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Review: Documentary ‘Return to Space’ wraps a thrilling adventure story in Elon Musk’s ego

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Review: Documentary ‘Return to Space’ wraps a thrilling adventure story in Elon Musk’s ego

The area race was once strictly between nations. Now it’s between wealthy dudes. On the time filmmakers Elizabeth Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin (“Free Solo”) have been making their newest documentary, “Return to House,” solely 4 entities had efficiently launched an area capsule into orbit and introduced it again to Earth: the U.S., Russia, China and billionaire Elon Musk.

The starstruck entrepreneur’s groundbreaking firm SpaceX and its concurrently affected person and impatient mission to get people into orbit once more are the main target of “Return to House.” Boasting unique entry to SpaceX’s 2020 launch of Demo-2 — the primary crewed U.S. mission since NASA’s final House Shuttle flight in 2011 — the movie is a comparatively clean mix of optimism for a rejuvenated emphasis on human exploration within the past, and branded content material selling a controversial businessman.

Musk is definitely featured, however he doesn’t dominate. Early on, we see him sitting within the hangar of his rockets, pitching us on his interplanetary objectives, and so they’re expectedly a mixture of wonderment, fearmongering, and ego — primarily, we will’t keep on Earth ceaselessly, one thing’s coming anyway (a meteor, local weather change, World Conflict III), and NASA didn’t transfer quick sufficient for him in attending to Mars.

It was in all probability inevitable that the non-public sector would become involved in area flight, however not essentially that NASA’s shrinking ambitions and paperwork would necessitate it. The film addresses the preliminary hubbub that the storied company attributable to saying its partnership with firms like SpaceX — that Neil Armstrong selected to communicate out towards ceding NASA’s authority to the non-public sector was a specific blow to the hero-worshipping Musk.

A rocket on the launchpad within the documentary “Return to House.”

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(Netflix)

However nothing tastes sweeter than success, and the effectively instructed story of how SpaceX in league with NASA stored at it by means of loads of trial-and-error launches and payload-only missions for almost 20 years, till they have been able to ship a pair of skilled astronauts — Marine pilot Doug Hurley and engineer Bob Behnken — to the Worldwide House Station, is a reasonably thrilling one. The swiftness of House X’s achievements in constructing reusable rockets, we’re instructed, got here down primarily to the distinction between the cautious strategy to problem-solving of a taxpayer-funded operation like NASA, and the go-go-go mindset of a well-funded firm desirous to check out its tech and study from anticipated failures.

The second half is dedicated to the main points surrounding the Demo-2 launch in Florida, which carried a extra solemn air of security first as a result of it did contain people. Although it’s reassuring to see the initially scheduled large day aborted when climate didn’t cooperate — regardless that Musk clearly thought they need to go forward — the filmmakers spend an excessive amount of time on the nonlaunch when the film is already full of info and inching towards overlength.

There are good human particulars, nonetheless, from the varied superstitions in SpaceX workers, to the nerdy YouTuber breathlessly awaiting liftoff, to the truth that Hurley’s and Behnken’s wives — Karen Nyberg and Megan McArthur, respectively — are additionally each completed astronauts. At instances, within the vérité scenes with the casually dressed, joshing floor management workers, the vibe is office sitcom, and when, upon Demo-2 reaching orbit, Behnken pulls out his son’s toy dinosaur and calls it a stowaway, it’s as if we’re being arrange for the “common individuals doing the extraordinary” feeling a industrial area firm would need to undertaking. (His area stroll, nonetheless, throughout his time on the ISS, positively seems to be like a job for a courageous skilled.)

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Even because it leans towards infomercial, judiciously skirting the extra problematic components of Musk’s character, there’s no denying that “Return to House” — consistent with the feats-of-wonder emphasis of Vasarhelyi’s and Chin’s earlier work — chronicles an unimaginable achievement. The collaboration between a noble, reconfigured authorities program and a tech magnate’s market-hot space-dream manufacturing unit, offers sufficient awe-inspiring moments to make one prepared for the brand new age of universe exploration it’s championing. “Thanks for flying SpaceX!” we hear somebody cheekily say to the astronauts after their profitable splashdown. This ultra-positive film is about hoping the remainder of us say the identical factor again, with an added a comma: “Thanks for flying, SpaceX!”

‘Return to House’

Working time: 2 hours, 6 minutes

Not rated

Taking part in: Accessible April 7 on Netflix

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Review: Kindness is the takeaway in the Holocaust-era-set 'White Bird: A Wonder Story'

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Review: Kindness is the takeaway in the Holocaust-era-set 'White Bird: A Wonder Story'

In 2017, the film “Wonder” was a surprise critical and commercial hit for Lionsgate. Adapted from a children’s novel by R.J. Palacio, the film starred Jacob Tremblay as young Auggie, a boy with the facial deformities of Treacher Collins syndrome who teaches his family and peers about the importance of kindness. (Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson co-starred as his parents.) Naturally, a sequel, adapted from one of Palacio’s “Wonder” spinoff books, was quickly green-lighted by the studio.

It’s now been seven years since “Wonder” came out, and the long-awaited sequel, “White Bird: A Wonder Story,” which has been plagued by delays both pandemic- and strike-related, is finally hitting theaters. Directed by Marc Forster and written by Mark Bomback, “White Bird” is very loosely connected to the original film, but it takes a more global, historical approach to the same message about the importance of small but high-stakes gestures of kindness.

Bryce Gheisar returns as Julian, Auggie’s bully from “Wonder,” who has been expelled from school for his cruelty. Now himself the new kid at a new school, he struggles to fit in. But Julian has the opportunity to reinvent himself, which is underscored by a surprise visit — and lesson — from his grandmother Sara (Helen Mirren) that completely changes his perspective on how to move through the world.

Thus unfolds the real story of “White Bird,” which isn’t about Julian, who serves merely as a framing device and a tenuous link to the world of “Wonder.” “White Bird” is actually Sara’s story of her childhood in Nazi-occupied France and the harrowing events she experienced as a young Jewish girl there.

If you’ve ever watched (or read) young-adult Holocaust films or fiction, “White Bird” will feel familiar. It takes a similar tack to real-life stories such as Anne Frank’s. Teen Sara (Ariella Glaser) is the adored and privileged daughter of a professor and a doctor (Ishai Golen) living an idyllic life in a small French village. Drawn to the handsome Vincent (Jem Matthews), she and her friends scoff at quiet Julien (Orlando Schwerdt), who is disabled from polio. Insulated from the harsh realities of occupation until laws limiting the freedom of Jews encroach on her town, Sara’s family makes plans to escape, though they are unable to outrun the Nazi roundups.

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Sara, though, manages to escape into the snowy woods, and Julien escorts her through the underground sewers away from the school to his family’s barn where he stows her away, and where he and his parents (Gillian Anderson and Jo Stone-Fewings) care for her. She will remain there, in hiding, until the forces of fascism that have infected her community must be reckoned with. But the story is about the connection she forges with Julien, and the circumstances that allow her to learn to evaluate character through shared humanity and bravery, not status and power.

The strength of “White Bird” lies in its performers, especially Glaser and Schwerdt, who deliver complex, nuanced takes on young people experiencing global atrocities on an intimate scale, while also trying to navigate the complications of connecting as teenagers. They are both excellent and keep the film emotionally grounded.

Forster presents a somewhat sanitized view of the Holocaust that is sobering but digestible for younger audiences. The pastoral setting remains picturesque and almost fairy-tale-like. As recounted through Sara’s memories, it has a kind of glowing haze about it, almost too beautiful at times. Computer-generated flowers bloom before our eyes. A cranberry-red coat stands out starkly against a snowy winter background. It’s an interesting stylistic choice (and one you may have seen in another much-celebrated Holocaust movie), but it speaks to the storytelling element of the film, the way our brains craft memories that might be more vivid and lovely, even after decades.

As a “Wonder Story” and a Holocaust story, the messaging of “White Bird” is unsurprising though important: Empathy matters, especially in action, and that often, caring for others can mean putting one’s own self in danger, but we should do it anyway. In the grand tapestry of human existence, we are all connected. It may be a message we’ve heard time and again, but it’s one that bears repeating.

Katie Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

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‘White Bird: A Wonder Story’

Rating: PG-13, for some strong violence, thematic material and language

Running time: 2 hours

Playing: In wide release Friday, Oct. 4

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CTRL movie audience review: Ananya Panday’s Netflix thriller is ‘terrific’; OTT film gets thumbs-up from viewers | Today News

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CTRL movie audience review: Ananya Panday’s Netflix thriller is ‘terrific’; OTT film gets thumbs-up from viewers | Today News

CTRL movie audience review: CTRL started streaming on Netflix on October 4. The thriller, directed by ace Bollywood director Vikramaditya Motwane, stars Ananya Panday and Vihaan Samat.

The story is about Nella and Joe, who seem like the ideal influencer couple. However, when Joe cheats on Nella, she uses an AI app to erase him from her life — only for it to gain control over her.

The Netflix movie has received some highly-positive reviews from viewers, who posted their comments on social media. Let’s take a look at some of those.

CTRL public reviews

“CTRL is… terrific, absorbing and made with a lot of finesse… Do watch if you have time.”

“Found Vikramaditya Motwane’s new Netflix film #CTRL utterly fascinating. So much to admire. An ambitious, timely, deeply uncomfortable screenlife thriller that’ll make you want to change your passwords, cover your webcam and move to the hills.”

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“This is quite good. Only 1 hour 40 minutes, and not gonna lie, I had underestimated Motwane a bit with this movie. Ananya did well because she nailed this genre. It starts off slow, happy, and lighthearted, but the tension builds as the story progresses. Give it a watch, it’s nice.”

“vikramdityamotwane Gives a nuanced and gripping narrative and @ananyapandayy has finally come into her own, and does a fine job.”

“As a big fan of Motwane’s films, I’ve always seen him set new standards in mainstream cinema. From Udaan to AK vs AK he has always proved his merit. However, #CTRL feels like just an okay film, despite good casting with Ananya Panday. It lacks a strong impact and becomes somewhat preachy about our relationship with technology, leaving you with little to think about afterward.”

“The movie is abt how social media, AI and corporates are controlling us and not vice versa. Ananya Panday is good. Vihaan Samat is brilliant. The movie cudve been much better. Esp the climax.Theres no closure!”

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Donald Glover cancels Childish Gambino tour over health concerns: 'Need time out to heal'

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Donald Glover cancels Childish Gambino tour over health concerns: 'Need time out to heal'

Donald Glover has pulled the plug on the remainder of his Childish Gambino touring commitments to focus on his health, including an upcoming surgery.

The Grammy-winning “This Is America” singer and “Mr. and Mrs. Smith” star tweeted Friday about the recent health concerns that have now led him to call off shows across Europe and Australia. The historic Emmy winner said he was hospitalized in Houston last month “to make sure of an ailment that had become apparent.”

He continued: “After being assessed, it became clear that I would not perform that night, and after more tests, I could not perform the rest of the U.S. tour in the time asked.”

In September, Glover postponed his New World tour — including several shows at Crypto.com Arena — “to focus on my physical health for a few weeks.” The “Community” actor was initially set to close out the North American leg of his tour earlier this week before heading overseas. Now, he says, “My path to recovery is something I need to confront seriously.”

Glover, 41,did not disclose additional details about his health concerns in his Friday statement. A representative for the multihyphenate did not immediately respond to The Times’ request for more information.

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It was a “difficult decision” to cancel the rest of the tour, Glover said, adding that fans can get their refunds at the point of purchase. While it’s unclear when exactly Glover will pick up the pieces, he wrote, “I want nothing more than to bring this show to the fans and perform.”

“Until then, thanks for love, privacy and support,” he said.

The New World tour — his first since 2019 — was poised to be Glover’s final hurrah as his musical personal Childish Gambino, under which he broke into the music scene. As Childish Gambino, Glover earned 12 Grammy nominations and won five prizes, four of which were for his pointed “This Is America.”

Glover released his final Childish Gambino album, “Bando Stone & the New World,” in July. A month prior, Glover revealed he was ready to move on and shed that chapter of his career. “It’s not fulfilling. And I just felt like I didn’t need to build in this way anymore,” he told the New York Times.

He explained that the decision to retire his alter ego was partially influenced by becoming a dad. He shares a boy with wife Michelle White.

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“When I put my son on my shoulders, I feel deep joy. That’s real,” he said. “No one on their deathbed is going to look back and say, ‘Thank God I avoided being cringe.’”

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