MOVIES
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 28/06/2015 (3780 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD
Grant Park. PG. 119 minutes.
This new adaptation of the Thomas Hardy novel stars a radiant Carey Mulligan as Bathsheba Everdene, a woman who strives for independence in Victorian England, even as she is pursued by three suitors, a farmer (Matthias Schoenaerts), a respected landowner (Michael Sheen), and a volatile soldier (Tom Sturridge). Hardy’s source material could have facilitated an overheated costume melodrama, but director Thomas Vinterberg opts for a cool, classic, contemporary rendition anchored by Mulligan’s subtle performance. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö 1/2
I’LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS
Grant Park. PG. 97 minutes.
A former songstress (Blythe Danner) decides to change her life, a plan that includes romancing a new man (Sam Elliot) and befriending a pool cleaner (Martin Starr) It’s got a dream cast and a dreamy plot, but it hangs on a screenplay as random as a dream. ‘Ö’Ö 1/2 (Reviewed by Roger Moore)
INSIDE OUT
Grant Park, Kildonan Place, McGillivray, Polo Park, St. Vital, Towne. G. 95 minutes.
This Pixar animated feature creates anthropomorphized emotions to show the psychological workings at play when 11-year-old Riley moves with her mom and dad to a new home in San Francisco. Amy Poehler voices a joyous Joy and Lewis Black is on the nose as Anger, but you have to especially respect the portrayal of Sadness (voiced with a tender comedic touch by Phyllis Smith), not as a negative or bad character but as a necessary member of the emotional team. She’s an effective repudiation of a dominant feel-good culture that would love to see her medicated out of existence. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö’Ö
INSIDIOUS CHAPTER 3
Polo Park, Towne. 14A. 98 minutes.
This prequel toggles between the supernatural crisis of a haunted teen (Stefanie Scott) haunted by a malevolent spirit after trying to contact her dead mother, and seasoned psychic Elise (Lin Shaye) as she attempts to abandon the spirit-world business after one too many terrifying encounters. The chief spectre is referred to as “the man who can’t breathe” and the whole film is a little wheezy when it comes to trotting out the elements that enlivened past Insidious entries, such as startling, aged, scary faces and figures popping in and out of the frame with physics-defying impunity. ‘Ö’Ö 1/2
JURASSIC WORLD
Grant Park, Kildonan Place, McGillivray, McGillivray VIP, Polo Park, Polo Park Imax, St. Vital, Towne. PG. 125 minutes.
Set 22 years after the events of Jurassic Park, the theme park is now a 10-year-old success story until corporate suits compel the park’s operations manager (Bryce Dallas Howard) to create a genetic hybrid monster, to the consternation of a raptor trainer (Chris Pratt) obliged to try to save the day. In its scale and visual effects, it feels like a proper sequel to Jurassic Park, except the characters are thin, and the first film’s critique of scientific hubris just gets lost in the rote blockbuster action. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö
LIVE FROM NEW YORK
Bandwidth. PG. 82 minutes.
This documentary examines the far-flung impact the show Saturday Night Live has had on western culture in its 40-year history. That turns out to be a too-tall order for its 82-minute running time, but this is still an entertaining overview. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö
MAD MAX: FURY ROAD
Polo Park, St. Vital, Towne. 14A. 121 minutes.
In this reboot from director George Miller, Tom Hardy assumes the role of Max Rockatansky, the post-apocalyptic road warrior originally played by Mel Gibson. Max finds himself aligned with a warrior woman (Charlize Theron) on a mission to fight her way through hordes of bloodthirsty scavengers to return to her homeland. This is the third mega-franchise entry to come down the pike this year, but demonstrating his mastery of screen action, 70-year-old Miller shows ’em how it’s done. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö’Ö
MAX
McGillivray, Polo Park. PG. 111 minutes.
A Belgian shepherd dog used by the military in Afghanistan is sent back to America to a family struggling with their own personal loss from the war. If director Boaz Yakin wasn’t so quick to push the patriot buttons of his intended audience, this would have represented a welcome return of the old-fashioned canine melodrama in the vein of Lassie and Rin Tin Tin. ‘Ö’Ö 1/2
ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL
Grant Park. PG. 105 minutes.
High school senior Greg (Thomas Mann), happy to make film parodies with his friend Earl (RJ Cyler) is obliged to visit a classmate (Olivia Cooke) battling cancer, a relationship that blossoms as her condition gets more serious. This could have been a heavy teen melodrama in the vein of The Fault in Our Stars, but the film hews closer to reality with characters that can’t always articulate their feelings or know how to do the right thing. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö 1/2
PITCH PERFECT 2
McGillivray. PG. 115 minutes.
A capella competitors the Barden Bellas suffer a humiliation at the Lincoln Center and resolve to fight their way back by winning an international competition hitherto denied any American teams. All the news is good about this sequel, which is, if anything, funnier than the original. It brings back all your favourite folks, most notably the sweetly geeky and adorable Anna Kendrick and the bawdy, nothing-is-sacred Rebel Wilson, whose Fat Amy gets more screen time and makes the most of it. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö 1/2 (Reviewed by Jocelyn Noveck)
THE SALT OF THE EARTH
Cinematheque. PG. 110 minutes.
Co-directors Wim Wenders and Julio Salgado collaborate on a gorgeous, ambitious documentary portrait of photographer Sebasti£o Salgado, who spent 40 years travelling the world and bearing witness to some of the major events of our recent history, a devastating journey that leads to his latest redemptive project, a tribute to the planet’s beauty. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö’Ö
SAN ANDREAS
Kildonan Place, McGillivray, Polo Park, St. Vital, Towne. PG. 115 minutes.
Dwayne Johnson is a Los Angeles Fire Department chopper pilot obliged to rescue his womenfolk (Carla Gugino as his estranged wife and Alexandra Daddario as his daughter) when a massive earthquake tears California apart. Notwithstanding all the digital mayhem, San Andreas has a soothing subtextual message in this age of global warming and ongoing toxic pollution that tells audiences no matter how horrific the disaster may be, humans aren’t to blame for the environmental chaos herein. A more appropriate title might have been San Andreas: It’s Not Our Fault. ‘Ö’Ö
SLOW WEST
Bandwidth. 14A. 84 minutes.
A Scottish teen (Kodi Smit-McPhee) tracks the love of his life from Scotland to Colorado, where he finds a suspect caregiver in Silas (Michael Fassbender), a bounty hunter who also happens to be on the young woman’s trail, for altogether different reasons. Its violence comes in sporadic, chaotic fits, and in no way resembles the mythic showdowns of movies past. Considering that, its leisurely pace and its offbeat characters, it may not qualify as a classic western, but it does earn membership in the club. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö
SPY
Grant Park, Kildonan Place, McGillivray, Polo Park, St. Vital, Towne. 14A. 120 minutes.
Melissa McCarthy is a CIA analyst who must go undercover when her fellow agents are compromised on a mission to stop a deadly arms dealer (Rose Byrne). The spy spoof featuring an unlikely secret agent is practically a genre unto itself, but in that crowded field, writer-director Paul Feig (Bridesmaids) wisely deploys McCarthy as a real, original and occasionally hilarious Bond wannabe. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö 1/2
TED 2
Grant Park, Kildonan Place, McGillivray, McGillivray VIP, Polo Park, St. Vital, Towne. 14A. 116 minutes.
In this sequel to the rude 2012 comedy, John (Mark Wahlberg) and his titular toy bear/”thunder buddy” Ted (voiced by director Seth MacFarlane) go to court to fight the law when Ted is declared “property.” It’s good for some frequent, guilt-inducing laughs even if the movie’s satiric message — slavery is bad — is a bit of a no-brainer. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö
THAT GUY DICK MILLER
Cinematheque. PG. 91 minutes.
This meandering documentary has the benefit of a fascinating subject in its affectionate look at the life of character actor Dick Miller, via his storied career working for Roger Corman and later Corman acolytes including Joe Dante, Allan Arkush, John Sayles and Jonathan Kaplan. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö
TOMORROWLAND
Towne. PG. 130 minutes.
A teenage science geek (Britt Robertson) discovers a conduit to a fantastic future world, but needs to enlist a disillusioned scientist (George Clooney) to help her unlock its mysteries in this Disney adventure from director Brad Bird (The Incredibles; The Iron Giant). Narratively awkward, Tomorrowland practically jumps the rails before it has properly begun. But when it gets back on track, it not only delivers the fun ride we expect from a summer-proximity Disney fantasy, but also a rare piece of family entertainment that warrants a discussion afterwards. ‘Ö’Ö’Ö 1/2
In a way, Randall King was born into the entertainment beat.
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