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Review: Recycled ideas keep time travel flick ‘The Adam Project’ stuck in the past

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Review: Recycled ideas keep time travel flick ‘The Adam Project’ stuck in the past

What if you happen to had an opportunity, as an grownup, to revisit nagging points along with your dad and mom? To reconcile along with your youthful self? May it repair the previous, or probably even the long run? That is the query undertaken slightly actually in Shawn Levy’s intelligent time journey flick “The Adam Undertaking.”

Levy and star Ryan Reynolds just lately collaborated on “Free Man,” and “The Adam Undertaking,” written by Jonathan Tropper, T.S. Nowlin, Jennifer Flackett and Mark Levin, makes related use of Reynolds’ power as a motor-mouthed main man, a film star who can concurrently pull off comedy and motion hero antics. “The Adam Undertaking” is doubly quippy with the presence of Walker Scobell, who performs Younger Adam to Reynold’s Huge Adam, and matches him beat for beat after they meet of their respective timelines.

Because the movie explains, “time journey exists, you simply don’t understand it but,” asking the viewers to droop their disbelief and simply go on this journey, a high-concept sci-fi motion journey that’s extra in regards to the symbolic restore of father-son relationships than it’s really about time journey.

Huge Adam comes from 2050, and he’s crash-landed in 2022, in his previous yard, the place Younger Adam, a twerpy tween who’s too sensible by half, is making an attempt to outlive age 12. Huge Adam was aiming for 2018, seeking his lacking spouse (Zoe Saldaña), however whereas he’s stopping over in 2022, he wants to repair his ship and heal from a gunshot wound, which gives him ample alternative to hold along with his youthful self.

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However it’s not all shared quirks and beating up bullies, because the struggle that Adam’s chasing finds him, and all of the sudden he and Younger Adam are on the run from a nefarious time-traveling tech mogul, Maya Sorian (Catherine Keener). The one approach they will make things better is to return one final time to seek out their father (Mark Ruffalo) and cease him from inventing time journey (once more, simply go together with it).

“The Adam Undertaking” is clearly impressed by movies like “Again to the Future” and “The Terminator,” each immediately referenced within the script. There are shades of newer movies too, reminiscent of Rian Johnson’s time-traveling-assassins drama “Looper,” whereas “Guardians of the Galaxy” involves thoughts with the presence of Saldaña and a soundtrack filled with traditional rock. Keener’s evil mogul is harking back to Kristen Wiig’s “Barb & Star” supervillain Sharon Gordon Fisherman. It looks like a retro journey movie, with a precocious child and an exasperated grownup enjoying “The Odd Couple” however with extra combating lasers and killer robots. Regardless of all of the complexities of time journey on show right here, the story feels neither revolutionary nor recent.

What makes “The Adam Undertaking” distinctive is its grounded aesthetic, the woodsy, natural panorama of the Pacific Northwest providing a backdrop for the tremendous high-tech futuristic weapons of invisible planes and light-weight saber bow staffs. There are some exceptional photographs, particularly within the first half of the movie, juxtaposing the world of 2022 with the weapons of 2050, a distinction that mirrors the connection between the Adams.

The primary half is the extra intriguing as older and youthful tussle with one another and ask the powerful questions, determining their mission collectively. However it all falls aside in a hackneyed third act, because the characters find yourself in a rote standoff, bargaining for a thingamajig to save lots of the world. Plus, each scrap of nuance within the dialog about reconciling their previous and current selves is jettisoned for aggressive sentimentality.

By the point a golden retriever pet trots by for a recreation of catch, the movie has shot proper previous emotional resonance and landed squarely within the realm of patronizing (unsuccessful) manipulation. This time journey film is so rife with daddy points, it’s a shock it wasn’t rolled out for Father’s Day. Sadly, what might have been one thing cerebral and stimulating finally ends up feeling like extra disposable cinema.

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Walsh is a Tribune Information Service movie critic.

‘The Adam Undertaking’

Rated: PG-13, for violence/motion, language and suggestive references

Working time: 1 hour, 46 minutes

Taking part in: Obtainable March 11 on Netflix

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A sultry scene shifts in 'The Brutalist'

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A sultry scene shifts in 'The Brutalist'

The architectural wonder of writer-director Brady Corbet’s 215-minute postwar immigrant epic “The Brutalist” astonishes onscreen. The ambitious spectacle, which follows László Toth (Adrien Brody) chasing his American Dream, only to be upended by a tycoon (Guy Pearce), was captured on VistaVision for its visceral widescreen imagery. The striking photography from cinematographer Lol Crawley suggests themes of modernity versus classicism — the waters of the Statue of Liberty, the majestic quarries of Carrara, Italy — but a sensual magnetism seeps into the visual style as well. Its full extent is on display during an underground party where László drinks and dances with a woman (Dóra Sztarenki). Filming in Budapest, Crawley minimally lighted the moody moment, which reverberates with a sultry version of “You Are My Destiny.” The camera drifts, hinting to an ominous figure looking from above. “What’s wonderful about that scene is that we start on the woman’s legs as she walks in, and then she has this flirtatious dance with Laszlo,” Crawley says. “It’s all handheld, shot in an almost documentary way to give the actors freedom in the space. So it’s this real gentle balance, which in many ways was wonderful and liberating.” It’s a gentle moment that soon turns brutal.

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Movie Review | 'Nosferatu'

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Movie Review | 'Nosferatu'

Robert Eggers’s take on the 1922 F.W. Murnau film “Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror” has long been a passion project for the director, in various stages of development since he broke out with 2015’s “The Witch.” Now that the film has finally made its way to screens, Eggers has the opportunity to shine. And like any of his films, “Nosferatu” has mood and style to spare.

Eggers’s movies always have great attention to detail, but sometimes the style can outweigh the story and “Nosferatu” is no different. “The Witch” was about setting a moody atmosphere and “The Northman” was about showing off the muscularity in his filmmaking and in between he made arguably his best movie, “The Lighthouse,” which is a bizarre, fever dream kind of experience.

In the first frames of “Nosferatu,” Ellen (Lily-Rose Depp) emerges from the shadows with tears running down her face. She is calling out to something, but nothing is there. What is making her body move in such unpleasant ways? Who is the mysterious voice calling out to her? From the shadows emerges a silhouette of Count Orlok (Bill Skarsgård), who is haunting Ellen.



Years later, Ellen is in a relationship with Thomas (Nicholas Hoult, who is having a busy year between “Nosferatu,” “Juror #2” and “The Order”). Thomas is heading to Transylvania to meet with Count Orlock, foreshadowing a great deal of dread in the movie. Back home,  Ellen is not doing well, constantly haunted by the looming presence of Count Orlock, who will not let her know peace.

Not only does Count Orlock hang over Ellen’s life, but his existence hangs over the entire movie. Eggers effectively uses the character sparingly, shooting him in shadows and only revealing his face every so often. It’s best to go into the movie surprised by the design, because Eggers certainly doesn’t settle for recreating the well-established imagery from the original film. Skarsgård, who is becoming a horror film regular, is nowhere to be found in his performance, completely disappearing behind the character.

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Depp delivers the strongest performance of her young career, as she is required to run the gauntlet of emotional and physical pain. Her suffering helps bring some emotion to the movie, which can occasionally feel cold and distant in service of emphasizing the film’s craft. Individual moments of dread feel palpable, but the movie goes through plodding stretches (including with superfluous characters played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Emma Corrin; Eggers regular Willem Dafoe also plays a role), where the emotionality of Depp’s performance and the grim appearance of Skarsgård become sorely missed.

Even when the movie is choppy, it’s hard to not get lost in the impeccability of the craft. Egger and cinematographer Jarin Blaschke partially use natural lighting to establish the mood, while production designer Craig Lathrop transports viewers to 1838 Germany. Getting lost in the world of “Nosferatu” isn’t hard — though sometimes being moved by it as a whole is a tough task.

“Nosferatu” is currently playing in theaters.

Matt Passantino is a contributor to CITY.






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Beyoncé brings 'Cowboy Carter' to the NFL on Netflix

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Beyoncé brings 'Cowboy Carter' to the NFL on Netflix

Beyoncé brought her album “Cowboy Carter” to life for the first time in a halftime performance at an NFL game on Christmas Day in her hometown of Houston.

The show, which came midway through the Baltimore Ravens’ rout of the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium, was designed to entice viewers to Netflix as the streaming goliath inaugurated a new pact with America’s most popular professional sports league. It also was a way to bring attention to Beyoncé’s latest LP — a detailed excursion into country music that plays up the singer’s Southern roots — just as Recording Academy members cast their votes for February’s Grammy Awards, where “Cowboy Carter” is nominated for album of the year.

Immediately following her performance, Beyoncé posted a brief video on X that suggested she’ll announce something on Jan. 14 — something, whatever it is, that many more fans now are likely to be looking forward to.

For all its cross-promotional synergy, though, Wednesday’s halftime show was a reminder that whatever lures Beyoncé from her superstar cocoon is worth celebrating: As usual for pop music’s greatest live performer, this 13-minute production — a “ho ho ho-down,” as she called it — was a thrill from top to bottom.

The show began with Beyoncé astride a white horse sauntering down a hallway in NRG’s bowels as she sang “16 Carriages,” her ballad about a youth spent on the road chasing showbiz dreams. Soon she was joined by a quartet of Black female country singers — Tanner Adell, Brittney Spencer, Tiera Kennedy and Reyna Roberts — for a moving rendition of the Beatles’ “Blackbird.”

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Beyoncé emerged onto the stadium field to sing a blistering “Ya Ya,” her version of a classic Tina Turner rave-up, accompanied by a small electric rock band and a huge horn section arrayed on bleachers that called to mind her presentation at the Coachella festival in 2018. Then she did the clubby “My House” before welcoming Shaboozey to join her for “Sweet Honey Buckiin’” and Post Malone for their “Levii’s Jeans” (which they did in front of a pickup truck wrapped in denim).

Beyoncé sang her cover of Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” while riding in a car cruising down the field — not unlike her Coachella tribute to HBCU tradition, this was a loving embodiment of Black rodeo culture — and finished the show with her chart-topping “Texas Hold ’Em,” which she did on the 50-yard line while dancing next to her 12-year-old daughter, Blue Ivy.

Throughout the show, Beyoncé’s vocals were strong and precise, the choreography tough and hard-hitting, the costumes beautifully bedazzled — a Christmas gift to her fans in the form of a marketing opportunity.

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