The Niagara Falls Review

Doc looks at legend’s final years of life

Pop forecast: What to expect in movies, television, and music

- CHRIS LACKNER @chrislackn­er79

Big releases on Jan. 12: The Commuter; Paddington 2.

Big picture: Liam Neeson has thwarted terrorists, Siths and Greek gods. But this film sees him facing his most vile nemesis yet: The Commuter.

“Most of us ride this train every day, but how much do we really know about each other?” Liam Neeson’s gravelly-voiced businessma­n-turned-action-hero lends the line added melodrama. Neeson’s new flick finds him trapped on a commuter train with an endangered witness, criminals and a hostage situation that rapidly gets … err … derailed. It’s like Murder on the Orient Express meets Speed and Speed 2.

Meanwhile, Paddington 2 is the family-friendly sequel that wasn’t deemed good enough to watch at Christmas. This is for everyone who has ever wanted to watch a villainous Hugh Grant try to outwit a talking bear in a blue coat and red hat.

Forecast: I would have preferred Paddington 2: Meet Ted, in which the innocent bear is old schooled by the potty-mouthed, amoral teddy bear. I also predict Neeson’s next project will be an action affair called The Dog Walker: “Most of you poop in this park every day, but how much do we really know about each other.”

TV

Big events: David Bowie: The Last Five Years (Jan. 8, HBO Canada); The Launch (Jan. 10, CTV).

Big picture: ThisBowied­oclooks at the music legend’s final, prolific years of life — two new albums (The Next Day and Blackstar) as well as Lazarus, a Broadway musical. Bowie’s brilliant musical mind feels like it gets a second life in the hands of director Francis Whately. The HBO original includes behindthe-scenes footage of Ziggy Stardust himself. As one interviewe­e puts it, “he offered an alternativ­e to people for generation­s to come.” How many people can claim that as an epitaph?

Meanwhile, The Launch is a new Canadian music-reality TV series promising to “deliver a new platform” for homegrown artists — even as the big music studios march onward towards irrelevanc­e and bankruptcy. Shania Twain mentors in the premiere. In each episode, five up-and-coming artists compete for the opportunit­y to record — and perform — a new song written by a bigname producer or songwriter all, of course, while being mentored by the likes of Twain. In a compelling twist and immediate payoff, the mentors decideeach­weekwhichv­ersionofth­e song will be released across the country. World-renowned music mogul Scott Borchetta co-created the series, and is the fixture amid a rotating cast ofA-listmentor­s,includingF­ergieand Alessia Cara.

Forecast: The Launch won’t find us a new Bowie, but it deserves to tout its own horn for trying to reinvent a tired TV genre.

Music

Big releases on Jan. 12: Anderson East (Encore); Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (Wrong Creatures).

Big Picture: Anderson East returns with more Alabama-bred rhythm-and-blues. Meanwhile, popular rockers the Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (my pick for one of the top 10 pretentiou­s-sounding band names of all time) deliver new tunes with titles likes Spook, King of Bones and Haunt.

Forecast: BRMC will reveal that its lead singer is, in fact, a 15-year-old teenage boy who wears a lot of black. Meanwhile, a money-hungry producer will find unreleased Bowie studio cuts in the near future. We haven’t said our last farewells to the icon.

 ?? SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Bowie’s brilliant musical mind feels like it gets a second life in the hands of director Francis Whately.
SUPPLIED PHOTO Bowie’s brilliant musical mind feels like it gets a second life in the hands of director Francis Whately.

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