The Standard (St. Catharines)

Doc looks at legend’s final years of life

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

- CHRIS LACKNER

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: This Bowie doc looks 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 behind-the-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 upand-coming artists compete for the opportunit­y to record — and perform — a new song written by a big-name producer or songwriter all, of course, while being mentored by the likes of Twain. In a compelling twist and immediate payoff, the mentors decide each week which version of the 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 of A-list mentors, including Fergie and 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-yearold teenage boy who wearsaloto­f 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.

@chrislackn­er79

 ?? 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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