Author: Don Kaye

  • Movie Review: ‘No Other Choice’

    Lee Byung-hun stars in 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    Lee Byung-hun stars in ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    Opening in theaters on December 25 is ‘No Other Choice,’ directed by Park Chan-wook and starring Lee Byung-hun, Son Ye-jin, Park Hee-soon, Lee Sung-min, Yeom Hye-ran, and Cha Seung-won.

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    Related Article: ‘Squid Game’ Season 3 Wraps Up the Main Story But Hints at the Future

    Initial Thoughts

    Lee Byung-hun stars in 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    Lee Byung-hun stars in ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    The films of director Park Chan-wook effortlessly mix and match genres like crime thriller, psychological drama, horror, and satire without breaking a sweat, and usually leaving you stunned by the audacious manner in which they do so. With ‘No Other Choice,’ Park has created an acidic workplace comedy that’s also a dark psychological study, as well as a ruthless condemnation of late-stage global capitalism.

    And – no surprise at all – it all works perfectly. While perhaps a tad too long, ‘No Other Choice’ is both entertaining and enraging, incredibly relevant and wickedly absurd – and a sad, prescient look at the way that life is becoming ever so harder to live and the way it drives some of us to desperate behavior.

    Story and Direction

    (Right) Son Ye-jin stars in 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    (Right) Son Ye-jin stars in ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    Based on the novel ‘The Ax’ by Donald Westlake, ‘No Other Choice’ follows Yoo Man-su (Lee Byung-hun), a manager at a paper manufacturing company who is brutally downsized after 25 years – along with much of his crew – by the American corporation that takes over the plant. Man-su tells his wife Lee Mi-ri (Son Ye-jin) and their children – his stepson Si-one and their neurodivergent daughter Ri-one – that he will quickly find another job within three months.

    But more than a year passes and the family is forced to tighten their belts, even sending their dogs to live with her parents and putting their beloved house – Man-su’s childhood home — up for sale, with their arrogant neighbor interested in buying it. Mi-ri herself also takes a job as assistant to a handsome dentist (Yoo Yeon-seok) and Man-su is soon convinced she’s sleeping with him, even as he himself develops a painful toothache that he refuses to do anything about.

    As Man-su works at lousy retail gigs just to earn some money, he becomes obsessed with getting a position at the Moon Paper papermaking company that’s currently held by the awful, self-absorbed manager Seon-chul (Park Hee-soon). Determined to get Seon-chul’s job at all costs, Man-su hatches a plan to kill him, find out who else might be up for the position via a fake job listing, and kill them as well.

    Director Park Chan-wook on the set of 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    Director Park Chan-wook on the set of ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    The precision and complete control of tone with which Park tells this story is illustrated by two sequences in which someone is marked for death. The first veers steadily over the line into full absurdity – almost slapstick comedy – while the second is tragic, horrifying, and a bitter indication of how quickly Man-su is losing his soul, and how heartless the circumstances are that he even gets to that point. Even when the movie is funny – which is more frequently than you might think – it’s also suffused with the kind of existential sadness and fear that working people know all too well.

    It’s this mix of black comedy and succinct, scathing social commentary that makes ‘No Other Choice’ such a bracing and original work – and it’s scary that it’s relevant right now even though it’s based on a novel written in 1997. We’ll mention again that it is a bit overlong, with some of its subplots struggling for the right amount of attention. But otherwise this is sharp work from Park Chan-wook, with an ending that is equal parts melancholy and unnerving, and it’s also beautifully shot from start to finish by cinematographer Kim Woo-hyung.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Son Ye-jin and Lee Byung-hun star in 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    (L to R) Son Ye-jin and Lee Byung-hun star in ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    Lee Byung-hun is perhaps best known to audiences these days as the icy Front Man in ‘Squid Game,’ and his cool demeanor has graced a number of other action and crime films. ‘No Other Choice’ finds him playing a confident, successful middle-class manager, husband, and father who has the rug pulled out from under him, and Lee handles the slow unraveling of Man-su superbly. Equally excellent is Son Ye-jin as his wife, Mi-ri, who becomes the true pillar of strength in the family as her husband’s self-image takes a brutal beating.

    Among the supporting players, Lee Sung-min as the dissolute Goo Beom-mo – a would-be rival to Man-su for the Moon Paper job – and Yeom Hye-ran as Beom-mo’s unhinged wife, A-ra, provide one of the film’s funniest moments, while Cha Seung-won is quietly poignant as Ko Si-jo, who waxes nostalgic over his paper factory days while working in a shoe store and expressing his need to spend more time with his daughter.

    Final Thoughts

    Lee Byung-hun stars in 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    Lee Byung-hun stars in ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    With films like ‘Oldboy,’ ‘The Handmaiden,’ and ‘Decision to Leave,’ Park Chan-wook charts human foibles like vengeance, obsession, and greed, and somehow manages to make his flawed characters relatable and their situations humorous even as they grow more untenable and often grotesque.

    That tradition carries on in ‘No Other Choice,’ with its increasingly desperate protagonist and equally distressed supporting characters, each of whom is subjected to some kind of direct or indirect humiliation as a result of the heartless corporate world they find themselves in. All the characters confront the title dilemma at one point or another, and director Park cuttingly reminds us that we might not be too far behind.

    ‘No Other Choice’ receives a score of 90 out of 100.

    Lee Byung-hun stars in 'No Other Choice'. Photo: CJ Entertainment.
    Lee Byung-hun stars in ‘No Other Choice’. Photo: CJ Entertainment.

    What is the plot of ‘No Other Choice’?

    After Yoo Man-su loses his job at a paper company when it’s purchased by an American company, he launches a desperate plan to kill the other men who are up for a similar job that he wants at another paper manufacturer, so that he can maintain his home, his income, and his family’s comfortable life.

    Who is in the cast of ‘No Other Choice’?

    • Lee Byung-hun as Yoo Man-su
    • Son Ye-jin as Lee Mi-ri
    • Park Hee-soon as Choi Seon-chul
    • Lee Sung-min as Goo Beom-mo
    • Yeom Hye-ran as Lee A-ra
    • Cha Seung-won as Ko Si-jo
    • Yoo Yeon-seok as Oh Jin-ho
    • Kim Woo-seung as Yoo Si-won
    • Choi So-yul as Yoo Ri-won

    Movies and TV Shows by Park Chan-wook

    Buy Tickets: ‘No Other Choice’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Park Chan-wook Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters on December 25 is ‘The Testament of Ann Lee,’ directed and co-written by Mona Fastvold and starring Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Thomasin McKenzie, Christopher Abbott, Stacy Martin, Scott Handy, Matthew Beard, Viola Prettejohn and Tim Blake Nelson.

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    Related Article: Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried Starring in Novel Adaptation ‘The Housemaid’

    Initial Thoughts

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    You probably won’t see another movie like ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ this awards season or even this year. It’s a strange, often surreal, and numinous historical drama that’s frequently harrowing yet at times extremely moving. It’s also a musical of sorts, although many of the numbers are based on religious hymns and wouldn’t sound out of place in a folk horror film.

    Directed by Mona Fastvold and co-written by Fastvold with her longtime partner Brady Corbet – who directed 2024’s ‘The Brutalist,’ which the couple also co-wrote – ‘Ann Lee’ is, like that film, eerily immersive in its historical period and driven by a singular performance from its star. You simply cannot take your eyes off Amanda Seyfried in this film, even if other actors are somewhat sidelined and the film itself raises questions about its subject that are never really answered.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Mona Fastvold and Amanda Seyfried on the set of 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Mona Fastvold and Amanda Seyfried on the set of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Born in Manchester, England in 1736, Ann Lee (Amanda Seyfried) is brought up in a strict religious household, one of eight children, and sent to work at an early age in a cotton factory. In her 20s, she joins a religious sect known as the Shakers – literally the ‘Shaking Quakers,’ an offshoot of the Quaker faith that expiates sin and expresses devotion to God through ecstatic shaking, dancing, and singing.

    After marrying an iron worker named Abraham (Christopher Abbott), being initiated into sex, and giving birth to four children who all die in infancy, Ann is committed to an asylum. These experiences, combined with a stint in prison for public evangelizing, trigger visions which result in her being deemed the second coming of Christ in female form.

    Now known as Mother Ann Lee, Ann establishes a doctrine for the Shakers that renounces all sexual activity, which does not sit well with Abraham. Yet the Shakers also believe in gender equality, pacifism, human rights (they are appalled by slavery), and community sharing. Increasingly persecuted in England, Ann, her devoted brother William (Lewis Pullman), and a small band of followers journey to the American colonies and settle in upstate New York – but their persecution doesn’t end there.

    Mona Fastvold with cast and crew on the set of 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Mona Fastvold with cast and crew on the set of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Mona Fastvold presents all this in linear, straightforward fashion, adding surreal imagery and some showy camera moves to accentuate the more spiritual moments of Ann Lee’s life. The songs – a mix of chants, Shaker hymns, and folk melodies – are haunting enough to not clash with the film’s tone and esthetic, which veers from the pastoral to the brutal – the latter especially in the scenes where Ann gives birth, as well as a later, harrowing sequence of persecution and torture.

    Where Fastvold loses focus is the story’s meaning. The Shakers espoused some truly progressive ideals, and their dancing and shaking were indeed rapturous, even bordering (at least onscreen) on the erotic. That brings Ann’s whole rigid adherence to celibacy for her flock into question, along with her own mental state and the frankly cult-like piety of her followers.

    Was she channeling the divine, or was she suffering from trauma brought on by sexual dysfunction and the horrific loss of her children? How did her anti-sex mandate coexist with ‘be fruitful and multiply’? The film doesn’t make a strong case either way, and while it’s visually powerful and often dramatically moving, there’s a bit of an empty feeling at the end (especially when the closing credits reveal that there are only three Shakers left in the world today).

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Amanda Seyfried and Lewis Pullman in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Amanda Seyfried and Lewis Pullman in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Amanda Seyfried has always been an exceptional actor, but she pushes herself to new heights in ‘Ann Lee.’ In a year full of raw performances by women like Rose Byrne, Jessie Buckley, and Jennifer Lawrence, Seyfried not only fearlessly embraces the extremes that are brought upon Ann – including graphically disastrous childbirths, beatings, and torture – but fully inhabits the spirituality and determination of the women.

    While whatever drove Ann Lee – whether it was a connection to the divine or the throes of mental illness – is open to debate, Seyfried never leaves any doubt of what Ann herself believes. Her subtle physical transformation and beautiful singing voice only add to what is nothing less than an epic performance.

    It’s a shame that many of the other characters and performers struggle to stand out in the shadow of Seyfried’s work, but Thomasin McKenzie makes an impression as her devoted assistant Mary and Lewis Pullman broadens his range as well with his portrayal of Ann’s fiercely loyal and devout brother William. Also notable is Christopher Abbott, whose face tells the story of a man who is slowly checking out of what he found so compelling about Ann and the Shaker beliefs – it’s too bad that he more or less disappears from the story halfway through.

    Final Thoughts

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Despite its thematic murkiness – and lapses in character development for everyone but its central figure – ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ is still a unique cinematic experience. We can’t say enough about Seyfried’s performance, and the film as a whole is a gripping, evocative experience.

    And setting aside the question of Ann’s convictions and the Shakers’ dedication to them, ‘Ann Lee’ is also a portrait of a woman trying to espouse and extend bold ideals and, of course, meeting resistance every step of the way. That she manages to create at least the beginnings of a truly egalitarian society, despite the odds and its own strange attributes, is akin in a way to the creation of such a challenging film itself.

    ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ receives a score of 85 out of 100.

    A scene from 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    A scene from ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’?

    Visionary spiritual leader Ann Lee rises from obscurity in 18th century England to forge the radical religious movement that will become the Shakers. Driven by her beliefs and persecuted in two countries, Ann gathers devoted followers who come to see her as the female embodiment of Christ.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’?

    • Amanda Seyfried as Ann Lee
    • Lewis Pullman as William Lee
    • Thomasin McKenzie as Mary Partington
    • Christopher Abbott as Abraham Standerin
    • Stacy Martin as Jane Wardley
    • Scott Handy as James Wardley
    • Matthew Beard as James Whittaker
    • Viola Prettejohn as Nancy Lee
    • Tim Blake Nelson as Pastor Reuben Wright
    'The Testament of Ann Lee' opens in theaters on December 25th.
    ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ opens in theaters on December 25th.

    List of Amanda Seyfried Movies and TV Shows

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Amanda Seyfried Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Anaconda’

    (L to R) Doug (Jack Black) and Griff (Paul Rudd) in Columbia Pictures' 'Anaconda'. Photo: Matt Grace. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Doug (Jack Black) and Griff (Paul Rudd) in Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’. Photo: Matt Grace. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters on December 25 is ‘Anaconda,’ directed by Tom Gormican and starring Paul Rudd, Jack Black, Thandiwe Newton, Steve Zahn, Daniela Melchior, Selton Mello, and Ione Skye.

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    Related Article: Jack Black and Paul Rudd Talk ‘Anaconda’ and Rebooting the Franchise

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Claire (Thandiwe Newton), Kenny (Steve Zahn) and Griff (Paul Rudd) in Columbia Pictures’ 'Anaconda'.© 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Photo: Bradley Patrick.
    (L to R) Claire (Thandiwe Newton), Kenny (Steve Zahn) and Griff (Paul Rudd) in Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’.© 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Photo: Bradley Patrick.

    No one will ever mistake the original ‘Anaconda’ for a good movie, and even the 1997 film itself doesn’t pretend to be one. With its random cast (Jennifer Lopez! Ice Cube! Jon Voight!), intentional silliness, and wacky premise, the movie leans into its own absurdity and ends up becoming one of those cult classics that fans adore for its ridiculousness (it was also a decent box office hit and spawned a raft of even worse sequels).

    Fortunately, the filmmakers behind the new ‘Anaconda’ understand the assignment: the movie, directed by Tom Gormican (‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent’), can only be described as a meta-reboot, in which the film both makes (loving) fun of its subject and becomes part of the pantheon itself. With comic sure things Paul Rudd and Jack Black leading the cast, the new ‘Anaconda’ is full of laughs for the first two-thirds of its running time – until it runs out of gas – and is actually even a sweet-natured homage to friendship and the love of making movies.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Jack Black and Director Tom Gormican on the set of Columbia Pictures' 'Anaconda'. Photo: Matt Grace. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jack Black and Director Tom Gormican on the set of Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’. Photo: Matt Grace. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Ronald ‘Griff’ Griffen Jr. (Paul Rudd) is a struggling actor (his claim to fame is a few episodes of ‘S.W.A.T.’) who returns home from Hollywood to Buffalo, New York for the surprise birthday party of his friend Doug McCallister (Jack Black). Doug writes screenplays at night but shoots wedding videos by day (although his idea to turn one into a horror movie is shot down by the less-than-enthusiastic couple), and is worried about being stuck in the job forever – until Griff comes to the rescue.

    At lunch with Doug and two of their other old friends – recent divorcee Claire (Thandiwe Newton) and Doug’s sometimes assistant, the dissolute Kenny (Steve Zahn) – Griff announces that he’s gotten hold of the rights to the original ‘Anaconda,’ their favorite movie as youths, and proposes that the four of them head to Brazil and ‘reboot the thing indie style.’ With the loving support of his wife (Ione Skye), Doug agrees to direct, while Griff and Claire will star and Kenny will co-produce (or something like that).

    With a budget of $35,000 (their initial $2 million figure got shot down by a local bank), the foursome head to the Amazon, where they rent both a boat and an anaconda, along with his slightly obsessive owner and trainer (Selton Mello). At first the shoot seems to go swimmingly, but then they learn that the presumed captain of the boat (Daniela Melchior) is not who she appears to be, that Griff hasn’t been entirely honest with them – and that there is a real giant anaconda in hot pursuit of them.

    (L to R) Jack Black and Paul Rudd on the set of Columbia Pictures’ 'Anaconda'. Photo: Bradley Patrick. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jack Black and Paul Rudd on the set of Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’. Photo: Bradley Patrick. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The plot – director Tom Gormican co-wrote the screenplay with Kevin Etten – is little more than nonsense, but it’s fun nonsense and the laughs come steadily for much of the film’s first hour or so. It’s an excuse for (mainly) Rudd and Black to riff on the original movie, and the meta factor gets even more byzantine when they learn that there are real bad guys on the river behind them and a real monster snake lurking in the depths as well: Doug writes it into the script, prompting an awestruck Griff to proclaim, ‘You could be the white Jordan Peele.’

    It’s only when ‘Anaconda’ turns into a semi-real action movie in its final third – with chases and explosions and lots more of the CG title beastie, which is almost an afterthought for the film’s first hour – that the movie’s charm and goofy energy begin to flag. Well, truth be told, it kind of starts to wane halfway through, but there are enough jokes to carry it along until the more conventional pyrotechnics of the third act take over, along with a not-unexpected but still rather awkward cameo.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Claire (Thandiwe Newton), Doug (Jack Black), Griff (Paul Rudd) and Kenny (Steve Zahn) in Columbia Pictures' 'Anaconda'. Photo: Matt Grace. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Claire (Thandiwe Newton), Doug (Jack Black), Griff (Paul Rudd) and Kenny (Steve Zahn) in Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’. Photo: Matt Grace. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Paul Rudd and Jack Black. Need we say more? Both actors are well within their comfort zone here. Rudd does his ‘middle-aged man struggling to find his way’ routine effortlessly, while Black does his ‘insane middle-aged man struggling to find his way’ act equally well. There is a lot of charm and chemistry between the two of them, and even though Thandiwe Newton and Steve Zahn are underwritten (especially the former), the quartet do manage to generate some of the joy of old friends having fun together and making a movie – that old ‘let’s put on a show’ vibe still comes through.

    Brazilian actor Selton Mello has a few chances to steal the show with his not-quite-all-there anaconda trainer, but even he doesn’t quite pull it off, he manages to imbue the character of Santiago with some genuine empathy – even if his relationship with his snake seems a tad unnatural.

    Final Thoughts

    Doug (Jack Black) in Columbia Pictures' 'Anaconda'. Copyright: © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Photo: Bradley Patrick.
    Doug (Jack Black) in Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’. Copyright: © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Photo: Bradley Patrick.

    All we can add about ‘Anaconda’ is that we went into the movie with low expectations (or, really, no expectations) and ended up having a good time. While there have been a handful of excellent comedies released in 2025, those films – like ‘Splitsville’ or ‘Friendship’ – have focused on the toxic side of relationships, whether between lovers or friends.

    The relationships in ‘Anaconda’ are not particularly toxic, and the friends are rather quick to forgive each other. Of course, none of the actions they take are remotely believable or smart – especially when the anaconda is chasing them – but that’s part of their appeal too. We laughed a lot at ‘Anaconda,’ and the movie embraces its source material and its own identity with the right attitude.

    ‘Anaconda’ receives a score of 75 out of 100.

    (L to R) Griff (Paul Rudd) and Doug (Jack Black) in Columbia Pictures’ 'Anaconda'. Photo: Bradley Patrick. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Griff (Paul Rudd) and Doug (Jack Black) in Columbia Pictures’ ‘Anaconda’. Photo: Bradley Patrick. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘Anaconda’?

    Childhood friends Doug, Griff, Kenny, and Claire seek to recapture their youth by traveling to the Amazon to shoot their own remake of the 1997 cult classic ‘Anaconda.’ But a real giant anaconda turns their guerilla filmmaking project into a perilous fight to stay alive.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Anaconda’?

    • Paul Rudd as Ronald ‘Griff’ Griffen Jr.
    • Jack Black as Doug McCallister
    • Steve Zahn as Kenny Trent
    • Thandiwe Newton as Claire Simons
    • Daniela Melchior as Ana Almeida
    • Selton Mello as Santiago Braga
    • Ione Skye as Malie McCallister
    'Anaconda' opens in theaters on December 25th.
    ‘Anaconda’ opens in theaters on December 25th.

    Other Movies in the ‘Anaconda’ Franchise:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Anaconda’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy ‘Anaconda’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Housemaid’

    Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway in 'The Housemaid'. Photo Credit: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo Credit: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    Opening in theaters on December 19 is ‘The Housemaid,’ directed by Paul Feig and starring Amanda Seyfried, Sydney Sweeney, Brandon Sklenar, Michele Morrone, Indiana Elle, Megan Ferguson, Ellen Tamaki, and Elizabeth Perkins.

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    Related Article: Sydney Sweeney to Star in ‘That Man from Rio’ for Director Justin Lin

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway and Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester in 'The Housemaid'. Photo Credit: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway and Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo Credit: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    Too often these days, a trailer for a new movie sells you a different experience than the one you eventually end up seeing – making something darker look funnier than it is, for example. There’s no such problem with ‘The Housemaid’: based on the best-selling novel by Freida McFadden, director Paul Feig’s adaptation is exactly what it promises: a campy, twisty psychological thriller, laced with laughs and a narrative that almost makes fun of itself – until it doesn’t.

    Feig – who seems to find his best groove lately with potboilers like this and ‘A Simple Favor’ – navigates the story’s twists and turns mostly successfully, aided by his trio of lead performers. While the film’s third act spins off the rails a bit in terms of tone and control, it still manages to be entertaining, with a crowd-pleaser of an ending that will send audiences out satiated.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R): Sydney Sweeney as Millie and Amanda Seyfried as Nina in 'The Housemaid'. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    (L to R): Sydney Sweeney as Millie and Amanda Seyfried as Nina in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    Millie Calloway (Sydney Sweeney) applies for a job as a live-in housemaid with Nina Winchester (Amanda Seyfried), a seemingly pleasant if high-strung homemaker who lives in her extravagant Long Island mansion with her rather cheeky daughter Cici (Indiana Elle) and handsome, charming, and effortlessly attentive husband Andrew (Brandon Sklenar).

    Millie, despite lying about her background and hiding the fact that she’s sleeping in her car and on parole after serving 10 years in prison, gets the job – only to find out once she starts that Nina is hiding a few secrets of her own, including the fact that she spent nine months in a psych ward for reasons revealed much later. Right off the part, Nina’s mood swings and capriciously cruel treatment of Millie indicate that something is wrong, along with the suspicious behavior of the groundskeeper, Enzo (Michele Morrone, from Netflix’s ‘365 Days’ sexathons). Luckily, Andrew is there to comfort Millie – even if his lingering glances indicate that he wants more than that.

    (L to R) Brandon Sklenar as Andrew Winchester and Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester in 'The Housemaid'. Photo Credit: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Brandon Sklenar as Andrew Winchester and Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo Credit: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    For much of its first two-thirds, ‘The Housemaid’ follows a seemingly conventional narrative almost to a fault, but the go-for-broke performances from its leads, precision needle drops, and Feig’s skillful balancing act of camp and psychological cat-and-mouse keep it thoroughly engaging. The world of wealth and privilege that the Winchesters inhabit is also roasted quite handily, thanks to Andrew’s almost ridiculously snooty mother (Elizabeth Perkins) and the local housewives, who at one point gossip about Nina after she leaves the room – even though Millie, who is all but invisible to them, is still there and can hear everything.

    ‘The Housemaid’ becomes predictable enough at a certain point that it almost screams that a twist is coming – one that is more or less telegraphed – and when that rug-pull is revealed, the movie tumbles into some surprisingly darker territory. It’s in the final third that Feig and screenwriter Rebecca Sonnenshine lose some of their grip on the material, diverging a bit from the book and stretching things out a bit too long with one betrayal or turnaround after another. Yet ‘The Housemaid’ still wraps up nicely, its conclusion both satisfying and leaving the door open for a continuation (McFadden did write two follow-up novels).

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R): Amanda Seyfried as Nina and Sydney Sweeney as Millie in 'The Housemaid'. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    (L to R): Amanda Seyfried as Nina and Sydney Sweeney as Millie in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    ‘The Housemaid’ opens one week before ‘The Testament of Ann Lee,’ also starring Amanda Seyfried, and you’re not likely to see two more different performances in theaters this year. That’s a compliment to the immense range of Seyfried, who plays Nina as an unpredictable weather pattern whose next ferocious storm will be followed just as quickly by a brief ray of sunshine. She keeps the audience off-balance throughout with a broad-strokes, jangling energy and does pampered housewife just as well as she does colonial religious leader.

    Sweeney is more low-key as a counterpoint, and a bit more limited in her range here than in her underrated ‘Christy’ from earlier this fall, but her seemingly submissive surface seethes subtly with a coiled watchfulness and smirking sense of play. As Andrew, Brandon Sklenar has the necessary physical presence to sell the character’s in-your-face masculinity, but otherwise his initial blandness comes across almost as a parody yet suits the contours of his character.

    Final Thoughts

    Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway in 'The Housemaid'. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    ‘The Housemaid’ may feel at times like one of those lightly erotic true-crime dramas that are the stock-in-trade of Netflix (and there is a smattering of sultry scenes here), but Paul Feig and his leading ladies give it a cinematic gloss and a sense of satire that may often elude that oversaturated genre.

    Playful and fun at some points, unnervingly dark at others, ‘The Housemaid’ might end up being what some grownups want for date night at the movies this holiday season instead of talking Disney animals or the blue cat people of Pandora (not that there’s anything wrong with those, of course). At a time when pulpy, provocative, adult-oriented movies are harder to find, ‘The Housemaid’ may be just the help you’re looking for.

    ‘The Housemaid’ receives a score of 80 out of 100.

    Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester in 'The Housemaid'. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.
    Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester in ‘The Housemaid’. Photo: Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate.

    What is the plot of ‘The Housemaid’?

    When Millie Calloway takes a job as live-in housemaid to the wealthy yet moody Nina Winchester and her attractive, charming husband Andrew, it’s only a matter of time before dark secrets, bizarre occurrences, and hidden passions erupt in the Winchesters’ seemingly perfect lives.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Housemaid’?

    • Sydney Sweeney as Millie Calloway
    • Amanda Seyfried as Nina Winchester
    • Brandon Sklenar as Andrew Winchester
    • Michele Morrone as Enzo
    • Elizabeth Perkins as Evelyn Winchester
    • Indiana Elle as Cecilia Winchester
    • Megan Ferguson as Jilianne
    • Ellen Tamaki as Patrice
    'The Housemaid' opens in theaters on December 19th.
    ‘The Housemaid’ opens in theaters on December 19th.

    Sydney Sweeney Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Housemaid’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Sydney Sweeney Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Dust Bunny’

    Mads Mikkelsen in 'Dust Bunny'. Photo: Lionsgate and Roadside Attractions.
    Mads Mikkelsen in ‘Dust Bunny’. Photo: Lionsgate and Roadside Attractions.

    In theaters on December 12 is ‘Dust Bunny,’ written and directed by Bryan Fuller and starring Mads Mikkelsen, Sophie Sloan, Sigourney Weaver, David Dastmalchian, Rebecca Henderson, and Sheila Atim.

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    Related Article: ‘Star Trek: Discovery’: Bryan Fuller Out as Showrunner

    Initial Thoughts

    Sophie Sloan in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    Sophie Sloan in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    In creating a fantastical world, one has to make it seem believable and real even if it only obeys the rules of its own internal logic. With his feature directorial debut, ‘Dust Bunny,’ Bryan Fuller imagines a surreal vision of what seems to be New York City, yet never makes it or the characters in his story feel three-dimensional.

    Famous for creating cult TV shows like ‘Pushing Daisies’ and ‘Hannibal,’ but more recently known for exiting series like ‘American Gods’ and ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ in their early stages or seasons, Fuller shows visual flair with his first film and also benefits from the presence of his ‘Hannibal’ star, Mads Mikkelsen. But ‘Dust Bunny’ never truly comes alive and is far too drawn-out for its own good.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Mads Mikkelsen and Sophie Sloan in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    (L to R) Mads Mikkelsen and Sophie Sloan in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    In an old yet ornate apartment building in what is supposed to be New York’s Chinatown, 10-year-old Aurora is convinced that the dust bunnies under her bed have evolved into a carnivorous monster that has pursued her throughout her young life, eating her previous foster parents and now targeting her new ones. When said parents are seemingly consumed, she enlists the help of her Intriguing Neighbor (Mads Mikkelsen) – that’s how he’s listed in the credits – an assassin who is skilled at killing more human monsters but is reluctant at first to help Aurora.

    A movie not giving its characters actual names usually raises red flags for us, indicating a frustrating lack of development of those characters. The same could be said for both the story and setting of ‘Dust Bunny’: while it’s meant to be surreal, it’s all too vaguely defined to truly capture our imaginations. It’s as if Fuller, who also wrote the piece, never bothered to go back after his first draft and add more texture and life to his story. It never feels real enough for us to care about what happens to Aurora and the Intriguing Neighbor, although the actors themselves work to give the film some emotional heft.

    Sophie Sloan in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    Sophie Sloan in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    But even the game cast can’t work around Fuller’s enervated direction and drawn-out pacing, which includes long stretches of looping dialogue that start out as jokes but ends up tiresome and far too repetitive. There are scenes of violence that are gore-free but still jarring within the fairy tale tone of the film, and while there are hints at a broader subtextual metaphor about abuse and neglect of children – and preserving their innocence in a vicious world – they’re also as vexingly hazy as much of the rest of the film.

    There are elements here that do have the making of an interesting dark fantasy film, and as noted earlier, Fuller does have an excellent eye for richly detailed compositions and a baroque use of color and shadow. But it often seems like his visuals are searching for a better story.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Mads Mikkelsen, Sophie Sloan and Sigourney Weaver in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    (L to R) Mads Mikkelsen, Sophie Sloan and Sigourney Weaver in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    Mads Mikkelsen makes everything he’s in better, and his reunion with Fuller for the first time since he starred as Hannibal Lecter on three seasons of ‘Hannibal’ is one of the best aspects of ‘Dust Bunny.’ Even though his character is so underwritten that he doesn’t even have a name, Mikkelsen does his best to bring the world-weary professional killer to life, and makes his growing fondness for Aurora feel credible.

    Little Sophie Sloan is adorable as Aurora, but her line delivery and range are still works in progress. Her finest moments come in some of the tender exchanges with Mikkelsen. Sigourney Weaver shows up as Laverne, who might be Mikkelsen’s boss, lover, or mentor (he confusingly calls her ‘mother’ at one point), and while Weaver always stands out as usual, the character is more of a cartoon character than anything else. Same goes for David Dastmalchian’s briefly seen and even more ridiculously named Conspicuously Inconspicuous Man.

    Final Thoughts

    Sophie Sloan in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    Sophie Sloan in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    We wish there was more to ‘Dust Bunny’ underneath its gleaming, stylish surface, since there are the inklings of an interesting world here – where monsters both human and inhuman are possibly interchangeable – and because there is the budding of a sweet father-daughter relationship between Mikkelsen’s gruff hitman and Sloan’s irrepressible Aurora.

    But at 106 minutes, ‘Dust Bunny’ has too thin a story to take up so much time, and not enough charm in its setting or narrative to do anything but test one’s patience. We’re not sure who it’s for either: the violence is probably too much for younger viewers while the story may not hook adults. Bryan Fuller has often displayed a singular imagination, but ‘Dust Bunny’ is too insular and half-formed to truly showcase the man’s talents.

    ‘Dust Bunny’ receives a score of 50 out of 100.

    David Dastmalchian in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    David Dastmalchian in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    What is the plot of ‘Dust Bunny’?

    When a monster under her bed seemingly eats her mother and father, a 10-year-old girl named Aurora (Sophie Sloan) living in New York City asks her mysterious hitman neighbor (Mads Mikkelsen) to help kill the beast.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Dust Bunny’?

    • Mads Mikkelsen as the Intriguing Neighbor
    • Sophie Sloan as Aurora
    • Sigourney Weaver as Laverne
    • Sheila Atim as Brenda
    • David Dastmalchian as Inconspicuously Conspicuous Man
    • Rebecca Henderson as Intimidating Woman
    • Line Kruse as Mother
    • Caspar Phillipson as Father
    Mads Mikkelsen in 'Dust Bunny'. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    Mads Mikkelsen in ‘Dust Bunny’. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    Series Written By Bryan Fuller:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Dust Bunny’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Mads Mikkelsen Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Hamnet’

    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Now in limited release and expanding on December 5 is ‘Hamnet,’ directed by Chloe Zhao and starring Jessie Buckley, Paul Mescal, Emily Watson, Joe Alwyn, David Wilmot, Olivia Lynes, Bodhi Rae Breathnach, and Jacobi Jupe.

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    Related Article: Ridley Scott to Reunite with ‘Gladiator II’ Star Paul Mescal for Post-Apocalyptic Adventure ‘The Dog Stars’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Every frame of ‘Hamnet’ is beautifully designed and captured by director Chloe Zhao (‘Eternals’) and her team, rendering England during the life and times of William Shakespeare in both ethereal and grimy terms. Life is hard, but also mysterious, and those who still connect with the forces of nature are an increasingly rare breed – like Anne ‘Agnes’ Hathaway (Jessie Buckley), who becomes the Bard’s wife and is the true center of ‘Hamnet.’

    Agnes, the daughter of an alleged ‘forest witch,’ is both luminously beautiful and slightly feral, which makes her all-intoxicating for Shakespeare himself (Paul Mescal). ‘Hamnet’ chronicles that passion, their deep love, and the creation of their family in poignantly simple terms – until tragedy rips at their very core. But that tragedy also manifests itself in a way that reverberates through history, and it’s only when that happens that ‘Hamnet’ wobbles, with the film not providing enough time for that aspect of the story to breathe and take root in the same way that its first part does.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Actors Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal with director Chloé Zhao on the set of their film 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Actors Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal with director Chloé Zhao on the set of their film ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    A young William Shakespeare is drawn to the magnetic Agnes (pronounced ANN-yes) in 16th century Stratford, and after a quick courtship they’re going at it hot and heavy in a stable. That leaves Agnes pregnant with the first of their three children, initiating a marriage that is frowned upon by Shakespeare’s brutish father (David Wilmot) and stern mother (Emily Watson). But William, Agnes, and their children – Susanna, and the twins Judith and Hamnet – find happiness in their existence, even if William has to travel frequently to London to write and produce his plays.

    It’s only when the unimaginable (at least for us; it was much more common then) hits the clan, resulting in the death of perhaps the most precocious family member, that the clan’s entire dynamic is in danger of disintegrating – particularly as a shattered Agnes begins to bitterly resent her husband for not being there for that child’s last moments, and for throwing himself into his work instead of sharing in her grief. But William has his own method for dealing with the loss and his unspeakable anguish – and it expresses itself through the creation of one of his greatest plays (at least according to this movie, and the Maggie O’Farrell novel it was based on; the truth, as with many aspects of the real Shakespeare’s life, remains elusive).

    (L to R) Jacobi Jupe stars as Hamnet, Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna and Olivia Lynes as Judith in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Jacobi Jupe stars as Hamnet, Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna and Olivia Lynes as Judith in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    For its first two-thirds, ‘Hamnet’ builds a magnificent edifice of love, emotion, and empathy that borders on the mystical, primarily through the force of nature that is Jessie Buckley’s Agnes. Her love for William – and his reciprocation – is the core of the movie’s first act, with their endearing family life the center of its second. It all comes crashing down during an extended, agonizing sequence in which Agnes’ feral, soul-crushing response is a heartbreaking howl of loss that could reverberate through the soul of every parent.

    After reaching that height of sorrow, Zhao doesn’t completely find a way to balance the scales, or at least give the rest of the narrative the weight it deserves. Agnes’ fury toward William doesn’t seem earned – even if he becomes a distant figure during the middle of the film — and her journey during the closing sequences, both physical as she travels to London to see what the hell her husband is doing there and psychological as she sees his latest play and realizes where it’s coming from, seems rushed. Where ‘Hamnet’ should reach a powerful crescendo of forgiveness and acceptance, it never quite brings down the house, leaving one feeling like something’s missing.

    Cast and Performances

    Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Whatever the flaws in narrative structure, there are none whatsoever in Jessie Buckley’s performance. She has been cited as the favorite to take home an Oscar this year and there’s no question about it. We meet Agnes curled at the base of a tree; she returns to that tree to give birth to her first child. The woman is connected to nature in ways both beautiful and enigmatic, and Buckley captures every aspect of her – her mystical nature, her undeniable charisma, her fierce love, and her excruciating grief – just right. It’s a powerhouse piece of work, and although it’s one of several delivered by women this year, it will be hard to top.

    We were somewhat soured on Paul Mescal after his miscasting in ‘Gladiator II,’ but he’s returned to our good graces here. Mescal’s Shakespeare, while not nearly as present onscreen as Agnes, is nevertheless a complex presence, a man torn between his love for his family and the work that takes him away from them, both physically and mentally. Mescal’s portrayal here is soulful and empathetic, giving us a glimpse into the beating heart of one of literature’s greatest geniuses (there’s only one scene, in which he spouts some of his most famous lines while considering the end of his own life, that doesn’t ring true).

    Attention must be paid as well to Emily Watson’s Mary Shakespeare, whose relationship with Agnes evolves from dour disapproval to love and understanding, and especially Jacobi Jupe as Hamnet Shakespeare, about whom we’ll say little but who also rips one’s heart out during several key scenes.

    Final Thoughts

    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Chloe Zhao seems most comfortable as a director in exploring the human psyche, the depths of our emotion and empathy, and the intimacy of our connection to both other people and the world around us. Perhaps that’s why her sole attempt to date at spectacle, ‘Eternals,’ didn’t quite work, while films like ‘Nomadland’ are so powerful.

    She re-centers herself here with ‘Hamnet,’ finding all the elements of her best work while adding a powerful message about the ways in which we process grief and how the creation of art can channel the deepest and most intense of human emotions. Shakespeare’s ‘Hamlet’ is not a recreation of events in the Bard’s life (which may or may not have happened as they do in this film), and neither is Chloe Zhao’s ‘Hamnet.’ But both take on a single, universal query: can art can provide empathy, understanding, and even healing? That is the question indeed.

    ‘Hamnet’ receives a score of 85 out of 100.

    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    What is the plot of ‘Hamnet’?

    William Shakespeare (Paul Mescal) and Anne ‘Agnes’ Hathaway (Jessie Buckley) marry and have three children, until the family is shattered by an unthinkable tragedy that leads to the writing of one of the Bard’s greatest plays.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Hamnet’?

    • Jessie Buckley as Agnes Shakespeare
    • Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare
    • Emily Watson as Mary Shakespeare
    • Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew Hathaway
    • Jacobi Jupe as Hamnet Shakespeare
    • David Wilmot as John Shakespeare
    • Olivia Lynes as Judith Shakespeare
    • Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna Shakespeare
    'Hamnet' opens in theaters on November 26th.
    ‘Hamnet’ opens in theaters on November 26th.

    List of Jessie Buckley Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Hamnet’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jessie Buckley Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Eternity’

    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen, Miles Teller and Callum Turner in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen, Miles Teller and Callum Turner in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    Opening in theaters November 26 is ‘Eternity,’ directed by David Freyne and starring Miles Teller, Elizabeth Olsen, Callum Turner, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, John Early, and Olga Merediz.

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    Related Article: Hailee Steinfeld to Star Opposite Miles Teller in Drama ‘Winter Games’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Miles Teller and Elizabeth Olsen in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Miles Teller and Elizabeth Olsen in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    Classic films like ‘Defending Your Life’ and ‘Heaven Can Wait’ have found rich material to mine for both comedy and romance in fantastical, often whimsical depictions of the afterlife – or, more specifically, the way stations we stop at on our journey before moving to whatever permanent form of existence that afterlife takes.

    ‘Eternity,’ from director and co-writer David Freyne, traverses the same mystical territory, channeling Albert Brooks’ ‘Defending Your Life’ in particular. But while Freyne’s feature is amusing and fairly entertaining, its rather static direction and lightweight treatment of its emotional core never make it feel as transcendent as it could.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen and Olga Merediz in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen and Olga Merediz in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    Elderly couple Larry and Joan Cutler (Barry Primus and Betty Buckley) are visiting their family when Larry abruptly chokes to death on a pretzel. He wakes up to find himself in the first stage of the afterlife, known as the Junction, where not only do you look like you did when you were at your happiest (in this case the form of Miles Teller) but where you stay in a moderately luxurious hotel while having a week to choose where you want to spend eternity, in whatever manner you decide.

    The options are all available in a funny kind of marketplace outside the hotel, where final destinations like Smoking World (‘cancer can’t kill you twice’) and No Men World (‘sold out’) jostle for business with more mundane locales like mountain cabins and tropical beaches. But once you decide on where to spend eternity, the decision is final. And if you decide you want to wait for a loved one to join you, you can stay at the Junction, which is what Larry decides to do so he can wait for Joan.

    He doesn’t have to wait long, as Joan succumbs to illness not long after and materializes looking like Elizabeth Olsen. But there’s a hitch: Joan’s first husband, Luke (Callum Turner), who was killed in the Korean War not long after they were married, has been waiting for her to show up as well. And now she must determine which of the two she wants to spend eternity with, and where – although the rules get a little cloudy at this point.

    (L to R) Callum Turner and Elizabeth Olsen in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Callum Turner and Elizabeth Olsen in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    All this information is relayed through heavy exposition by beings known as ‘afterlife coordinators,’ who are assigned to each new arrival. Larry’s is played by Da’Vine Joy Randolph, while John Early portrays Joan’s, and it’s a credit to both performers that they more or less steal the movie with their own amusing rapport and bits of business while explaining how this version of the afterlife works.

    Freyne’s direction is not especially stylish, often resulting in long, enervated shots that don’t leap off the screen but are fortunately bolstered by his game cast. The movie itself is entertaining enough in a low-key, low-stakes kind of way, and the superficial treatment of the concept, the emotions at play, and the decisions at the heart of the film render it a lot less poignant or thought-provoking than it could be.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) John Early and Da'Vine Joy Randolph in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) John Early and Da’Vine Joy Randolph in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    Neither Miles Teller nor Elizabeth Olsen, while fine actors, are known for their comedic chops, and ‘Eternity’ is not going to change that, really. Both are good, and Teller does play against his usual type – either super-tense or swaggering – while Olsen’s natural appeal powers her through the film. One thing both actors do well is use their body language to remind you that they are playing characters who, in their minds, are well into old age even if they look like their younger selves.

    Less impressive is Callum Turner, although his character is perhaps the most poorly written of the three leads – a shining knight one moment and a surly man-child the next. But the movie’s scene-stealers are easily Da’Vine Joy Randolph and John Early as the afterlife coordinators. Both have a rapport and dynamic that provides both the biggest laugh lines and many of the film’s funniest moments.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Callum Turner and Elizabeth Olsen in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Callum Turner and Elizabeth Olsen in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    ‘Eternity’ is an odd film. It’s not particularly cinematic, yet its premise – at least initially – is kind of clever and well-suited to a big screen comedy. Yet neither the direction nor the screenplay ever quite make it hit home emotionally, despite a few stirring moments. The end result is an amiable attempt at a rom-com crowd-pleaser that may pass the time relatively pleasantly but doesn’t make its insights as profound as they could be.

    ‘Eternity’ receives a score of 65 out of 100.

    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen and Miles Teller in 'Eternity'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen and Miles Teller in ‘Eternity’. Photo: A24.

    What is the plot of ‘Eternity’?

    In an afterlife where souls have one week to decide where to spend eternity, Joan (Elizabeth Olsen) is faced with the impossible choice between the man she spent her life with (Miles Teller) and her first love (Callum Turner), who died young and has waited decades for her to arrive.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Eternity’?

    • Miles Teller as Larry Cutler
    • Elizabeth Olsen as Joan Cutler
    • Callum Turner as Luke
    • Da’Vine Joy Randolph as Anna
    • John Early as Ryan
    • Olga Merediz as Karen
    • Barry Primus as Old Larry
    • Betty Buckley as Old Joan
    'Eternity' opens in theaters on November 14th.
    ‘Eternity’ opens in theaters on November 14th.

    Miles Teller Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Eternity’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Miles Teller Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Keeper’

    Tatiana Maslany in 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    Tatiana Maslany in ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    Opening in theaters November 14 is ‘Keeper,’ directed by Osgood Perkins and starring Tatiana Maslany, Rossif Sutherland, Birkett Turton, Claire Friesen, Christin Park, and Eden Weiss.

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    Related Article: Director Osgood Perkins and Maika Monroe Talk Horror-Thriller ‘Longlegs’

    Initial Thoughts

    Rossif Sutherland in 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    Rossif Sutherland in ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    For his sixth directorial effort (and third in 16 months, following ‘Longlegs’ in 2024 and ‘The Monkey’ earlier this year), director (and one-time actor) Osgood Perkins swerves again, pivoting from the horror-comedy of the latter to a darker, more foreboding tale set against a backdrop of nature and featuring almost a folk horror vibe. Notably, he did not write ‘Keeper’ – it was penned by Canadian scribe Nick Lepard, who was able to work on it during the 2023 writers’ strike in Hollywood – but the film does bear Perkins’ trademarks as a director, with unsettling imagery, creepy sound design, and the use of both darkness and silence all in abundance.

    While the story is a fairly gripping, slow-burn affair, it still feels like it gets stretched out despite the relatively brief 100-minute running time. Padded by Lynchian dream sequences (which admittedly raise a few goosebumps), ‘Keeper’ can be quite scary – but also can’t quite make this tale feel like it fits in a feature-length movie.

    Story and Direction

    (Center) Director Osgood Perkins on the set of 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    (Center) Director Osgood Perkins on the set of ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    ‘Keeper’ opens with a dread-inducing montage of images of women, progressing from flirtatious to romantic to angry to fearful to finally screaming in terror, all set to Mickey and Sylvia’s ‘Love is Strange.’ Cut to Liz (Tatiana Maslany) in the car with her boyfriend Malcolm (Rossif Sutherland), as they head for Malcolm’s family cabin deep in the woods to celebrate their one-year anniversary of dating.

    Liz is still unsure about the relationship – her friend is sure that Malcolm is hiding a wife and kids somewhere – and it seems difficult for Malcolm to earn her trust completely, despite his apparently sincere affection for her and willingness to do anything to make her comfortable. But comfort is the last thing she finds at the Westbridge family cabin: the woods are deathly silent around them, the next-door neighbor is Malcolm’s obnoxious cousin Darren (Birkett Turton), who’s there with his non-English speaking model squeeze (Eden Weiss), and the house seems to reverberate with muffled sounds from somewhere above. Then Liz wakes up on their first night there with an unquenchable urge to consume an entire chocolate cake ostensibly left behind by the property caretaker, and things only get weirder.

    Tatiana Maslany in 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    Tatiana Maslany in ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    Neon has largely held ‘Keeper’ back from critics, officially to avoid spoilers, but of course we’d honor that under any circumstances. So we’ll refrain from discussing much more of the plot, except to say that it’s fairly basic once all the cards are on the table. There are portions of the film where very little seems to happen, but Perkins makes a strenuous effort to fill the screen with all kinds of surreal images and frightening portents – and his efforts do pay off. Even by the time we reach the third act, where certain plot elements become murky and less of the story makes sense, the director still manages to come up with some truly nerve-rattling visuals.

    Atmosphere, imagery, and often jocular or haunting needle drops are Perkins’ strong points, particularly as seen in his last couple of outings, and they don’t fail him here. Story and character, not so much this time out. Liz and Malcolm are barely sketched in as people, and in the case of Liz – being the protagonist – that leaves her and the viewer a bit lost in the woods (pardon the pun). There is some subtext here as well — and a sense of comeuppance later — which manifests late in the proceedings and brings a little humor with it as well.

    Cast and Performances

    Rossif Sutherland in 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Tatiana Maslany and Rossif Sutherland in ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    The cast is quite small in this one, and the characters are not especially filled out, but Tatiana Maslany is excellent as Liz – a woman who’s not afraid to say what she feels but is on unsure footing with a possible love in her life. Maslany makes us care enough about Liz to want her to survive, although strange things start happening so quickly that we’re not sure why she waits so long before deciding she wants to leave. Her wry humor gives way to abject terror (which Maslany is quite good at) and she holds the screen for nearly the entire running time of the film.

    Less successful is Rossif Sutherland (yes, Donald’s son) as Malcolm, who speaks in a whisper for much of the movie and also sports an odd half-accent that perhaps makes sense toward the end of the film. He’s supposed to be a bit mysterious but Sutherland’s work is a bit too flat – although his monologue near the end is effective. The only other actors with any real screen time are Birkett Turton and Eden Weiss, but the minimal characterization leaves them giving one-note performances.

    Final Thoughts

    Tatiana Maslany in 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    Tatiana Maslany in ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    With half a dozen films in 10 years, Osgood Perkins has firmly established himself as a genre auteur, crafting a sort of literary brand of horror movie that finds inspiration, directly or indirectly, in authors like Shirley Jackson (‘I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives in the House’), Stephen King (‘The Monkey’), and H.P. Lovecraft (to which ‘Keeper’ owes a debt).

    His films are odd, frequently surreal, and not particularly large-scale, and their narratives are often clouded – perhaps a deliberate choice on his part, but one that leaves them with a vague feeling of incompleteness. ‘Keeper’ falls squarely in line with the rest of his filmography, but he continues to mine the story and production resources at hand to generate some truly terrifying imagery and a sustained level of dread even if the material doesn’t always keep up its end of the bargain.

    ‘Keeper’ receives a score of 70 out of 100.

    Tatiana Maslany in 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    Tatiana Maslany in ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    What is the plot of ‘Keeper’?

    A romantic anniversary trip to a secluded cabin turns sinister when a dark presence reveals itself, forcing a couple to confront the property’s haunting past.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Keeper’?

    • Tatiana Maslany as Liz
    • Rossif Sutherland as Malcolm
    • Birkett Turton as Darren
    • Eden Weiss as Minka
    • Claire Friesen as Ada
    • Erin Boyes as Julia
    • Christin Park as Leslie
    • Tess Degenstein as Maggie
    • Glen Gordon as Teen Malcolm
    • Logan Pierce as Teen Darren
    A scene from 'Keeper'. Photo: Neon.
    A scene from ‘Keeper’. Photo: Neon.

    List of Osgood Perkins Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Keeper’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Osgood Perkins Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Die My Love’

    (L to R) Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in 'Die My Love'. Photo Seamus McGarvey/Mubi.
    (L to R) Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in ‘Die My Love’. Photo Seamus McGarvey/Mubi.

    Opening in theaters November 7 is ‘Die My Love,’ directed by Lynne Ramsay and starring Jennifer Lawrence, Robert Pattinson, Sissy Spacek, LaKeith Stanfield, Gabrielle Rose, and Nick Nolte.

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    Related Article: Robert Pattinson Being Considered for Cast of Third ‘Dune’ Movie

    Initial Thoughts

    Jennifer Lawrence in 'Die My Love'. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.
    Jennifer Lawrence in ‘Die My Love’. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.

    Lynne Ramsay has written and directed only five feature films in 26 years, and ‘Die My Love’ comes eight years after her previous effort, 2017’s ‘You Were Never Really Here.’ Based on Ariana Harwicz’s 2012 novel of the same name, ‘Die My Love’ treads similar psychological ground as some of Ramsay’s earlier films, with this one portraying both postpartum depression and the dissolution of an unhappy marriage.

    But despite an incendiary performance from Jennifer Lawrence, and strong support from Robert Pattinson and Sissy Spacek, ‘Die My Love’ never really takes off. It’s filmed incredibly well – by now a Ramsay trademark – and has a string of powerful moments, yet at some point it settles into a kind of cyclical structure that just ends up repeating itself, making for an initially absorbing but frustrating viewing experience.

    Story and Direction

    Director Lynne Ramsay on the set of 'Die My Love'. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.
    Director Lynne Ramsay on the set of ‘Die My Love’. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.

    The film opens inside the decaying, shabby farmhouse that Grace (Lawrence) and Jackson (Pattinson) are moving into, which we learn belonged to Jackson’s uncle before he offed himself upstairs. But the only ghosts in the house are the ones in Grace’s head. They’ve moved to the middle of nowhere in Montana to get out of city life and let Grace concentrate on writing a novel, while one-time musician Jackson settles into a job as a truck driver that takes him away for days at a time.

    At first they romp around the house like playful, overgrown children, sexing and drinking with relish, but once Grace gets pregnant and gives birth, all that comes to an end – even though Grace is still horny, Jackson doesn’t want anything to do with that and his trips get even longer. That leaves Grace alone with the baby and her own increasingly fractured and tormented thoughts – which soon turn into increasingly destructive actions that seem to tip into full-blown psychosis.

    Director Lynne Ramsay on the set of 'Die My Love'. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.
    Director Lynne Ramsay on the set of ‘Die My Love’. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.

    Is it the loneliness or the postpartum depression that does Grace in? It’s left ambiguous, but we suspect the former more than the latter. Either way, whether she literally tears the bathroom apart or has a quick (possibly imaginary) fling with the biker down the road (a barely there LaKeith Stanfield), Grace is on a downward spiral – until she isn’t. She gets better for a bit, and then does it all again, rinse and repeat.

    And that’s ultimately the problem with ‘Die My Love’: it ends up chasing its own tail, becoming more stylized and self-indulgent as it goes along and less interesting to watch. Jackson and his mom, Pam (Sissy Spacek) try to help but seem hapless in the face of Grace’s force-of-nature rush to set her whole life on fire (dog lovers beware: things don’t end well for the family pet). There are moments of clarity and beauty and profundity, but they’re fleeting in an otherwise exhausting catalog of erratic behavior that portrays mental illness as a kind of Grand Guignol.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in 'Die My Love'. Photo: Kimberley French/Mubi.
    (L to R) Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in ‘Die My Love’. Photo: Kimberley French/Mubi.

    Jennifer Lawrence is at her best when she just lets raw emotion and impulse pour out of her, which makes ‘Die My Love’ something of a tour de force. Unafraid to bare her flesh and equally fearless about getting it dirty and bloodied, Lawrence plunges headlong into the role of Grace with fervor, keeping your eyes glued on her even when the rest of the movie falters. She approaches the character with both dark humor and grim abandon, daring the viewer to stay with her on the ride – and succeeding through her strength as an actor alone.

    Robert Pattinson does his best here, but Jackson is simply not as present, either physically or psychically, and the character is merely reactive to whatever Grace throws at him. Sissy Spacek injects some empathy into the proceedings, but in a similar fashion, the role of Pam is not developed enough. It’s also a shame we don’t see more of Nick Nolte as Jackson’s dementia-addled father, whose few moments onscreen are moving.

    Final Thoughts

    Jennifer Lawrence in 'Die My Love'. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.
    Jennifer Lawrence in ‘Die My Love’. Photo Kimberley French/Mubi.

    ‘Die My Love’ is the second movie this season about a young mother cracking under the strain, with ‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’ also making the experience a harrowing one. The films both use dark humor and surreal imagery, but differ in important ways: Grace, in her own fashion, embraces motherhood, while Rose Byrne’s Linda in ‘If I Had Legs’ admits at a pivotal moment that she didn’t want to be a mother in the first place.

    It’s up to the individual viewer how relatable each performance is, but the work by both actors is Oscar-worthy even if neither film develops a clear narrative or theme. In the meantime, ‘Die My Love’ is Lynne Ramsay’s most internalized film since her early efforts ‘Ratcatcher’ and ‘Morvern Callar,’ and perhaps her most difficult to embrace – and even a harder one to love.

    ‘Die My Love’ receives a score of 65 out of 100.

    (L to R) Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in 'Die My Love'. Photo: Kimberley French/Mubi.
    (L to R) Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in ‘Die My Love’. Photo: Kimberley French/Mubi.

    What is the plot of ‘Die My Love’?

    Grace and Jackson move from New York City to Jackson’s rural childhood home in Montana in search of a quieter life. As they adjust to their new surroundings and become parents, Grace begins to struggle with feelings of isolation and psychological distress. Her deteriorating mental health gradually drives their marriage into unsettling and unpredictable territory.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Die My Love’?

    • Jennifer Lawrence as Grace
    • Robert Pattinson as Jackson
    • Sissy Spacek as Pam
    • LaKeith Stanfield as Karl
    • Nick Nolte as Harry
    • Gabrielle Rose as Jen
    • Debs Howard as Marsha
    • Sarah Lind as Cheryl
    Director Lynne Ramsay on the set of 'Die My Love'. Photo: Mubi.
    Director Lynne Ramsay on the set of ‘Die My Love’. Photo: Mubi.

    Other Lynne Ramsay Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Die My Love’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jennifer Lawrence Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Sentimental Value’

    (L to R) Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.
    (L to R) Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.

    Opening in theaters November 7 is ‘Sentimental Value,’ directed by Joachim Trier and starring Renate Reinsve, Stellan Skarsgård, Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Anders Danielsen Lie, Cory Michael Smith, Catherine Cohen, and Elle Fanning.

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    Related Article:  ‘A Different Man’ Tackles Issues of Identity with Compassion and Humor

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.
    (L to R) Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.

    Easily one of the best films of the year, ‘Sentimental Value’ is Joachim Trier’s follow-up to 2021’s ‘The Worst Person in the World,’ a character study disguised as a bittersweet rom-com. ‘Sentimental Value’ is also bittersweet, but it’s no romantic comedy: instead, it dissects the complicated relationship between a narcissistic but aging filmmaker and his two daughters in the wake of their mother’s death.

    ‘Sentimental Value’ gets at some universal truths about all families, parents, and children, and presents each of its four main characters in nuanced shades, letting us see them at their best and not so finest. While the film might be too casually paced and narratively loose for some, this is ultimately a rich, engrossing, deeply moving tale of what happens when family becomes fodder for art, and everything that spins out of that.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas and Elle Fanning in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.
    (L to R) Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas and Elle Fanning in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.

    Gustav Borg (Stellan Skarsgård) is a once highly-regarded filmmaker whose best years are behind him and who hasn’t been able to get a film financed for 15 years. He returns to his family home in Oslo, Norway for the funeral of his ex-wife, where he attempts to reconnect with his two daughters, actor Nora (Renate Reinsve) and her sister Agnes (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas) who has a more stable job as a historian and a husband and child.

    But Gustav is also after more than just re-establishing the tattered relationship he has with the two daughters he left behind: he has written a new film – apparently an incredible script – and wants Nora to star in it. However, she wants nothing to do with the film or her father. Thanks to a fortuitous meeting, he instead enlists a young American star named Rachel Kemp (Elle Fanning). With Rachel attached, Netflix comes calling – but something about the entire project feels off.

    Renate Reinsve in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.
    Renate Reinsve in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.

    Through a string of beautifully composed scenes, Joachim Trier (working from a script he co-wrote with Eskil Vogt) slowly peels back the layers of each of these characters, revealing the multi-dimensional people at the heart of a very intimate story about how the compulsion to create art can be both healing and disruptive. We find out that Gustav’s script is about his mother, who survived Nazi atrocities only to take her own life in the very home in which he wants to film – a personal expression of anguish he’s held all these years. But the screenplay is also about his daughters, and as we find out more about them, we learn that this family has been shattered in multiple ways.

    All this is eloquently and elegantly shot in gorgeous Oslo, with the Borg house at the center of the story both a place of stability and a ghost from the past. With warmth, some sly humor (mostly poking fun at the movie business), and a story that lays bare some raw emotions while not providing easy solutions, ‘Sentimental Value’ is an engrossing drama that makes one want to spend more time with the Borg family.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Stellan Skarsgård and Renate Reinsve in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Christian Belgaux.
    (L to R) Stellan Skarsgård and Renate Reinsve in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Christian Belgaux.

    All four leads in this film are impeccable, starting with the great Renate Reinsve and the global treasure that is Stellan Skarsgård. Coming off ‘The Worst Person in the World’ and last year’s ‘A Different Man,’ Reinsve once again displays her ability to make the work of acting literally invisible, while fully inhabiting the character she portrays. Nora is complicated and troubled – she is an exceptional actress but has extreme anxiety attacks before going onstage – and unable to get everything in her life lined up, but also possessed of charm, wit, and an underlying darkness that is hinted at but perceptible.

    As for Skarsgård, this may be the Swedish veteran’s masterpiece: Gustav is also charming, talented, and witty, but possessed of a high self-regard, a condescension toward others, and an almost childish temper. A scene in which he visits his one-time cinematographer, only to realize that the man might be too old to work anymore, is acting perfection: just with the subtle expression on his face, Skarsgård shows us both Gustav’s disappointment and fear – he’s seeing his own potential future. And underneath his still-cocky surface lies a deep grief – which he is unable to express without a camera. This is brilliant, Oscar-worthy stuff all the way.

    Credit also to Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas as the practical sister from whom Nora is somewhat estranged as well, but who still has a deep love for both sibling and parent, and Elle Fanning (having a heck of a fall with this and ‘Predator: Badlands’), whose Rachel Kemp exhibits depth and sensitivity that, in a lesser film, would be replaced by a simple Hollywood brat.

    Final Thoughts

    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.
    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.

    Joachim Trier keeps mining everyday human relationships for maximum complexity while presenting his stories with an easygoing clarity that’s hard to not enjoy. ‘Sentimental Value’ continues that tradition, and while it’s ironically not sentimental at all, it’s still deeply moving in its understanding of how grief and sadness can be both fodder for great art and fuel for slow self-destruction.

    ‘Sentimental Value’ receives a score of 95 out of 100.

    'Sentimental Value' opens in theaters on November 7th.
    ‘Sentimental Value’ opens in theaters on November 7th.

    What is the plot of ‘Sentimental Value’?

    The fractured relationship between an acclaimed director and his two estranged daughters becomes even more complicated when he decides to make a personal film about their family history.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Sentimental Value’?

    • Stellan Skarsgård as Gustav Borg
    • Renate Reinsve as Nora Borg
    • Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas as Agnes Borg Pettersen
    • Elle Fanning as Rachel Kemp
    • Anders Danielsen Lie as Jakob
    • Cory Michael Smith as Sam
    • Catherine Cohen as Nicky
    • Andreas Stoltenberg Granerud as Even
    Stellan Skarsgård in 'Sentimental Value'. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.
    Stellan Skarsgård in ‘Sentimental Value’. Photo: Kasper Tuxen Andersen.

    List of Stellan Skarsgard Movies and TV Shows

    Buy Tickets: ‘Sentimental Value’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Stellan Skarsgård Movies on Amazon

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