The onslaught of family-friendly movies continued at press screening this week, and I think we might have seen everything now in this particular wave. The biggest movie is
Dora and the Lost City of Gold, starring Isabela Moner, Eva Longoria and a scene-stealing Michael Pena as the explorer family on the hunt for a legendary Inca city. It's very, very silly, but also a lot of fun.
The Art of Racing in the Rain, by contrast, takes the heartwarming approach to a story about a dog and his race-driver master (Milo Ventimiglia). It's even sillier. As for animation, there was
UglyDolls, a lively and engaging if relentlessly corny fable about misfit toys. And
Asterix: The Secret of the Magic Potion is finely animated and quite sophisticated in its humour, even it if it's also thoroughly ridiculous.
More serious fare included the offbeat drama
The Peanut Butter Falcon, an involving and gorgeously shot and performed road movie starring Shia LaBeouf and Dakota Johnson. Halle Berry and Daniel Craig star in
Kings, an uneven but audacious experiential take on the 1992 Los Angeles riots. The British drama
The Last Tree is a strikingly beautiful coming-of-age drama that's emotionally resonant but never feels terribly deep. Also from Britain,
Wicked Witches is a very cheaply made but thoroughly nasty horror about female vampires (not actually witches). And the American indie
Ecco is an ambitious thriller that struggles on various fronts.
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This coming week's screenings include Julianne Moore in
After the Wedding, Naomi Watts in
Luce, Lupita Nyong'o in
Little Monsters, the pre-teen drama
Good Boys, the rom-com
One Last Night and the Iranian drama
Permission. I'm also watching films that will feature at this year's FrightFest, later this month in London.
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