Lifestyle
A political dramedy, military satire, and dark whimsy — in theaters this week
Emma Mackey as the title character in Ella McCay.
Claire Folger/20th Century Studios
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Claire Folger/20th Century Studios
A stellar cast can’t save James L. Brooks’ dramedy in theaters this week. Luckily, there are other choices, including an Alia Shawkat-led military satire and a horror fantasy from the creator of Pushing Daisies.
They’re joining Five Nights at Freddy’s 2, Fackham Hall, Hamnet, Wake Up Dead Man, Wicked: For Good and more at cineplexes. Here’s our movie roundup from last week, and the week before.
Here’s what’s new.
Ella McCay
In theaters Friday
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85-year-old James L. Brooks has such an enviable track record as a TV creator (The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Taxi, The Simpsons), and movie writer/director (Terms of Endearment, Broadcast News, As Good as It Gets), that it’s hard not to hope for the best when he makes his first feature film in 15 years. Alas, this treacly, tone-deaf dramedy centered on the travails of its titular idealist will be nobody’s idea of a good time. Ella (Sex Education‘s Emma Mackey) is lieutenant governor of an unnamed state, who becomes governor when her avuncular mentor (Albert Brooks) resigns to take a cabinet position.
Buttressed by a supportive aunt (Jamie Lee Curtis) and a wisdom-spouting driver (Kumail Nanjiani), while being undercut by a neglectful dad (Woody Harrelson) and opportunistic hubby (Jack Lowden), she embarks on a singularly inept attempt to do public good while also counseling her agoraphobic little brother (Spike Fearn) on how to win back his girlfriend (Ayo Edebiri). That is an indisputably impressive cast, which makes it all-the-more remarkable that not one of them manages to make the film’s dialogue or motivations either plausible or comic. — Bob Mondello
Atropia
In limited theaters Friday
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We begin in a bustling Iraqi village, with teenaged American soldiers confronting villagers in turbans and hijabs who look as if they’re going about everyday life in … oh never mind, it’s all fake. Atropia is a town constructed in the California desert to train green troops before they’re sent off to fight in the Middle East. These towns evidently exist in real life, though they’re presumably not put to uses as goofy as they are in Hailey Gates’ scattered satirical romp. Alia Shawkat (Arrested Development) plays an aspiring actress who still nurtures dreams that this gig will further her acting career. Callum Turner (a handsome inexpressive lug in The Boys in the Boat) is now a marginally more expressive lug as a returning vet playing an Iraqi insurgent to exorcise his own demons and maybe give a few green soldiers some pointers. The setup’s fun, the payoff less, but it’s amusing. — Bob Mondello
Dust Bunny
In theaters Friday
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Where do you stand on the notion of “dark whimsy?” Because that’s what the horror/fantasy film Dust Bunny will be serving up — in a big way — in select theaters. It’s writer/director Bryan Fuller’s feature debut, although he’s put in plenty of time on the small screen (he’s the guy behind Wonderfalls, Pushing Daisies and Hannibal). The premise is simple — a young girl (Sophie Sloan) is terrified of a monster under her bed, and recruits an assassin for hire (Mads Mikkelsen) to kill it. It’s the execution (heh) that matters, though — and that execution is stylized to a fare-thee-well, in a mode reminiscent of the go-for-broke fabulism of films like Delicatessen, The City of the Lost Children and, yes, Amélie. If you like that sort of approach, it’s whimsical; if you hate it, it’s twee. (Me, in this case I lean more to the former, because the film features Sigourney Weaver as a kind of executive assassin. There is nothing twee about my girl Sigourney goddamn Weaver, and there never has been.) — Glen Weldon


Lifestyle
The 11 most challenged books of 2025, according to the American Library Association
The American Library Association’s list of the most frequently challenged books of 2025 includes Sold by Patricia McCormick, The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky and Maia Kobabe’s Gender Queer: A Memoir.
American Library Association
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American Library Association
The American Library Association has released its annual list of the most commonly challenged books at libraries across the United States.
According to the ALA, the 11 most frequently targeted books include several tied titles. They are:
1. Sold by Patricia McCormick
2. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
3. Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe
4. Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas
5. (tie) Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo
5. (tie) Tricks by Ellen Hopkins
7. A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas
8. (tie) A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
8. (tie) Identical by Ellen Hopkins
8. (tie) Looking for Alaska by John Green
8. (tie) Storm and Fury by Jennifer L. Armentrout
Many of these individual titles also appear on a 2024-25 report issued last October by PEN America, a separate group dedicated to free expression, which looked at book challenges and bans specifically within public schools.
The ALA says that it documented 4,235 unique titles being challenged in 2025 – the second-highest year on record for library challenges. (The highest ever was in 2023, with 4,240 challenges documented – only five more than in this most recent year.)
According to the ALA, 40% of the materials challenged in 2025 were representations of LGBTQ+ people and those of people of color.

In all, the ALA documented 713 attempts across the United States in 2025 to censor library materials and services; 487 of those challenges targeted books.
According to the ALA, 92% of all book challenges to libraries came from “pressure groups,” government officials and local decision makers. While 20.8% came from pressure groups such as Moms for Liberty (as the ALA cited in an email to NPR), 70.9% of challenges originated with government officials and other “decision makers,” such as local board officials or administrators.
In a more detailed breakdown, the ALA notes that 31% of challenges came from elected government officials and and 40% from board members or administrators. In its full report, the ALA states that only 2.7% of such challenges originated with parents, and 1.4% with individual library users.
Fifty-one percent of challenges were attempted at public libraries, and 37% involved school libraries. The remaining challenges of 2025 targeted school curriculums and higher education.

The ALA defines a book “ban” as the removal of materials, including books, from a library. A “challenge,” in this organization’s definition, is an attempt to have a library resource removed, or access to it restricted.
The ALA is a non-partisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to American libraries and librarians.
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We beef with the Pope and admire the Stanley Cup : Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me!
Promo image with Phil Pritchard, Alzo Slade, and Peter Sagal
Bruce Bennett, Arnold Turner, NPR/Getty Images, NPR
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Bruce Bennett, Arnold Turner, NPR/Getty Images, NPR
This week, Phil Pritchard, NHL’s Keeper of the Stanley Cup, joins us to about taking the cup jet-skiing and panelists Alonzo Bodden, Adam Burke, and Dulcé Sloan beef with the Pope and get misdiagnosed.
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