the end use while filming allows for practical decisions around aspect ratios, subtitles, and branding, which ultimately increase the return on investment for the project.

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