Is Now a Good Time? (2024) - 1/10 | 🚮 | Unacceptable
I wasn't sure if it was supposed to be a comedy because not only wasn't it funny but I also didn't even know it was supposed to be funny until I saw its genre tags long after watching it.
There are some lines that I'd rather call witty than funny, even though witty isn't the right word either. Deadpan, perhaps? Not really that either. Not that it matters much. Ultimately, this is pretty bad as a film.
Here's the thing: it's much harder to make a great short because you have less time to create an atmosphere and films need breathing. You can feel it in this film. It's so tightly packed that it gives no time for breathing, which is ironic given this is exactly how I'd describe Marvel movies.
In theory, I should at least respect it for criticizing Marvel/Disney as a company that is overly focused on money and includes LGBT characters only if it doesn't sabotage its gross. Still, these are such obvious and trite points that one doesn't need to make a film, not even a short film, about that. Companies care only about profit - wow, that's new. Marvel is the poison in the good well of cinema - no sh*t?! I've been evangelizing about it for close to 10 years now. This short falls within the category of films that can start a discussion but whose existence is not excused by anything. A forum post can start a discussion on this topic. I started it a few times myself! You can make a film about it, but I see no point. It won't be a good film.
But maybe if one thinks about
Is Now a Good Time? more, deeper meaning will surface? The meaning behind the dying kid? Now that I think of it, the idea the last film you'll ever watch is a Marvel film is indeed worthy of Cummings' reaction. But the kid brought it on himself for being a fan of Marvel anyway, so it makes no sense. Also, why did the kid ask about gays in Marvel? Was the kid gay himself and wanted representation in the content he watches? That interpretation would be painfully trite.
In addition to all the above, the juxtaposition of this short's swearing and gay sex relative to Captain America 4 which is supposed not to have any is another failed piece of screenwriting where the screenwriter thinks this juxtaposition is amazing and deep while it's just hackneyed, banal, cliched, platitudinous, vapid, etc., etc..
To finish this off because I already dedicated much more time to this short than it deserves, there's a thing many people believe. They believe that to make a sublime film you must make it complicated and/or deep. But this isn't true. You can make it pretty simple. You only need to make it
feel profound. You can do that by skillfully writing it in a way that escapes easy categorization or dismissal and by utilizing visuals and music that bring it to the higher echelons of artistic excellence. In other words, good screenwriting is making the viewer
FEEL, NOT THINK. You don't need to think extraneously to tell if a film is good. It's self-evident from just experiencing it. Thinking sometimes makes the film even worse in your eyes. Case in point:
Is Now a Good Time?. This film is bad because it made me think to try and find any good thing about it. But there's nothing, maybe save for Cunnings' performance. And the more I think about this short, the less I like it. Well, I didn't like it to begin with, so all the thinking was a waste of time. We should always go with our instincts when it comes to art.