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Notice to Quit โ€” Mediaversity Reviews

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Notice to Quit โ€” Mediaversity Reviews

Title: Notice to Quit (2024)
Director: Simon Hacker ๐Ÿ‘จ๐Ÿผ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
Writer: Simon Hacker ๐Ÿ‘จ๐Ÿผ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Reviewed by Li ๐Ÿ‘ฉ๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Technical: 3.25/5

In a solidly built feature debut by writer-director Simon Hacker, Notice to Quit follows a simple premise: A deadbeat dad who hasnโ€™t seen his daughter in months suddenly finds himself saddled with her care. Said daughter, 10-year-old Anna (Kasey Bella Suarez), is distraught over her and her momโ€™s impending move from New York City to Florida (a โ€œswamp,โ€ Anna gripes). On the childโ€™s last day in the city, she runs away to spend time with her dad, Andy (Michael Zegen).

The emotional beats of this fast-paced dramedy wonโ€™t surprise anyone. Across genres, from kidsโ€™ movie Despicable Me (2010) to the grittier Logan (2017), a cantankerous father figure is forced into babysitting a precocious young girl before softening towards her by filmโ€™s end. In Notice to Quit, washed up rental agent/hustler Andy and whipsmart Anna play their roles dutifully.

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While itโ€™s not the familiar plot that carries this film, Hacker deftly creates a bursting love letter to working class New Yorkers, in all their brash and unscrupulous swagger. Viewers find themselves thrown onto a roller coaster ride of chaos and city hijinks, recalling the punishing pace of Uncut Gems (but without the debilitating sense of dread). From finding a cockroach in a diner to arguing with your gruff-but-secretly-kind immigrant landlord, to having your financial solvency center around the cityโ€™s housing market, the movie taps into a very real New York experienceโ€”and splashes it on screen for audiences to laugh at (or commiserate with).ย 

Gender: 3.5/5
Does it pass the Bechdel Test? YES

Although Anna has a headlining role with plenty of screentime, Hacker clearly has his sights set on main character Andy. Itโ€™s Andyโ€™s hectic day we follow, and Anna is simply the comet thatโ€™s come crashing into his punishing routine of showing apartments and ducking shady colleagues to whom he owes money. Anna does have a positive role as a kid whoโ€™s balanced as both street-smart yet vulnerable, but she remains two-dimensional throughout the film.

In a key role (albeit one thatโ€™s mostly offscreen), Annaโ€™s mom Liz (Isabel Arraiza) avoids the tiresome stereotypes often applied to the exes of main male characters. Sure, she does gripe about Andy being a useless father, but viewers are given good reason to agree with her. (Andy is a mess.) So many scripts subtly chastise women for working full time, seen in Mrs. Doubtfireโ€™s (1993) judgment of Sally Fieldโ€™s career-oriented character, not to mention just about the entirety of the Christmas movie catalog. Notice to Quit never falls into the trope of suggesting that Liz is somehow overbearing, or needs to change.

But in the end, the cast is filled mostly with men. Brokers, butchers, landlords, doormenโ€”working class New York looks like a manโ€™s world. The only minor characters we see with more gender balance appear in expected places: caregivers such as Liz, who works as a hospital nurse, and Annaโ€™s babysitter Maria (Feiga Martinez), plus a smattering of former and would-be tenants looking to rent from Andy. On the plus side, this depiction of the city doesnโ€™t ring untrue; it just makes for another movie that doesnโ€™t bother sketching outside gender conventions.

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Race: 4/5

On the other hand, even with its white main character, Notice to Quit embraces the racial and ethnic diversity of its setting through supporting and background roles. This isnโ€™t Sex and the Cityโ€™s whitewashed brunch utopia, nor is this the โ€œurbanโ€ (read: Black and Latino) hellscape regurgitated by so many movies centering around white leads from the 1980s and โ€˜90s. Having lived in New York City myself for over a decade, itโ€™s hard to specify what makes Notice to Quitโ€™s racial inclusivity so potent beyond the fact that it just โ€œfeels right.โ€

In the most prominent roles for people of color, Latina Suarez and Puerto Rican Arraiza play Anna and Liz, respectively. Their ethnicities are naturally woven into the film: Whether itโ€™s speaking occasional Spanish, to Lizโ€™s no-nonsense but loving approach to parenting Anna, cultural markers feel neither exotified nor ignored. Hackerโ€™s comfort level around this comes into sharp focus when Anna translates for a man speaking Spanish to Andy. Itโ€™s a small but effective bit of scripting that puts control in the hands of Latinos as Andy is left out of the conversationโ€”a subtle power shift that mirrors how, in most parts of New York City, white people are in the minority. Even if this only happens briefly, itโ€™s a positive (and realistic) setup that doesnโ€™t resort to dull cliches about Latinos being potentially violent or โ€œscaryโ€ in order for them to briefly have the upper hand around a white protagonist.

Mediaversity Grade: B- 3.58/5

For a simplistic story about a guy struggling to balance the demands of work and family, Notice to Quit stands out more for its Technicolor rendering of New York City, and the way it paints its hustlers with humor and affection. As lead actor Zegen succinctly puts it himself, โ€œIt’s not a deep movie. It’s just a good time.โ€

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Movie Reviews

‘The Invite’ Movie Review – Spotlight Report

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‘The Invite’ Movie Review – Spotlight Report

The Invite is a remake of the Spanish film The People Upstairs, itself based on a play by the same director Cesc Gay. With all remakes, the question is: Whatโ€™s this version bringing to the table. In this case, itโ€™s a rock solid cast with great chemistry and some very snappy direction by Olivia Wilde.

Joe (Seth Rogen) and Angela (Olivia Wilde) are a dysfunctional couple with some noisily amorous upstairs neighbours. They invite Hawk (Edward Norton) and Piรฑa (Penรฉlope Cruz) to dinner and hijinks ensue.

Thereโ€™s a lot to like about The Invite. Each member of the cast is funny in their own way. Rogen plays his usual schlub but his character is more nuanced than usual, with the rapid-fire jokes masking a deep frustration and melancholy. Wildeโ€˜s Angela is a persnickety neurotic, but itโ€™s not hard to see why. Cruz plays a sultry therapist whoโ€™s in permanent flirt mode but is also holding something back. Norton steals the show with a quietly hilarious performance as a retired firefighter who is all too eager to share his new age insights. The way each person interacts with the other results in a rollercoaster of cringe comedy, acerbic satire and genuine gut-busters. This is a film that relies entirely on performance and actually succeeds.

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The story itself is a little masterpiece. Adapted from Gayโ€™s original by Rashida Jones and Will McCormack, the dialogue is quick, laden with not-very-subtextual motivations and always up to something. Itโ€™s very even-handed, and all the characters are sympathetic but flawed in amusing ways. Watching the increasingly desperate Joe and Angela bouncing off the Hawk and Piรฑa is both funny and excruciating. Joeโ€™s attraction to Piรฑa is played fairly straight, but Angelaโ€™s attraction to Hawk becomes side-splitting as she pours out her soul to his Zen-calm ears and gets responses that make her even more attracted to him and by the end sheโ€™s practically hyperventilating.

The Invite does take something of a turn towards the end, although the film is in a state of continual twist throughout. This final shift throws the couplesโ€™ dysfunction into stark terms but doesnโ€™t ruin anything. In the end, it moves from a somewhat misanthropic tone to a sincere and compassionate one. It skillfully makes you complicit in Joe and Angelaโ€™s spatting and then forces you to reconsider. The comedy is so intense throughout the film that when this happens it might lose some viewers, but itโ€™s well-earned, true to the characters and itโ€™s a very satisfying payoff.

The Invite is a small film that feels like a return to a better era in cinema. Itโ€™s a remake that is worth watching for its performances, and itโ€™s very, very funny. Itโ€™s the sort of film that can be watched at home given its confined setting, but it generates enough laughs that seeing with an audience is a real pleasure.

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review: ‘Supergirl’ – Catholic Review

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Movie Review: ‘Supergirl’ – Catholic Review

NEW YORK (OSV News) โ€“ At what is meant to be a poignant moment in the DC Comics adaptation โ€œSupergirlโ€ (Warner Bros.), the title character, played by Milly Alcock, is told by her mother (Emily Beecham) that she doesnโ€™t have to be nice but she must be good. The recipient of this advice takes it to heart in a way that lends the whole film an unpleasant tone.

Weโ€™re not talking Deadpool depths of obscene snark here. Yet scrappy Supergirl, aka Kara Zor-El, in contrast to her affable cousin โ€” and fellow Kryptonian โ€” Superman (David Corenswet), does not come across as especially likeable.

Nor is she a figure to be imitated since, before she embarks on the quest to which most of the running time is devoted, early scenes show her waking up with a succession of staggering hangovers. She gets blotto, we later learn, in an effort to blot out her troubled past. The only positive ingredient in her current life is the bond she shares with her beloved dog, Krypto.

So when evil alien Krem of the Yellow Hills (Matthias Schoenaerts) wounds Krypto with a poisoned dart, leaving him with only hours to live, Supergirl is desperate to help the pup survive. Learning that Krem carries the antidote with him wherever he goes, she sets off on an interplanetary hunt for the villain, racing against time.

Supergirl has already crossed paths with another of Kremโ€™s victims, Ruthye (Eve Ridley). Having watched as Krem slaughtered her entire family, Ruthye is out for revenge and wants to join forces with Supergirl.

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Since Ruthye, though courageous, is undersized and completely untrained for combat, Supergirl initially tries to ditch her. But Ruthye is not to be so easily rebuffed.

The unlikely duo eventually acquire an informal ally in the person of cigar-chomping, motorcycle-riding freelance warrior Lobo (Jason Momoa). Lobo has reasons of his own for hating the band of brigands Krem leads.

As scripted by Ana Nogueira, director Craig Gillespieโ€™s scifi adventure includes more than one exchange in which Supergirl warns Ruthye about the morally corrupting effects of exacting vengeance. Yet this thoroughly respectable ethical message is completely undermined as the action reaches its climax.

โ€œSupergirlโ€ may not be a dose of Kryptonite. But itโ€™s no energy-infusing sunbath either.

The film contains much harsh but bloodless violence, a scene of urination, a passing reference to nonscriptural religious ideas, a couple of mild oaths, several uses each of crude and crass language and an obscene gesture. The OSV News classification is A-III โ€“ adults. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG-13 โ€” parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

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Movie Reviews

โ€˜Balaramana Dinagaluโ€™ review: A restrained look at the gangster mind

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โ€˜Balaramana Dinagaluโ€™ review: A restrained look at the gangster mind

In K M Chaitanyaโ€™s Aa Dinagalu (2007), actor Atul Kulkarni, playing gangster Agni Sreedhar, says man is the biggest weapon in the underworld. โ€œThe rest are just properties,โ€ 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 โ€” each an extension of the gangstersโ€™ 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. Thatโ€™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 Prabhakarโ€™s portrayal of the titular role is the filmโ€™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 underworldโ€™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. Itโ€™s as if these men who commit heinous acts, have a heart as well. Shashidhar is often called โ€œintellectual gangsterโ€, 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 movieโ€™s world-building.

The film falters in its inability to rise above the plotโ€™s predictability. Balaramaโ€™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 Balaramโ€™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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โ€œMy hands speak louder than my words,โ€ says Balarama. This signals that he is someone who settles conflicts with fists rather than conversations. Despite this detail, Balaramโ€™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. Itโ€™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 itโ€™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.ย 

The assassination of Jayaram, the impact of Kotwalโ€™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.ย The love story is simple, but it lacks emotional intensity between the lead couple. Santhosh Narayananโ€™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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