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    Movie Review

    Student and teacher play with fire in awkward drama Miller's Girl

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 26, 2024 | 11:48 am

    Stories that dare to depict relationships between someone who is underage and an adult who should know better are some of the trickiest to pull off well. If not treated with enough care, a film could come off as a tacit endorsement of such a bond, an idea with which some filmmakers may be okay, but most surely want to avoid.

    The new film Miller’s Girl walks that tightrope in a way that may not be as successful as writer/director Jade Halley Bartlett had intended. Cairo Sweet (Jenna Ortega) is a high schooler who – as she explains in the first of many voiceovers - lives alone in a big house in Tennessee, with her parents “permanently abroad.” This leaves her to her own devices, including harboring a crush on her English teacher, Jonathan Miller (Martin Freeman).

    With more than a little encouragement by her flirty best friend, Winnie (Gideon Adlon) – who has a crush of her own on teacher/coach Boris Fillmore (Bashir Salahuddin) – Cairo begins pursuing Mr. Miller by engaging with him about their shared love of writing, especially the work of the notoriously prurient Henry Miller. With Mr. Miller a little too welcoming of her attention, it’s clear it won’t be long until the whole situation comes to a head.

    Given that the film is made by a female filmmaker, you’d figure that the point of view would be one that bends toward showing how wrong it is for a teacher to indulge in a student’s crush, no matter how much she pursues him. And while Bartlett certainly doesn’t ignore that aspect of the story, the way she structures the film gives both Cairo and Mr. Miller – as well as Winnie and Mr. Fillmore – plenty of latitude in allowing the pursuit.

    The film is odd in a number of other ways, as well. Miller and his wife, Bea (Dagmara Domincyzk), share a series of weird scenes in which she is in an almost constant state of undress for no compelling reason. The majority of the film takes place at the high school, but most of the sequences feature only the two girls and the two teachers in various combinations, as if no one else were there.

    Most curious of all is how the moments when Cairo and Mr. Miller get the closest are treated. They have a romantic, seductive vibe to them, with the cinematography, music, voiceovers, and a silky dress Cairo wears all combining to make it seem like Bartlett wants the audience to be okay with the two of them getting together. An unsatisfying ending only confuses matters more.

    For all the story issues the film has, none of it is the fault of the actors, who give uniformly good performances, even with the thick Southern accents several of them employ. Ortega is a rising star thanks to her roles in the Scream series and Netflix show Wednesday, and she’s highly effective in this role. Freeman isn’t your typical heartthrob, but he plays the conflicted teacher part well. Adlon, Salahuddin, and Domincyzk are believable in their roles, even if their arcs are a little strange.

    Perhaps other critics will have a greater insight into what Bartlett was trying to accomplish with Miller’s Girl, but this critic was left highly uncomfortable with how the story was presented. While teacher-student relationships have happened in the real world, depicting them in a film requires a nuance that seems to be missing here.

    ---

    Miller's Girl opens in select theaters on January 26.

    Gideon Adlon and Jenna Ortega in Miller's Girl
      

    Photo courtesy of Lionsgate

    Gideon Adlon and Jenna Ortega in Miller's Girl.

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    Movie Review

    New Superman film honors the past while forging into the future

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 11, 2025 | 1:26 pm
    David Corenswet in Superman
    Photo by Jessica Miglio
    David Corenswet in Superman.

    When the character of Superman was invented in 1938, it was perhaps easier to see the world in good and bad terms. Fascism was already on the rise in Germany under Adolf Hitler, and the idea of an all-powerful superhero who stood up for people in need was a welcome one. In the nearly 90 years since, though, the world and the character have undergone multiple evolutions, and the thought of someone who is purely good is often met with cynicism or worse.

    The new Superman, written and directed by James Gunn, puts the superhero (or metahuman, as the film calls him and similar creatures) squarely in the midst of the modern world, with geopolitical conflicts, mega-corporations, and social media all combining to make the altruism of Superman/Clark Kent (David Corenswet) questionable. That skepticism even extends to his coworker/girlfriend Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan), whose knowledge of his exploits puts her in a tricky position personally and professionally.

    Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult) is out to dominate the world and take down Superman, with his eponymous corporation and vast group of underlings dedicated to doing both. Superman is generally a one-man fighting crew, but he’s occasionally aided by a group calling themselves the Justice Gang, comprised of heroes many have never heard of like Guy Gardner (Nathan Fillion), a version of Green Lantern; Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced), a flying metahuman; and Mr. Terrific (Edi Gathegi), who knows all kinds of technology.

    One of the best things about this new version of Superman is that it mostly dispenses with introductions, putting the audience in a world where Superman is already a well-known quantity who’s adored by many and hated by some. Gunn has used his new position as co-CEO of DC Studios to honor the past of the hero and take him into the future. With the 1978 John Williams theme song echoing throughout and Corenswet giving off Christopher Reeve vibes, it’s clear Gunn wants audiences to feel nostalgia while still getting something new.

    He also appears to want viewers to fight against the negativity that the modern world can bring. The plot involves manipulation of the public, usually at the hands of Luthor, through bombastic talk shows, political theater, and social media, the latter of which - in a great joke - comes to involve hundreds of typing monkeys. The film could be read as a rebuttal of many real-world ills as, despite Luthor’s machinations, many choose to continue to believe in the goodness of Superman.

    There is a lot going on in the film, but somehow it never comes off as overly complicated. Superman’s relationship with Lois Lane and Luthor’s attempts at taking him down are given the most prominence, with everything else supporting those two main things. The Justice Gang is a fun addition, with Mr. Terrific becoming the breakout hero of the group. The addition of the (CGI) dog Krypto provides levity, poignant moments, and unexpectedly great action scenes. The only part that gets somewhat short shrift is the crew of The Daily Planet, with everyone besides Lois and Jimmy Olsen (Skyler Gisondo) getting little more than face time.

    Being the new Superman is a lot to live up to, but Corenswet is completely up to the job. He, like Reeve, plays the character as someone who is earnest but not naive, a quality that comes through even when he’s in the middle of fight scenes. Brosnahan is also fantastic, providing a nice balance to the relationship while also proving the character’s own worth. Hoult makes for a great new version of Luthor, and Gathegi nearly makes the case that Mr. Terrific should get a starring film of his own.

    Just as he did with the Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy, Gunn has shown that success can be found through making characters people want to see. Not everyone in this Superman will be familiar to viewers, but in the end a group of people working together toward a goal that serves the common good is one worth watching and cheering for.

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    Superman is now playing in theaters.

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