Something changed in 2012 when a little movie called THE HUNGER GAMES grossed $408 million, opening to gigantic $152.5 million over one weekend in March. Something clicked, and the Hollywood studios realized that they could release their big-budget "tentpole" event movies, usually reserved for the "Summer Movie Season" (May-August) and a few for the "Holiday Movie Season" (Thanksgiving-Christmas), just about anytime they want to and still make prime season dollars. It's not like it was the first time a non-summer, non-holiday season movie had made blockbuster dollars, but THE HUNGER GAMES was
huge. Now, major brands like Marvel releases movies like THOR: THE DARK WORLD and CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER in the months November and April, respectively, and strike gold, with the added benefit of less competition than they would face in the busier summer months. This has led to a lot of discussion though about whether the summer movie season still begins in May. Of course it still begins in May! You might as well argue that it's not Christmas just because there aren't presents. Without presents, it may be a pretty lame Christmas, but it's still Christmas When movies of summer blockbuster caliber are released in March, that doesn't mean that March is now part of the summer movie season, it just means that March is now more awesome. But the summer movie season still runs from the first weekend in May to the end of August, or at least until the big movies stop coming, whichever comes first.
NOTES ON THE 2014 SUMMER MOVIE SEASON
- Kicking off the summer, THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2 was one-part ridiculously charming and two-parts a showcase of the worst possibilities of a post-AVENGERS multi-character crossover attempt. The over-the-top fun of the opening action sequence and the beautiful interactions between Andrew Garfield's Peter Parker and Emma Stone's Gwen Stacy were so good, making the bad things so much more infuriating, because we know they could do better, if not for the misguided "franchise-building." Not technically a huge disappointment, because expectations weren't terribly high to begin with, but definitely a disappointment in its own conflict. It did introduce the schadenfroh pleasure of the "Spider-Man Shuffle," when a studio, in this case Sony, is so sure of a franchise that they schedule multiple installments for the next several years, only to shuffle those around after a film under-performs, in this case, THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2.
- X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST was the best lot of superheroes in a summer unusually low on superheroes, a summer staple for the past decade. Imperfect, but an impressively-mounted science fiction epic with powerful emotional resonance, DAYS OF FUTURE PAST edged out even the late-summer smash hit GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, with as much humor and character as that film, but better action.
- MALEFICENT, the latest in Walt Disney Pictures' mining of their legendary animated fairy tales canon for live-action, special effects-heavy blockbusters, was better than it was given credit for, but admittedly, I was overly generous in my initial review. My expectations were fairly low, but my first viewing was an unexpectedly pleasant experience, and while my head was saying 3 out of 4 stars, my heart was saying 3.5 out of 4 stars, and wanting to emphasize my positive feelings about it, I went with the latter. On a second viewing, I might have gone as low as 2.5 out of 4 stars, but I still say it was a harmless diversion, and it's not like the 1959 animated so-called classic was all that much better outside of its technical craft.
- June opened with a great sci-fi action film characteristic of summer cinema and a comparatively small teen romance atypical of summer cinema, with the former failing terribly at the U.S. box office and the latter over-performing significantly. The former was EDGE OF TOMORROW, a film that I might just as soon have written off but wound up loving (see "Best Movies of Summer 2014"), and the latter was THE FAULT IN OUR STARS, which I was very eager to see, but was a little underwhelmed by.
- Two sequels released on the same day, HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 and 22 JUMP STREET, were both abnormally good sequels. 22 JUMP STREET, the box office winner, was a raunchy and thoroughly self-aware R-rated comedy, and HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 underperformed (you can still expect another come 2016) but improved handily on the overrated original as a darker, more widely-scoped adventure.
- Currently the highest-grossing film of the summer (it's grossed $1 billion internationally despite under-performing slightly in the U.S., making a tempting case for "American exceptionalism"), TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION was the worst movie of the summer, beating out another Michael Bay-related production, TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES, for the title with its obscene 165 minute running time.
- July was dreadfully dull, with the lone bright spot of DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (unless you were near a theater playing the independent film BOYHOOD), which turned the big special effect-driven blockbuster formula on its head with well-constructed characters and striking visuals.
- GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY came in and rescued the summer season as a quality sci-fi action-comedy that performed spectacularly at the box office and is currently on track to out-gross not only TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION to be the #1 movie of the summer, but also Marvel's last film, CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER, to be the #1 movie of the year, at least until THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 comes out in November.

THE BEST MOVIES OF SUMMER 2014
1. BOYHOOD (DRAMA)
Directed by Richard Linklater
Starring: Ellar Coltrane, Ethan Hawke, Patricia Arquette, Lorelei Linklater
Rated R for language including sexual references, and for teen drug and alcohol use.
Most people won't consider this a real "summer movie," seeing as it's actually a low budget independent drama that's only been gradually expanding from five theaters to several hundred currently, but it's a summer independent movie and shouldn't be passed up. It has one heck of hook, having been filmed over the course of twelve years from 2002 through 2014, with writer/director Richard Linklater reuniting the same cast, led by Ellar Coltrane who is seven-years-old in the first scene and nineteen-years-old in the final scene. In addition, the rest of the cast, including Patricia Arquette as his mother, Ethan Hawke as his father and Linklater's daughter Lorelei Linklater as his sister are followed as they change and grow throughout the years. It just may be one of the greatest behind-the-scenes stories in the history of modern cinema, but against all the odds, it justifies its audacious production as an incredible and remarkable, epic and yet intimate drama the likes of which we aren't likely to see again. It's almost three hours long, and not a minute of it is boring, but it isn't until you've reached the journey's end and can look back on it, having witnessed over a decade of life illustrated in the little moments, that you realize just how exhilarating and satisfying it is. FORREST GUMP turns 20 this year and is even getting a 20th Anniversary re-issue in IMAX, and in contrast to that film's fairy tale mentality of man experiencing history in retrospect, what makes BOYHOOD so important is the light it shines on history as its being discovered. There are no on-screen subtitles to indicate the year each chapter takes place in, but the details make it clear regardless, and as all those details (excepting the soundtrack, with songs corresponding to the given years) are being filmed as those then-current events were current. We aren't looking at the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the 2008 Presidential Elections or the supposed end of the Star Wars film series depicted in hindsight, where it can be milked for exploitative nostalgic value. It's an opportunity to experience our recent past once again, as it was happening, in a grand epic narrative filled with rich, evolving and endearing characters.
2. EDGE OF TOMORROW (SCI-FI/ACTION)
Directed by Doug Liman
Starring: Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Bill Paxton, Brendan Gleeson
Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, language and brief suggestive material.
Not that I have anything against Tom Cruise, but I wasn't expecting much from EDGE OF TOMORROW at the start of the summer. Director Doug Liman hadn't done anything really good in a long while, and Tom Cruise's recent work had been a bit lukewarm, but goodness, both were at the top of their game and had an ace-in-the-hole with Emily Blunt as the "Full Metal Bitch." A cross between ALIENS and GROUNDHOG DAY, with a dash of SAVING PRIVATE RYAN, EDGE OF TOMORROW, formerly ALL YOU NEED IS KILL, was the biggest and best surprise of the summer. Tom Cruise gives a surprisingly humorous performance, Emily Blunt is the biggest badass of the summer, and the action showpiece, a D-Day-style battle on a French beach between the legitimately nightmarish alien "Mimics" and a futuristic Earth military is astounding and startling. Plus, it's an awful lot of fun.
3. DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (SCI-FI/ACTION-THRILLER)
Directed by Matt Reeves
Starring: Andy Serkis, Jason Clarke, Toby Kebbell, Gary Oldman, Keri Russell
Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and action, and brief strong language.
It was a little frustrating that DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES's really cool marketing wasn't particularly representative of the film itself, and I'd still really like to see that grand battle for dominion of the planet, but once you get past that, it's an unusually intellectual blockbuster that justifies its incredible visual effects. Andy Serkis is still the King of Motion-Capture Performing, having found in Caesar his greatest role since Gollum/Smeagol in THE LORD OF THE RINGS, and his fellow mo-cap performers don't disappoint either. The sci-fi "world-building" here is top-notch, but what most makes the film remarkable is its well-rounded main players, especially the quartet of Andy Serkis' Ceasar, Toby Kebbell's Koba, Jason Clarke's Malcolm and Gary Oldman's Dreyfus, all four of whom are sympathetic and given understandable motivations, even in the midst of their conflicts. There are still a lot of flaws, but nothing too major, and all mostly overshadowed by the film's strengths. It's equal parts sci-fi action blockbuster and character drama, and in today's world, it certainly doesn't hurt to represent an anti-gun opinion, a stance which DAWN OF... is surprisingly bold in.
WORST MOVIES OF THE SUMMER
TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION (SCI-FI/ACTION)
Directed by Michael Bay
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Nicola Peltz, Jack Reynor, Stanley Tucci, Kelsey Grammer
Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and action, language and brief innuendo.
When you pass the 2-hour mark, you surrender your option to the "dumb fun" defense. Ninety minutes is the optimum running time for dumb fun, but if it's really fun and not too dumb, a 2-hour running time can be justified. TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION runs a mind-boggling two hours and forty-five minutes, and has something around a 15:1 ratio of dumb to fun. There's very little I think to defend director Michael Bay with, especially when his films are not only less-than-entertaining, but they're also full of dreadfully irresponsible role models, racism, sexism and homophobia, all while catering to an impressionable young male audience. I can't even give a very strong defense for him as a director of action scenes, because for every good one, he has a few unhinged, bombastic, convoluted ones. But I don't even feel like he cares about this film; it feels a like a checklist of Michael Bay trademarks been checked off with indifference. It's not even as remarkably bad as REVENGE OF THE FALLEN, probably the worst major blockbuster of the last twenty years at least; it's just routine bad. The whole thing is bewildering.
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (ACTION/FANTASY)
Directed by Jonathan Liebesman
Starring: Megan Fox, Will Arnett, William Fichtner, Noel Fisher, Alan Ritchson
Rated PG-13 for sci-fi action violence.
Michael Bay's been getting a lot of flack from critics for this newest iteration of the mutated teenage turtles who are ninjas, but I don't think that's quite fair. Bay's responsible for TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION, and that's bad enough, and while he acted as producer on the 2014 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES and brought down hellfire from the internet fanboys for trying to make the Ninja Turtles into aliens, this doesn't strike me as Bay's brand of crap. It does not surprise me, however, that this came from director Jonathan Liebesman, the man behind WRATH OF THE TITANS. The real shame is, while I knew well-enough that TRANSFORMERS 4 was essentially a lost cause, I actually had some hope for NINJA TURTLES. I wasn't really into them as a kid, so I have no emotional attachment to them, but the previews looked kind of cool and I loved the cross-marketing campaign, such as Ninja Turtle Crush pop cans. But this movie failed on almost every level, and the only saving grace was its relatively brief 100-minute running time. The turtles are hideous and unpleasant to look at, having fallen into some bizarre uncharted territory of the "uncanny valley," Megan Fox is a bland leading lady, the camera is wildly and unnecessarily shaky and frenetic, all the jokes fall dead flat and the script was obviously subjected to heavy re-writes during shooting, because there are major inconsistencies and ridiculous shortcuts. I went in with good faith and left actively disliking this movie.
MOST DISAPPOINTING MOVIE
GODZILLA
Directed by Gareth Edwards
Starring: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe, Bryan Cranston, Elizabeth Olsen, Sally Hawkins, Juliette Binoche
PG-13 for intense sequences of destruction, mayhem and creature violence.
It's not that GODZILLA was bad, because it's not a bad movie, but it should have been a lot more. It's a good movie with a crippling flaw- if you're going to go "slow burn" with your big-budget monster movie, you damn well better have some interesting characters, and this movie did not provide in that department. The character who may have been an interesting lead turned out to be a red herring, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson, or rather his character, was bland stock military character. To be fair, there's a lot to be praised in this reboot of GODZILLA, and assuming they learn from their mistakes, the upcoming sequel (scheduled for 2018) will be worthwhile. By the final act, there's a lot of payoff for our patience, but I'd just as soon skip the human drama if it isn't going to add anything.
BEST SUMMER COMEDY
22 JUMP STREET (ACTION-COMEDY)
Directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller
Starring: Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum, Ice Cube, Wyatt Russell, Peter Stormare, Amber Stevens, Jillian Bell
Rated R for language throughout, sexual content, drug material, brief nudity and some violence.
NEIGHBORS was a really funny and pleasant release early in the summer, which was largely disappointing, but I've got to give 22 JUMP STREET the edge for ingenuity. From the title itself to the self-mocking vignettes that play with the end credits, 22 JUMP STREET is a rare worthy comedy sequel. Parodying buddy cop movie, blockbuster filmmaking, romantic-comedies, media franchises and just about everything it is or can get its hands on, the film's directing team of Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (also responsible for THE LEGO MOVIE, CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS and 21 JUMP STREET) have essentially written themselves a blank check for audience and studio credit on whatever they want to tackle next. And it isn't even the best movie they've put out this year.
THE SUMMER'S HIDDEN GEM
SNOWPIERCER (SCI-FI/ACTION-THRILLER)
Directed by Joon-ho Bong
Starring: Chris Evans, Kang-ho Song, Ah-sung Ko, Jamie Bell, John Hurt, Tilda Swinton, Ed Harris, Alison Pill, Ewen Bremner
Rated R for violence, language and drug content.
The Weinstein Company, which acquired the rights to North American distribution for this South Korean film, demanded substantial edits and the addition of a narration before it played in theaters, but when director Joon-ho Bong refused to make the alterations, the Weinstein Company agreed to release it in its uncut form but only in eight theaters, eventually expanded to a few hundred. But, it was also made available on VOD services (digital rental). Despite the unceremonious release, there's nothing that separates SNOWPIERCER from the better movies playing in theaters everywhere. Based on a French graphic novel, the film is primarily in English with a mostly English-speaking cast, led by Chris Evans (best known as Steve Rogers/Captain America in the Marvel Cinematic Universe), with Jamie Bell (the title character in THE ADVENTURES OF TINTIN), Tilda Swinton (known for THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE) and John Hurt (recently seen in HERCULES). Set in 2031, after a last-ditch attempt to slow global warming inadvertently started another ice age, killing all life on Earth, save for the passengers on a lone, massive train, the
Snowpiercer, which circumvents the globe with a perpetual-motion engine, piercing through the snow and ice on its tracks. The society of the
Snowpiercer inhabitants has formed a class system, with those living closer to the engine living in opulence, while those at the tail end are impoverished and suppressed by the cruelty of the upper class. But the tail end passengers are ready to stage another rebellion, and if they can take over the engine, they can take over the train. In the tradition of classical science fiction, SNOWPIERCER is a richly detailed, heavily layered commentary on our own society's problems, and nuanced in its judgement, asking hard questions without easy answers. The action is sometimes stunning and often exhilarating, and the cast is top-notch. This isn't a cheap little movie or an arthouse film with limited appeal; there's as much and more to enjoy in SNOWPIERCER as there is in any big summer blockbuster, and it'll make you think.
Note: Because I'm not a professional film critic or writer, this article is subject to the films that I, as a private film-goer and theater projectionist, was able to see this summer. As a disclaimer, these are the summer releases that I'm including in my consideration:
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2
NEIGHBORS
GODZILLA
X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST
MALEFICENT
THE FAULT IN OUR STARS
EDGE OF TOMORROW
22 JUMP STREET
HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2
TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION
SNOWPIERCER
DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES
BOYHOOD
PLANES: FIRE & RESCUE
HERCULES
GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES