Actual in-person screenings were back with a vengeance this week, after a recent slow stretch. And yes, it was great to settle into proper cinemas and screening rooms to watch movies on a big screen where they belong. Especially a film as visually astounding as
Everything Everywhere All at Once, which stars Michelle Yeoh as a middle-aged woman thrown into parallel-reality craziness. Thankfully, the filmmakers remember that this is about real human emotions rather than wacky science. The big screen also helped with the lavishly designed
Downton Abbey: A New Era, a return to the upstairs-downstairs drama with an enormous ensemble of likeable characters, each of whom somehow gets some good screen time. It's just what's expected, which is both comforting and a bit boring.
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Elsewhere, Mark Wahlberg tells the inspiring true tale of boxer-turned-priest
Father Stu. There's only a slight rough edge to what should be a more complex story. Sophie Marceau is terrific in
I Love America, a gentle comedy about a French filmmaker who moves to California. And the Moroccan drama
Casablanca Beats bristles with life as a rapper teaches a group of lively, politically engaged students to create music.
A little further afield, Nick Cave lets the cameras watch as he and Warren Ellis create music in the gorgeously shot documentary This Much I Know to Be True. Robert Bresson's masterful 1959 morality tale Pickpocket gets a pristine big-screen restoration. And the documentary White Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie & Fitch just about makes sense of the clothing brand's horrible history of employment prejudice, while completely missing the point of why the clothes were so popular (and perhaps aren't so much now).
This coming week features another long weekend, and I'll also be watching a range of films including Benedict Cumberbatch in
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, the Irish coming-of-age drama
The Quiet Girl, the Danish black comedy
Wild Men, the chilean romance
The Sea, the Iranian drama
Atabai, and the Palestinian bombing doc
Eleven Days in May.
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