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Film reviews x2: Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie, and Scarlet

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Film reviews x2: Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie, and Scarlet

If the winter blues have got you down, I highly recommend Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie (Rating: ✭✭✭✭), Matt Johnson’s Toronto-centric gonzo comedy that acts as a love letter to the city, movies, creative ingenuity and friendship. Make sure you see it in a packed movie theatre in the GTA. It’ll really increase the fun.

✅ = Critic’s pick / ✭✭✭✭✭ = outstanding, among best of the year / ✭✭✭✭ = excellent / ✭✭✭ = recommended / ✭✭ or ✭ = didn’t work for me

Matt and Jay (played by Johnson and co-writer/composer Jay McCarrol) have long wanted to play the legendary Rivoli — a desire that pretty much fuelled the web and TV series Nirvana the Band the Show and Nirvanna the Band the Show. At the top of the film, they hatch a brilliant (to them) idea of jumping off the CN Tower’s EdgeWalk attraction and parachuting into the SkyDome to announce their gig just a few blocks north.

Never mind that they aren’t booked to play the Rivoli. They’ll figure that out when it comes. And never mind that the stadium’s retractable roof is about to close.

When the stunt backfires — and I’m still not sure how they captured it so convincingly, complete with security guards — they regroup. And what they come up with is something even more outlandish involving an RV, a spilt bottle of Orbitz (remember those?) and a home-made flux capacitor that, of course, acts as a loving homage to the Back to the Future movies.

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This, in turn, takes them back to 2008, where they get to spy on their younger selves (thanks to the webseries footage), include lots of visual gags about male celebrities who are now cancelled (or news and entertainment weeklies that are now defunct) and tinker with the future by making a couple of changes.

The two actors have a blast both as their schlubby present-day versions and their slightly altered (in Jay’s case much altered) selves, sometimes improvising with people on the street and inserting themselves into real-life scenarios. One ingenious sequence was captured after the high-profile shooting last summer at Drake’s mansion in the Bridle Path.

Sure, they take liberties with the city’s geography a bit (oh for a movie theatre at Queen and University), but that’s to be expected when the comic and dramatic payoffs are so big.

The final act is too much fun to spoil. Let’s just say it’s extremely exciting and improbably moving. McCarrol, who wrote the film’s songs, is a great straight man to his extroverted on-screen partner. Johnson, decked out in his beige hat and crumpled sports jacket, is like some millennial Chaplin by way of Duddy Kravitz, capable of making you laugh one moment, cry the next.

The best thing about the film? Like those Back to the Future movies, not long after watching it you’ll want to see it again.

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Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie opens Feb. 13.

Scarlet (right) takes on Voltemand. Courtesy of Mongrel Media

Scarlet fever

So it turns out Hamnet isn’t the only feature film this season to draw on Shakespeare’s best-known tragedy.

There’s also Scarlet (Rating: ✭✭✭), Mamoru Hosoda’s anime epic that takes the bones of the play’s plot and places it in a completely different universe.

✅ = Critic’s pick / ✭✭✭✭✭ = outstanding, among best of the year / ✭✭✭✭ = excellent / ✭✭✭ = recommended / ✭✭ or ✭ = didn’t work for me

In war-torn 16th-century Denmark, King Amleth (Masachika Ichimura) would rather talk with his enemies than fight them. His brother Claudius (Kôji Yakusho) — who’s already sleeping with his wife, Gertrude — frames him for treason, and promptly has him executed. The young princess Scarlet (Mana Ashida) witnesses this, but doesn’t learn about her father’s final words until much later.

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When she, Claudius and a bunch of the play’s dramatis personae die, they find themselves in a purgatory world, all in search of the “Infinite Land,” where they’ll presumably be able to live forever. Scarlet befriends Hijiri (Masaki Okada), a contemporary medic (also dead) whose pacifist stance contrasts with her thirst for vengeance.

Hosoda (Oscar-nominated for Mirai) fails to explain why so many Elsinore citizens died in the first place. (I guess something really was rotten in the state of Denmark.) Sure, Claudius and Scarlet drank poison, but how did the others meet their ends? Where is Laertes in all this? And why doesn’t Scarlet seek out her dad for some advice?

It also feels like a missed opportunity to ignore what happens to Gertrude (Yuki Saitô), who was left in the “real world” after her second husband and daughter died. Does she feel any remorse?

Courtesy of Mongrel Media

Still, some of the visual backdrops, particularly of crowd scenes and vast, cavernous landscapes, are impressive — you can appreciate them in IMAX this week. (The film extends to regular theatres next week.)

And there’s charm of a different sort in watching two characters from different universes learn about each other’s cultures. At last year’s Venice Film Festival, Scarlet and Hijiri won the Nave d’Argento for Best OTP (One True Pairing), an award celebrating fan-favourite couples.

So there’s that.

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Scarlet is now playing in IMAX theatres and opens in more theatres Feb. 13

Coming soon: Winter review roundup #3: You, Always, Through the Eyes of God, Eureka Day; an interview with Eureka Day’s Jake Epstein and Sarah McVie; and more

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Movie Reviews

‘Balaramana Dinagalu’ review: A restrained look at the gangster mind

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‘Balaramana Dinagalu’ review: A restrained look at the gangster mind

In K M Chaitanya’s Aa Dinagalu (2007), actor Atul Kulkarni, playing gangster Agni Sreedhar, says man is the biggest weapon in the underworld. “The rest are just properties,” he adds. The yesteryear Kannada crime drama, based on the real incidents from a big chapter of the Bengaluru underworld, stood out for its understated storytelling.

In Balaramana Dinagalu, which has the skeleton of a sequel to Aa Dinagalu, weapons are seen in the first scene. As the film progresses, we encounter an arsenal of knives, razors, machetes, and guns — each an extension of the gangsters’ identities and an indispensable tool in their quest to remain feared and lethal. Chaitanya attempts to make the movie a mix of reality and entertaining tropes.

Balaramana Dinagalu (Kannada)

Director: K M Chaitanya

Cast: Vinod Prabhakar, Priya Anand, Atul Kulkarni, Ashish Vidyarthi, Ramesh Indira

Runtime: 151 minutes

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Storyline: Balarama, an ordinary young man from a remote village in Karnataka, becomes a dreaded gangster who rules Bengaluru

The director has roped in the same cast, who played the dreaded gangster trio of Kotwal Ramachandra (essayed by Sharath Lohitashwa), Jayaraj (Ashish Vidyarthi), and Agni Sreedhar (Atul) in Aa Dinagalu. That’s what makes one instantly curious about Balaramana Dinagalu. The only difference in the latest movie from the previous one is the fictionalised names of the real dons. Jayaraj becomes Jayaram, Sreedhar is Shashidhar, and Muthappa Rai is called Monnappa Rai (played by Ramesh Indira).

Even if these characters are the big draw in the movie, the plot revolves around the journey of Balarama, a character with a small yet significant presence in Aa Dinagalu. Vinod Prabhakar’s portrayal of the titular role is the film’s biggest takeaway. He makes us feel for the character, and is quite impressive in the final portions of the movie, where Balarama struggles to break free from the underworld’s trap.

Balaramana Dinagalu is impressive when it reflects the psychology of a gangster. Jayaram is shown helping the needy while Balarama urges young boys to focus on education. It’s as if these men who commit heinous acts, have a heart as well. Shashidhar is often called “intellectual gangster”, as the film reflects how the underworld fears well-read men in the field. Politicians and policemen, the supposedly the protectors of people being part of the crime nexus, strengthen the movie’s world-building.

The film falters in its inability to rise above the plot’s predictability. Balarama’s journey is no different from the often-seen life of an innocent man from a small town who becomes a gangster owing to uncontrollable circumstances. I wish the film had delved a bit more into Balaram’s personality. Why does he not resist becoming a gangster? What dreams did he have when he moved to Bengaluru from a small town?

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“My hands speak louder than my words,” says Balarama. This signals that he is someone who settles conflicts with fists rather than conversations. Despite this detail, Balaram’s entry into the underworld feels too sudden. The predictability strips the sheen away from the well-shot action sequences, as the result of every fight is known beforehand.

Chaitanya is careful not to glorify the act of violence. He wants to portray the negative effects of violence on the children in a family, as the movie ends with a hard-hitting frame. It’s impressive that the actor-director duo has delivered a non-hero-worshipping gangster saga.

That said, the movie could have benefited from a couple of gripping episodes. While it’s important not to romanticise the life of a gangster, there is no harm in delivering moments of peak tension, the biggest plus of the genre. 

The assassination of Jayaram, the impact of Kotwal’s elimination on the underworld, or the Sakleshpura incident involving Monnappa Rai, had the potential to offer edge-of-the-seat, high-stakes portions, but they are rushed. The love story is simple, but it lacks emotional intensity between the lead couple. Santhosh Narayanan’s dance numbers are forgettable (despite it being his forte) while his montage melodies are beautiful.

Balaramana Dinagalu adopts a restrained, almost clinical approach to the gangster genre. While that keeps it from glorifying violence, it also leaves the narrative feeling a touch too neat and emotionally muted.

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Balaramana Dinagalu is currently running in theatres

Published – June 28, 2026 07:58 pm IST

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Movie Reviews

A New Dawn Anime Film Review

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A New Dawn Anime Film Review

Perhaps there’s a certain irony in a story about a fireworks factory mostly keeping away from explosive drama. Yoshitoshi Shinomiya‘s lowkey feature directorial debut A New Dawn is at the very least visually captivating, comprised of lush and rather hypnotic production design. The story is small scale focusing on a trio of friends who try to save a fireworks factory in their hometown, but the imagery feels expansive and lush. A New Dawn begins with a beautiful and vaguely familiar display of this beauty: the flowing, painterly imagery of its opening sequence recalls Shinomiya’s work on the flashback sequence in Makoto Shinkai‘s your name., immediately showing that the film’s visuals might transcend its small town drama.

A background artist himself on films by Makoto Shinkai as well as the similarly resplendent Pompo: The Cinéphile, it makes sense that this history would be felt in the background works of A New Dawn. They’re dense with detail, rich with almost luminous color and illustrative texture. Shinomiya, who also wrote and storyboarded the film, veers away from the photorealism associated with someone like Shinkai through some impressionist touches – like the splotches of green paint which represent treelines – which sometimes turns into outright abstraction like when a character begins to run through the space. Sometimes there are swaying, morphing textures in the background as splotches of paint subtly shift around. On a more intimate level, the cluttered and characterful interior spaces tell a story too. This is a long-winded way of saying A New Dawn looks really, really good.

It’s not just in the tableaux of its countryside habitats and ramshackle living spaces carved out of abandoned warehouses, but there’s a sense of invention permeating through A New Dawn‘s various experiments with visual languages of animation. The most prominent is an incredibly charming stop motion animated sequence using a cardboard diorama and real human hands invading the shot in a creative reflection of a drunken character’s perspective. Even though it broadly still looks “anime” through its character design, there are also smaller details which work to set A New Dawn apart from its contemporaries, touches like its occasional lineless artwork or the way rain is defined through smudged black brushstrokes.

It’s in the screenwriting where A New Dawn begins to feel more run of the mill. Its story about the constant chasing of the majesty of a fabled firework “Shuhari” feels both familiar in its premise but also a little bit alienating in its structure. The importance of the firework itself never feels clear – the moment its mystery is unravelled hardly feels like a revelation as a result, something amplified by how the writing often obfuscates what anyone is talking about. The whole story feels a little distancing, and despite the allure of the background art and design of the spaces the characters inhabit, the people themselves feel constantly at arms length.

It almost pulls things back with its climax – the detonation of the “Shuhari” goes a long way in justifying the circular conversations about its nature and origins – a painted streak of light launches into the sky before turning into something otherworldly, suddenly tripling down on the film’s captivating exaggerations.

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Hollywood Pariah Kevin Spacey Opens in a Straight to Video Movie with 25 Producers, 1 Review, No Theaters, No Press – Showbiz411

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Hollywood Pariah Kevin Spacey Opens in a Straight to Video Movie with 25 Producers, 1 Review, No Theaters, No Press – Showbiz411
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As we know, Kevin Spacey is a pariah in Hollywood.

He’s in a rare club with Mel Gibson, Armie Hammer, Nate Parker, Jonathan Majors, and James Franco.

Spacey has managed to avoid jail time by reaching settlements with various accusers of sexual malfeasance, all men.

His film career — which included two Oscars and a Tony Award — has been destroyed.

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Spacey has been reduced to appearing in straight to video films, made for whatever reason the various producers involved know only to themselves.

On Friday, a new Spacey movie surfaced against its will, but not in theaters. It also went straight to video. “1780” is a period piece set during the Revolutionary War. Spacey plays a toothless Pennsylvania country trapper.

There is no rating on Rotten Tomatoes, largely because there is only one review. The review by Alan Ng of Film Threat is positive. Ng recently reviewed “World War Bigfoot,” which he also liked. He seems to specialize in reviewing films no one has heard of.

“1780” does boast 25 producers who will probably not see a return on their investment. But they can say they made a movie with Kevin Spacey.

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