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Review: Noomi Rapace on Netflix, a real-life Ted Lasso, and more movies to watch this weekend

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Review: Noomi Rapace on Netflix, a real-life Ted Lasso, and more movies to watch this weekend

Provided that there’s an precise struggle raging in Europe proper now, this may increasingly seem to be a wierd time to look at the dystopian Swedish motion image “Black Crab,” which is ready in a near-future world the place extraordinary residents have been drafted into armed battle. However maybe that’s why director Adam Berg’s punchy thriller has change into one of many most-watched films on Netflix because it debuted final week. It feels extra like an escapist fantasy than a ripped-from-the-headlines cautionary story.

Noomi Rapace stars as Caroline, who within the film’s opening scene is driving her daughter by means of a tunnel when all of a sudden pictures ring out and troopers rush in, surrounding the vehicles. The story then jumps forward to a rustic ravaged by what appears to be a protracted and un-winnable apocalyptic battle. There, Caroline will get assigned to what could possibly be a suicide mission, becoming a member of a staff of expert skaters who’ve been ordered to ship two probably war-ending packages to an iced-in archipelago — the place the heroine’s long-lost little one could also be held.

Berg makes the many of the “particular forces on skates” gimmick (tailored by Berg and screenwriter Pelle Rådström from a Jerker Virdborg novel), capturing numerous lengthy, tense sequences of Caroline and firm gliding urgently throughout an eerie frozen panorama. The film is much less profitable at making its plot really feel genuinely significant, fairly than a easy supply gadget for chases and shootouts. Nonetheless, for individuals who might use a break from actual explosions on the information, the faux ones in “Black Crab” are well-crafted, thrilling and largely innocent.

‘Black Crab’

In Swedish with subtitles (additionally accessible dubbed in English)

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Not rated

Working time: 1 hour, 54 minutes

Taking part in: Accessible now on Netflix

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Hazel Doupe, left, and Carolyn Bracken within the 2021 horror drama “You Are Not My Mom.” Picture courtesy of Magnet Releasing

(Magnet Releasing)

Within the gripping Irish supernatural thriller “You Are Not My Mom,” Hazel Doupe performs Char, a lonesome and regularly bullied Dublin teenager who spends a lot of her time taking care of the 2 ladies in her life: her gruff and superstitious grandmother Rita (Ingrid Craigie) and her depressed mom Angela (Carolyn Bracken). When Angela disappears sooner or later and returns with a wholly completely different character — alternately sweetly upbeat and alarmingly odd — Char isn’t certain what to make of Rita’s insistence that this “Angela” is definitely a changeling, and should be destroyed.

Author-director Kate Dolan — making an extremely promising characteristic filmmaking debut — units this story simply earlier than Halloween, at a time when Char’s neighbors and academics are inclined to inform tales from folklore. Like numerous the most effective current horror movies, “You Are Not My Mom” is rooted in the concept numerous our oldest scary tales are actually simply the methods our ancestors defined dire sickness, unimaginable trauma and precise evil. This directly deeply creepy and unusually shifting film is finally a couple of woman in misery, not sure of what to do when the change she’s been determined for seems to be worse than the distress she’s already discovered to deal with.

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‘You Are Not My Mom’

Not rated

Working time: 1 hour, 33 minutes

Taking part in: Laemmle Glendale; Harkins 18, Chino Hills; Jurupa 14, Riverside; additionally on VOD

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Based mostly on a novel by Michael Koryta — a best-selling creator whose books typically tread the skinny line between gritty true crime and paranormal journey — “So Chilly the River” stars Bethany Pleasure Lenz as Erica Shaw, a struggling filmmaker and journalist who takes a well-paying gig as an archivist, employed to make a film celebrating a dying plutocrat. She investigates her patron’s previous whereas staying in a cool previous resort lodge, the place she discovers some disturbing truths about her topic and begins to have unusual visions induced by the native spring water.

Author-director Paul Shoulberg successfully captures the spooky, “Shining”-like vibe of Koryta’s story; though given the wealthy supply materials, this film ought to be quite a bit grabbier than it’s. The story proceeds alongside a pretty straight path, as Erica consults with the locals and will get nearer to the center of her employers’ darkness, one gradual step at a time. Nonetheless, the movie has a hanging look, stuffed with deep shadows, shimmering mild, and flashes of coloration. “So Chilly the River” additionally captures the moral problems dealing with a reporter who begins to comprehend that the character of her task might hold her from telling the general public what they actually need to know.

‘So Chilly the River’

Rated: R, for some violence, bloody photos, and language

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Working time: 1 hour, 35 minutes

Taking part in: Lumiere Music Corridor, Beverly Hills; additionally accessible on VOD

A man with his arms in the air.

German soccer coach Otto Rehhagel within the documentary “King Otto.”

(Sven Simon / Imago / MPI Media Group)

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Christopher André Marks’ entertaining sports activities documentary “King Otto” tells the story of an unlikely European soccer hero: Otto Rehhagel, a veteran German participant and supervisor who had a strong if largely undistinguished profession earlier than he signed on to teach the Greek nationwide staff, the place his defense-focused type flummoxed opponents. The squad’s legendary run by means of the 2004 European Championship cemented his repute as a strategist and a pacesetter, who was both extremely fortunate or subtly sensible. “King Otto” options numerous thrilling previous footage from the pitch, together with new interviews that dig into the methods this real-life Ted Lasso used a cultural hole to his benefit, relying on his gamers to boost their recreation at any time when they couldn’t perceive what he was saying. It’s an excellent story, crisply advised.

‘King Otto’

In German, Greek, French and English with subtitles

Not rated

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Working time: 1 hour, 20 minutes

Taking part in: Laemmle Royal; West Los Angeles; additionally accessible on VOD

Additionally on VOD

“All My Associates Hate Me” is a deftly written and acted black comedy — bordering on horror — starring Tom Stourton as a person who joins his previous faculty friends for a weekend within the nation after which makes one nightmarish social blunder after one other.

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Accessible now on DVD and Blu-ray

“Nightmare Alley” (Searchlight) is director Guillermo del Toro’s Oscar-nominated, visually dazzling, uncompromisingly unnerving interpretation of William Lindsay Gresham’s basic “carnival noir” novel, beforehand tailored to the large display in 1947. Bradley Cooper performs an amoral drifter who learns a couple of con artist tips, turns them right into a profitable nightclub act, after which will get into hassle when he tries to cross himself off as a psychic.

“The Flight of the Phoenix” (Criterion) options one in all James Stewart’s final nice performances, enjoying a cargo airplane pilot whose crew tries to outlive within the desert — whereas constructing a functioning plane from spare components — after a crash leaves them stranded. Director Robert Aldrich’s 1965 movie is a rousing journey with an all-star solid.

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Movie Reviews

It Ends with Us (2024) – Movie Review

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It Ends with Us (2024) – Movie Review

It Ends with Us, 2024.

Directed by Justin Baldoni.
Starring Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, Brandon Sklenar, Jenny Slate, Hasan Minhaj, Amy Morton, Isabela Ferrer, Alex Neustaedter, Kevin McKidd, Robin S. Walker, Emily Baldoni, Robyn Lively, Megan Elyse Robinson, Caroline Siegrist, Adam Mondschein, and Robert Clohessy.

SYNOPSIS:

Adapted from the Colleen Hoover novel, Lily overcomes a traumatic childhood to embark on a new life. A chance meeting with a neurosurgeon sparks a connection but Lily begins to see sides of him that remind her of her parents’ relationship.

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Writer/director/co-lead Justin Baldoni’s directorial debut, It Ends with Us (based on the book by Colleen Hoover and adapted for the screen by Daddio writer/director Christy Hall), is a story about domestic abuse with an important message at the core, that becomes far too preoccupied with ridiculous soap opera love triangle nonsense. Also coming into question is how much of this relies on conveying that message through misleading visuals. Early on, our protagonist jokes that she is an unreliable narrator, which later on feels more like the film itself admitting it’s toying with perception disingenuously, albeit in a predictable way since there isn’t much doubt in where the story is headed.

Lily Blossom Bloom (Blake Lively with a wild hairstyle suggesting the film takes place in the 1980s rather than the present day) lives in Boston and has just opened up a, wait for it… flower shop. This comes following the sudden death of her father (played by Kevin McKidd in flashbacks), who routinely physically abused her mother (Amy Morton), making for an awkward funeral, to say the least. Lily walked out at the podium, unable to come up with anything positive to say about the man, still unsure of how her mom ever could have stayed with him. In that frustration, she also enters a nearby apartment to unwind, hanging out on the roof, where she has a meet-cute with the most handsome, buff neurosurgeon you have ever seen. His name is Ryle Kincaid (Justin Baldoni), and he is kicking a chair, upset that he was unable to save a life.

Perhaps he seems like a sweet guy. Well, within a few minutes, he is opening up “naked truths,” talking about being unfit for serious relationships and how he would casually like to have sex with Lily right there on this roof. To me (and maybe you), that’s pretty weird; it’s also far from the only case of Ryle getting a bit sexually sleazy, something that the film kind of lets him off the hook for. Lily also opens up about her first love and the first person she ever had sex with, a sensitive and kind homeless boy she gravitated to, with that relationship serving as the focal point of the flashbacks (a relationship we get a glimpse of in flashbacks, with the two played by Isabela Ferrer and Alex Neustaedter.) Since this is a movie, he immediately determines something is different about Lily and that he would like to give real love a shot.

Nevertheless, everything about this blossoming love between Lily and Ryle appears to be going well on the surface, even if it’s apparent to viewers his mask will come off (there wouldn’t be a movie, otherwise.) Again, that conflict (which takes roughly an hour to arrive finally) comes in the form of domestic abuse and, more specifically, how people perceive, rationalize, and chalk an incident up as an accident. That’s also something vital that should be explored, but the filmmakers seem more concerned with manifesting that drama in the most melodramatic, over-the-top manner possible while also inserting another guy into the equation (Brandon Sklenar), one who is fiercely protective over Lily.

Of course, there is also a lot of fortuity here, such as Ryle reconnecting with Lily after the initial meet-cute, all because his sister Allyssa (Jenny Slate) randomly stumbled into the flower shop looking for a job. She also has no idea that her brother is capable of some deplorable behavior, making for the scarily intriguing concept that not even some siblings know each other entirely. The problem is that the execution treats this entire story like a Lifetime film, charging headfirst into drama that never quite feels real. If anything, it’s often unintentionally hilarious, such as a restaurant fight between the two grown men battling over Lily. The specific reason that the fight occurs comes across as laughably dumb, something that could have been solved by two people talking to each other like adults. The thing is, people rarely feel real here.

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There is also the feeling that anytime the film dares to become serious and dive into uncomfortable thematic material, it also pulls back as if it wants to be a sappy romantic love triangle above all else. And while I’m aware domestic abusers are capable of hiding that aspect of themselves well, here, there are constant jumps in times that leave one questioning the credulity of how long this man inexperienced with dating (presumably for good reason) would last without slipping up on his toxic side. The endless barrage of pop songs only serves to sanitize the material here. Even accounting for the flashbacks, there isn’t a single moment of actual conflict here until the one-hour mark, presumably because the romance is what sells to this demographic.

One possible read is that the filmmakers are aware of this, creating the usual cringe Hollywood love story playing into Lily’s oblivious nature that all is well in this relationship and that this is love. I would love to sit here and say that everything here is a stroke of subversive brilliance. However, even if that were the case, the execution isn’t there, often eliciting groans and laughs since the situations feel far-fetched. Coincidently, It Ends with Us does conclude with an emotional, believable exchange that needs to be heard by domestic abusers around the world. It’s a shame the rest of the film is outlandish and doesn’t cut nearly as deep.

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★

Robert Kojder is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association and the Critics Choice Association. He is also the Flickering Myth Reviews Editor. Check here for new reviews, follow my Twitter or Letterboxd, or email me at MetalGearSolid719@gmail.com

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

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Chappell Roan’s performance reportedly breaks attendance record at Lollapalooza music fest

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Chappell Roan’s performance reportedly breaks attendance record at Lollapalooza music fest

This could be the year of the “Femininomenon.”

Chappell Roan’s 2024 track “Good Luck Babe!” is rising on the charts, and her 2023 song “Feminomenon” has gone viral. And now, the “Midwest Princess” may have broken a record with the crowd that gathered to see her last week at the Lollapalooza Music Festival in Chicago, according to the event’s representatives.

“Chappell’s performance was the biggest daytime set we’ve ever seen,” a festival spokesperson told CNN about the singer’s set at Grant Park. “It was a magical moment added to Lolla’s DNA.”

The spokesperson said that 110,000 people attended the festival each day, although the exact number for Roan’s set wasn’t specified. Other headliners included big-draw acts SZA, Megan Thee Stallion and Melanie Martinez.

Representatives for Lollapalooza did not immediately respond to The Times’ request for comment.

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“It’s Chappell’s world and we’re just living in it,” the festival wrote in its Instagram caption on an overhead view of Roan’s crowd during her performance of “Hot to Go.”

The “After Midnight” singer was originally supposed to play a smaller stage at Lollapalooza. However, interest in her act grew in the weeks leading up to Lollapalooza so she was moved to the main stage, swapping set times with pop singer Kesha, a representative for the festival told CNN. Roan had attracted large crowds earlier on the festival circuit, including at Coachella, Boston Calling and New York City’s Governors Ball.

Lollapalooza was founded in 1991 by Jane’s Addiction frontman Perry Farrell as a multi-city venue for his band’s farewell tour. In 2010, the event expanded abroad with festivals in Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Germany, Sweden, France and India.

Korean rapper J-Hope of BTS drew 100,000 attendees for his solo set in 2022, according to Billboard. J-Hope was the first South Korean artist to headline a major American music festival.

Roan is set to perform Sunday at the Outside Lands festival at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. The three-day festival begins Friday.

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Borderlands Movie Reviews Get Worrying Update

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Borderlands Movie Reviews Get Worrying Update

A new update regarding the Borderlands movie and its incoming reviews has some worried about the long-awaited film. 

Originally announced as an adaptation of Gearbox Software’s uber-popular looter shooter video game back in 2015, the road toward the Borderlands film has been a long and arduous one. 

Originally directed by Hostels Eli Roth, the movie underwent several spurts of extensive reshoots, with Deadpool director Tim Miller stepping in to finish up the movie in Roth’s stead. 

However, it should finally hit theater screens on Friday, August 9, taking fans on this R-rated romp through the wasteland. 

[ Borderlands: Who Is Cate Blanchett’s Lilith? Movie vs. Game Character Differences Explained ]

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Borderlands Movie Reviews Are Not Looking Good

Lionsgate

According to some recently surfaced information, things may not be looking good when it comes to Borderlands movie reviews.

As posted by review aggregator Metacritic on X (formerly Twitter) fans should not expect to see reviews for the upcoming video game adaptation until after its release date. 

More specifically, reviews are reportedly set to go live after Thursday previews for the film have been screened at 3 p.m. ET on Thursday, August 8. 

While not a surefire sign of the movie’s quality, such a late review embargo usually signifies a lack of confidence in a product by the studio. 

Typically movie reviews usually drop anywhere from as far out as two weeks to a handful of days before release. Usually, if a studio knows it has a hit on its hands, it will want the press to talk about the movie as much as possible in the lead-up to its release date. 

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At least for the Borderlands movie, that does not look to be the case. 

Previous to this, movies like Madame Web and Five Nights at Freddy’s shared a similarly delayed review-to-release timeline.

While Five Nights at Freddy’s (FNAF) found an audience thanks to the viral nature of its source material, both of those films flopped critically, with Madame Web earning 57% and FNAF 32% on Rotten Tomatoes. 

This does not bode well for the highly anticipated video game adaptation, especially after fans waited for nearly a decade since its announcement for the movie to see the light of day. 

As of writing, the film is tracking to make somewhere between $10-$15 million domestically during its opening weekend, which would be disastrous seeing as the film is reportedly carrying a sizeable $120 million budget (per Puck). 

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Is Borderlands In Trouble?

Again, it is worth noting that the quality of the Borderlands movie is still yet to be determined. 

It could turn out to be a massive hit despite its delayed review release date; however, all signs are pointing to the contrary. 

As mentioned above, the movie has had plenty of ups and downs since its initial announcement. 

The biggest of these troubles came in January 2023, when extensive reshoots were ordered for the project, nearly two years after it had finished principal photography. 

And seeing as the film’s original director, Eli Roth, was busy at the time working on the holiday-themed horror film, Thanksgiving, Deadpool filmmaker Tim Miller was brought in to finish the project. 

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Usually, this passing of the director’s chair at any point in production is not a good sign, but the fact that it happened as late as it did, could spell signs of the studio hoping to Frankenstein together a hit after it has been shot. 

This director switcheroo was not the only major creative shake-up the film had on its way to release. 

One of the movie’s original writers has since disowned the project after being brought on to help pen this film’s first draft. 

The Last of Us showrunner Craig Mazin was first attached to the Borderlands movie in 2020 when it was announced Roth would take on directing duties. 

However, as time has gone on, and the movie has seemingly gone through massive changes, Mazin has removed his credit from the title, telling Variety in July 2023 that he “cannot claim any kind of authorship of Borderlands:”

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“I am not a credited writer on the film, so I cannot claim any kind of authorship of ‘Borderlands,’ much less ‘co-writing.’ I did see the report about the pseudonym, which is false. I did not use a pseudonym. If the name in question is indeed a pseudonym, all I can say is… it’s not mine.”

All this could make for a dangerous concoction of creative misfortune, potentially making Borderlands a disappointing effort for longtime fans. 


Borderlands comes to theaters on Friday, August 9. 

Read more about gaming on The Direct:

Sonic 3’s First Trailer Gets New Release Window (Report)

Here’s When the Nintendo Switch 2’s Release Is Expected to Happen

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