Movies with Milan

Movies with Milan

Movies reviews from Milan PaurichFull Bio

 

Movies with Milan - June 10, 2021

NEW TO STREAMERS (AND IN THEATERS):

AKILLA'S ESCAPE--An urban crime drama starring Saul Williams as former gang member Akilla who comes to the aid of a troubled teen (Thamela Mpumlwana) involved in the hold-up of the pot dispensary he works at. Director Charles Officer's filmmaking debut covers a lot of ground, not always smoothly--the timeframe spans 1995-2020--but soulful performances, especially by Williams, help finesse the narrative flaws. Although set in Toronto, it might as well be taking place in Detroit or Atlanta; which was probably intended. I was, however, puzzled that the present-day Akilla speaks with a Jamaican accent while his 15-year-old flashback incarnation (played by the excellent Mpumlwana in a dual role) doesn't. Didn't anybody catch that? (C PLUS.) 

CENSOR--In Thatcher-era London, a censor (Nimah Alger) working for the British Board of Film Classification becomes fixated on an actress (Sophia La Porta) who reminds her of the sister who, after vanishing years earlier, was ultimately declared dead. Could there be a connection? First-time director Prano Bailey-Bond's arthouse shocker is one of the better horror flicks of recent vintage, appealing to both gorehounds and cinephiles. Enjoy! (B PLUS.) 

THE CONJURING: THE DEVIL MADE ME DO IT--Husband and wife Christian ghostbusters Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga) are back on the case, this time investigating a 1981 murder committed by a young man (the suitably haunted-looking Ruairi O'Connor) who uses demonic possession as his defense. While not great--none of the "Conjuring" movies really are--it's at least a step up from director Michael Chaves' previous film, 2019's mediocre "The Curse of La Llorona." And despite the jokey title, Flip Wilson's Geraldine doesn't make an appearance. (C PLUS.)

CRUELLA--Craig ("Lars and the Real Girl," "I, Tonya") Gillespie's live-action prequel to Disney's "One Hundred and One Dalmatians" is an unalloyed delight. As fantastic as Emma Stone is playing the young Cruella de Vil, an ab-fab Emma Thompson handily steals the movie as Cruella's mentor/arch nemesis. I wouldn't be surprised if Thompson wins 2021's Best Supporting Actress Oscar, even though her role is actually a co-lead. It's a better super villain origin story than "Joker," but probably won't be recognized as such because it's a femme-centric (vs. uber male) film. Some of the song choices seemed a tad odd (Rose Royce's "Car Wash" for a scene where Cruella's criminal minions kidnap Thompson's dalmatians?), and the mid-credits sequence setting up the 1961 cartoon felt an awful lot like radical revisionism. Maybe they'll explain it in the sequel. Despite the length (137 packed minutes), I was never bored for a moment. (A MINUS.)

DREAM HORSE--A middle-aged barmaid (Toni Colette) rallies friends and neighbors into investing in a racehorse (Dream Alliance) that winds up competing in--and winning!--the Welsh Grand National. Based on the same true story previously chronicled in the splendid 2015 documentary, "Dark Horse," director Euros Lyn's underdog dramedy is very much in the mode of Brit-accented feel-good movies like "The Full Monty" and "Calendar Girls." But it's so beautifully done and charming that you won't mind the occasional nudge-nudge manipulation. It's that rare entertainment that can be enjoyed by all ages--and which doesn't insult anyone's intelligence. What a concept. (B PLUS.)

FINDING YOU--New Yorker Finley (Rose Reid) takes a semester abroad where she meets and falls for the hunky star (Jedediah Goodacre) of a "GOT"-style franchise. While clearly aspiring to be a YA update of the 1999 Julia Roberts/Hugh Grant smash "Notting Hill," this touristy rom-com doesn't quite make the cut due to Brian ("I'm Not Ashamed") Bough's pedestrian direction and a middling script too enamored with cliches and treacle. But thanks to its engaging young leads and a predictably wonderful supporting turn by the great Vanessa Redgrave, it suffices as a pleasant enough diversion. Bough gets great scenic mileage out of his bucolic Irish locations even if he seems determined to turn the Emerald Isle into an Orlando theme park. (B MINUS.)

GODZILLA VS. KONG--Adam Wingard graduates from smart, small-scaled genre flicks like 2011's 'You're Next' to this (much) larger-scaled, not-so-smart CGI fest. It is what it is, but I had a much better time watching this "Battle of the Titans" than I did with any of the preceding MonsterVerse movies (including 2019's somnambulant "King of the Monsters"). Wingard brings a much zestier kick to the proceedings: his pop-savvy sensibility and winking appreciation of the absurdity of the hokey premise makes all the difference. Rebecca Hall and Alexander Skarsgard play scientists tasked with relocating Kong to his new home, but the film is handily stolen by Brian Tyree Henry who brings some welcome humor to the role of a conspiracy-theorizing podcaster hot on the dynamic duo's trail. The FX are pretty groovy (I dug Kong's new beard and the Transformers-like Mechagodzilla makes a welcome appearance), and Wingard keeps things pacy enough that you won't notice--or even mind--some gaping plot holes in the third act. (B.)

GULLY--While clearly aspiring to be a New Millennium answer to "Boyz n the Hood" or "Menace 11 Society," Nabil Elderkin's episodic film about an eventful 48 hours in the lives of three childhood friends (Kelvin Harrison Jr., Charlie Plummer and Jacob Latimore, all of whom are infinitely better than their material) is overwrought, wildly pretentious and borderline-incoherent. It's also actively unpleasant with intimations of child sexual abuse and two creepy home invasion scenes that make the "Singin' in the Rain" sequence from "A Clockwork Orange" seem like child's play. (D PLUS.)

HERE TODAY--Billy Crystal stars, directed and cowrote this lachrymose, tone-deaf dramedy about a veteran comedy writer succumbing to the indignities of Alzheimer's. As the itinerant singer he strikes up an unlikely friendship with, Tiffany Haddish is OK although she can't sing a lick. Nothing about it--including Crystal's emotionally fraught relationships with grown children Penn Badgley and Laura Bernati--rings true or feels remotely genuine, and the entire film has a synthetic, disingenuous quality that feels particularly disappointing coming from the same studio (Sony Pictures) that released "The Father" with Anthony Hopkins' Oscar-winning performance as an elderly man battling the ravages of dementia. Embarrassing cameos by Kevin Kline and Sharon Stone. (C MINUS.)

HOLLER--After her addict mom (Pamela Adlon from FX's "Better Things") goes to jail, Southern Ohio high school senior (Jessica Barden, best known as the breakout star of Netflix's "The End of the F***ing World") begins working at a not-strictly-legal scrap metal start-up with her older brother (Gus Helper). Nicole Riegel's grim and gritty regional drama is reminiscent of Debra Granik's "Winter's Bone," but not nearly as memorable. For starters, it lacks a central performance as dynamic as Jennifer Lawrence's Oscar-nominated turn. Barden is solid enough, but doesn't provide the emotional anchor required to make us genuinely care about these hardscrabble lives of not-so-quiet desperation. (B MINUS.) 

IN THE HEIGHTS--"Crazy Rich Asians" director Jon M. Chu's irresistible film adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda's Tony-winning 2008 Broadway hit is the most ebullient New York-lensed movie musical since Nancy Walker's "Can't Stop the Music." It's also the much-needed lift "gotta sing/gotta dance"-loving audiences have been craving since "La La Land." The wildly charismatic Anthony Ramos plays bodega owner Usnavi whose Washington Heights store serves as the fulcrum of his close-knit Latino community. Naturally there's a woman involved (Melissa Barrera as social-climbing fashionista Vanessa), but it's the exhilarating production numbers you'll remember. While hardly perfect--in every sense it feels like a dress rehearsal for the multi-cultural triumph Miranda would eventually achieve with "Hamilton"--yet it's so much fun only spoilsports will kvetch. (A MINUS.)

LA DOSIS--Martin Kraut's suspenser has a Hitchcockian "transfer of guilt" motif--it almost feels like a "Strangers on a Train" reboot set in an Argentinean hospital--but falls short of Hitch standards. Veteran nurse Marcos (Carlos Portaluppi) becomes increasingly paranoid after sociopath Gabriel (suitably unctuous Ignacio Rogers) joins the staff of his ICU unit. Because Marcos has been murdering his most terminal patients for years as an act of "mercy"--something Gabriel quickly gets wind of--it's difficult to blow the whistle on his new co-worker, even when he starts killing patients right and left. Although the cat and mouse game that ensues isn't devoid of tension, first-time director Kraut lacks the chops to truly seal the deal. (C PLUS.)

MORTAL KOMBAT--Because my only previous exposure to the phenomenally successful "Mortal Kombat" videogame franchise were the two pretty meh '90s big-screen spin-offs, I'm hardly the best judge of this new iteration. But taken on its own terms as an ultra-violent 21st century actioner, it's not bad. An origin story (of sorts), it's poorly acted and indifferently (often incoherently) written, but director Simon McQuaid stages the frequent action setpieces with bloodthirsty elan. Which, I suppose, is all that anyone really wants from a movie called "Mortal Kombat," isn't it? (C.)

NOBODY--If you put "John Wick," the original 1974 "Death Wish," "Straw Dogs" (Sam Peckinpah's, not Rod Lurie's), and the first and best "Die Hard" into a cinematic Cuisinart, you'd have Ilya ("Hardcore Henry") Naishuller's instant cult classic: a kickass action flick that "boys" (and "girls") of all ages will be endlessly quoting for years to come. Bob ("Better Call Saul") Odenkirk plays a mild-mannered office drone/family man whose inner ninja is released after a failed home invasion. Soon he's going mano a mano with a Russian oligarch (Aleksey Serebyakou), and wracking up a prodigious body count that would make Rambo blush. A throwaway line near the end--"A bit excessive, but glorious"--beautifully captures its gonzo sensibility. I just hope they don't ruin it with a sequel. Or sequels. If any movie can bring people back to multiplexes in droves, it's this one. (A.)

PETER RABBIT 2: THE RUNAWAY--A sequel to the 2018 kidflick that reunites the original director (Will Gluck) and cast to generally amiable effect. After Bea (Rose Byrne) publishes her first illustrated children's book about Peter and his pals, the bad boy bunny vows to clean up his act and quit being such an incorrigible brat. But when a disreputable pal of his late dad shows up, Peter is recruited to participate in the heist of a local Farmer's Market.What's a rabbit to do? A sunny, light-hearted lark (James Corden, Margot Robbie and Elizabeth Debicki once again supply the voices for Peter, Flopsy and Mopsy) with just enough wink-wink meta humor to amuse accompanying grown-ups. If it's not up to the exacting artistic standards of the "Paddington" franchise, it's still a pretty good time. (B.)  

QUEEN BEES--The great Ellen Burstyn plays a widow who temporarily moves into a retirement community while her house is being restored. But since this is a formulaic geriatric rom-com (think Diane Keaton's woebegone 2019 flop "Poms"), that "temporary" stay eventually becomes permanent. As Burstyn's fellow seniors, James Caan, Jane Curtin, Christopher Lloyd, Loretta DeVine and the forever-young Ann-Margaret are so clearly superior to their sub-"Golden Girls" material that you're likely to pity them. I know I did. (D.)

A QUIET PLACE 2--Picking up 14 months after the events chronicled in the 2018 sleeper, this somewhat pacier sequel is still riddled with gaping plot inconsistencies. But taken as a hot-weather thrill ride, it's satisfying enough--as long as you don't try to parse the whys and why-nots of alien cosmology. Emily Blunt, Noah Jupe and the wonderful Millicent Simmonds reprise their roles as the imperiled Abbott family (since his character was killed off in the original film, John Krasinski is only a presence behind the camera this time as director/ screenwriter), and Cillian Murphy is a welcome addition as the family friend who joins them on the road. (B MINUS.)  

RAYA AND THE LAST DRAGON--If "Mulan" and "Kung Fu Panda" had a CGI baby, it would look something like this latest Disney 'toon. Fortunately, it's also much better than that reductive description would suggest. Directors Don ("Big Hero 6") Hall and Carlos ("Blindspotting") Lopez Estrada have crafted a great-looking movie with engaging characters, an easy-to-track storyline and a girl power message that seems more timely than ever. Awkwafina voices the titular dragon and she steals the show. (B.)

SEPARATION--After her mom (Mamie Gummer) is killed in a hit and run accident, 8-year-old Brooklynite Jenny (Violet McGraw) helps recover with the aid of her beloved puppets. But when those marionettes come to life and begin, uh, acting out, things quickly escalate from creepy to homicidal. The latest kid-centric horror flick by William Brent Bell (2016's "The Boy" and its 2020 sequel) is disposable junk, but at least it gives some good actors (including "Succession" patriarch Brian Cox and "Homeland" alumnus Rupert Friend) a paycheck. (C.)

SPIRAL--Police detective Chris Rock and rookie partner Max Minghella investigate a string of grisly murders eerily reminiscent of the notorious Jigsaw killings in this reboot of the "Saw" franchise. Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman--who previously helmed three "Saw" movies, none of them any good--it has more wit (thanks to Rock who seems to have improvised much of his own dialogue: a "Forrest Gump" riff is alone worth the price of admission) and mercifully less viscera than the earlier films. But not even the always welcome Samuel L. Jackson as Rock's retired cop dad makes me hope this spawns a new torture-porn series. Life's too short. (C.)

SPIRIT UNTAMED--Another femme-centric CGI animated film, but a plodding and generally underwhelming one. Motherless Lucky (Isabela Merced) goes to visit her railroad titan dad for the summer and falls under the spell of Spirit, a wild mustang who prevously resisted all attempts to tame him. Naturally they become BFFs. And it's up to Lucky--along with some ethnicity-box-checked gal pals--to rescue him after dastardly ex-cons steal Spirit and his equine family. I have no idea why Jake Gyllenhaal and Julianne Moore signed on for vocal duties (as the kid protagonist's dad and aunt respectively), but I hope they were well paid for their labors. For anyone keeping score, this isn't a sequel to DreamWorks' superior hand-drawn 2002 'toon, "Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron." (C MINUS.)

TAKE ME SOMEWHERE NICE--Alma (Sara Luna Zoric) leaves her cozy Netherlands home to visit her ailing, estranged dad in a Bosnian hospital. Her circuitous route takes the comely lass on a Candide-like journey--first solo, then with a drug dealer cousin (Ernad Penjavonac) and his "intern" (Lazar Dragojevic)--that recalls the free-form road movies Wim Wenders ("Alice in the Cities," "Kings of the Road") and Jim Jarmusch ("Stranger Than Paradise," "Down by Law") used to make back in the '70s and '80s. Because first-time distaff helmer Ena Sendijarevic seems equally enamored with Wes Anderson's pop-up storybook mise-en-scene, every shot is painstakingly calibrated for maximum effect. It's a little distracting at first, but charming performances help salvage what might have simply been an arch exercise in (borrowed) style. (B MINUS.)

THOSE WHO WISH ME DEAD--Survival expert Angelina Jolie must protect juvenile murder witness Finn Little from two assassins (Nicholas Hoult and Aiden Gillen) in the midst of a raging Montana forest fire in Taylor Sheridan's new action thriller. While lacking the moral complexity and thematic gravitas of past Sheridan films like "Hell or High Water" and "Sicario," it's a good, old-fashioned suspenser, one that's best appreciated on a big screen. (B PLUS.)

TOM AND JERRY--The origin story of Hanna-Barbera's onetime Saturday morning tube staple is a fairly seamless blend of CGI animation and live action. Tom (the cat) and Jerry (the mouse) are joined in fitfully amusing adventures by Chloe Grace Moretz, Michael Pena and SNL news anchor Colin Jost. While clearly aiming to be a New Millennium "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," journeyman director Tim ("Barbershop," "Ride Along") Story's kidflick has limited appeal for grown ups--unless they're inveterate '60s nostalgists. (C.) 

THE UNHOLY--First-time director Evan Spilotopoulos' adaptation of James Herbert's best-selling novel fits neatly into the "PG-13" religious horror groove that's been Screen Gems' bread and butter dating back to 2005's "The Exorcism of Emily Rose." "The Walking Dead" Big Bad Jeffrey Dean Morgan plays a disgraced tabloid reporter (isn't that an oxymoron?) who finds a chance at reviving his career after meeting a formerly mute teenage girl (appealing newcomer Cricket Brown) who claims the Virgin Mary cured her. Soon her small New England town is overrun with the faithful, all praying for their very own miracles. But when spooky things start happening, the journalist begins to wonder if an evil spirit might be afoot. (Cue "Tubular Bells.") Until going on mumbo-jumbo auto-pilot in the final 20 minutes, this is a reasonably diverting, decently crafted (and acted) Saturday night entertainment for the Clearisil set. (C PLUS.)

WRATH OF MAN--As a follow-up to his best film to date (last year's firing-on-all-cylinders "The Gentlemen"), Guy Ritchie's latest actioner falls a bit short. It's closer to middling director-for-hire Ritchie assignments like "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." or "A Game of Shadows" than, say, "Rock 'N Rolla" or "Snatch." Jason Statham--reteaming with Ritchie for the first time since their 2005 disaster "Revolver"--plays mystery man H who goes to work as a security guard for an L.A. armored truck company. His true mission is supposed to be the movie's raison d'être, but it's eminently predictable if you've seen the tell-all trailer. Some good actors (including Holt McCallany and Jeffrey Donovan) drift around the margins, but it's Statham's show all the way. (C.)

NEW ON HOME VIDEO/STREAMIMNG CHANNELS:

AMERICAN TRAITOR: THE TRIAL OF AXIS SALLY--The true story of Ohio-born Mildred Gillars (aka Axis Sally) who, after broadcasting Nazi propaganda to American servicemen during WW II, was arrested and put on trial for treason in 1949. Michael Polish's film has a Classics Illustrated quality--he works in broad strokes; subtlety doesn't seem to be one of the colors in his Crayola box--and isn't helped by Meadow Williams' bland lead performance. Fortunately, Polish enlisted Al Pacino to play Gillars' lawyer, and that wily old pro brings a much-needed spark of energy to an otherwise somnambulant production. Also very good are Swen Temmel as Pacino's eager beaver co-counsel and Thomas Kretschmann--icily exuding a subtle menace--as Joseph Goebbels. After this and last year's trashy "Forces of Nature," it's clear that Polish's days as an indie director of provocative films like "Twin Falls, Idaho" and "Northfork" have long since passed. (C.)

AMMOMITE--Director Francis Lee follows his standout 2017 film "God's Own Country" with a slow-burning period romance between a paleontologist spinster (Kate Winslet) and a London housewife stuck in a loveless marriage (Saorise Ronan). While bordering on the decorous at times--anyone hoping for a British "Blue is the Warmest Color" will be sorely disappointed: the two leads don't even kiss until 70 minutes in--the filmmaking is so assured and the performances so compelling that it's easy to get caught up in the whirlwind of emotions. Strong support from Gemma Jones, Fiona Shaw, James McArdle and Alec Secareanu. (B PLUS.)

ARMY OF THE DEAD--Zack ("Justice League," "Batman vs. Superman") Snyder takes a welcome break from his usual DC mythologizing to helm a (relatively) unpretentious walking dead (not "Walking Dead") flick about a group of Vegas hooligans (led by Rock 2.0 Dave Bautista) who decide to pull a heist during a zombie apocalypse. As a return to Snyder's roots with his 2004 "Dawn of the Dead" remake, it's not half-bad if egregiously overlong at two-and-a-half-hours. And with zombies occupying so much cable real estate thanks to AMC, it also feels kind of irrelevant. Premiering in (some) theaters prior to its May 21st Netflix bow. (C PLUS.)

BARB AND STAR GO TO VISTA DEL MAR--Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo play the titular BFFs who, after losing their jobs, decide to splurge on a vacation at a Florida resort. In the process, they wind up getting involved in the nefarious plot hatched by a megalomaniac albino (Wiig in a dual role) to exterminate the residents of Vista Del Mar with killer mosquitos. For anyone hoping that Wiig and Mumolo (who cowrote the screenplay) were reteaming for another "Bridesmaids" (also penned by the duo and which Wiig starred in), the fact that their follow-up vehicle is a lame "Austin Powers"-y spoof will be a crushing blow. I know it was for me. Sure, there are a few stray laughs--and Jamie Dornan gives a good-sport performance as a spy with mixed loyalties--but it's easy to see why this sat on the shelf for more than a year. (C MINUS.)

BOOGIE--On paper, first-time director Eddie Huang's high school basketball saga sounds fairly boilerplate. An inner city high school basketball phenom strives to be the best on the court to please both his demanding immigrant parents and win a college scholarship. But Huang's movie is about so much more than "The Big Game." Among other things, it's about race (Boogie is Asian-American and his girlfriend is African-American), class and the immigrant experience. Basketball is merely the springboard Huang uses to address those hot-button themes. He brings a vivid sense of place to the film--it was shot entirely on location in New York City--and his skill with actors, many of them newcomers, would be enviable in veteran directors. Running a taut 89 minutes, there isn't an ounce of flab here. Everything serves a purpose and, thanks to Huang and his cast, everything matters. (B PLUS.)

CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING--Jacques Rivette's greatest--and most purely pleasurable--film finally receives the Criterion Collection Blu-Ray release fans have been clamoring for, and this 2-disc set proves to be have been worth the wait. One of the most magical and enchanting movies ever made, it blithely encapsulates the entire history and ethos of the French New Wave in one 193-minute masterpiece. I hadn't seen "Celine and Julie" since 1978 when it received its belated U.S. theatrical release four years after premiering at the New York Film Festival. Manhattan was blanketed under more than a foot of snow, yet I bravely trekked from my NYU dorm room to the Upper West Side to see what J. Hoberman had raved about in that week's Village Voice. I can still remember walking out of Dan Talbot's Cinema Studio Theater that afternoon: the sun had finally returned, and I was so giddy with cine-euphoria that I could have literally flown back to the Village. As the librarian and her magician gal pal who get involved in a serpentine haunted house mystery that's like Nancy Drew Meets Roland Barthes, Dominique Labourier and Juliet Berto are utterly beguiling audience surrogates for Rivette's psychotropic immersion into candy-colored chaos theory and pure moviemaking magic. Extras include a 2017 audio commentary featuring Australian film critic Adrian Martin; Claire Denis' two-part 1994 documentary, "Jacques Rivette: Le veilleur," whose coup de grace is a far-ranging interview with Rivette conducted by French critic Serge Daney; recent interviews with frequent Rivette collaborators Bulle Ogier and filmmaker Barbet Schroeder; a chat between critic Pacome Thiellement and Helene Frappat, author of Cahiers du Cinema's invaluable "Jacques Rivette secret compris;" archival interviews with Rivette, Ogier, Berto, Labourier and Marie-France Pisier; an essay by film/theater critic Beatrice Loayza; and a playful 1974 article by Berto originally commissioned for the movie's press kit. (A PLUS.)

CHAOS WALKING--A spaceship crash lands on a planet populated solely by men whose inner thoughts--"The Noise"--are audible to anyone within earshot. Because the new arrival is a woman (Daisy Ridley from the "Star Wars" movies), it creates a power imbalance that rattles the patriarchy. "Amazing Spider-Man" Tom Holland is entrusted with the newcomer's safety, and the pair flees to a distant town only to discover that everything they (and the audience) believed was a lie. Doug ("Edge of Tomorrow," "The Bourne Identity") Liman's sci-fi/western hybrid has a fairly ridiculous premise ("The Noise," duh) that no one ever found a satisfactory way of depicting onscreen. Maybe that's why the film was stalled in post-production for three years. (Subtitles, loud whispering and streaks of CGI pixie dust floating through the air grow old pretty quickly.) Yet the second half--once Holland and Ridley reach a matriarchal society run by "Harriet" Oscar nominee Cynthia Erivo--actually works pretty well, especially when Big Bad Mads Mikkelsen shows up and an internecine battle for gender supremacy erupts. Based on Patrick Ness' YA trilogy although it's doubtful we'll be seeing a sequel (let alone a Part III) anytime soon. (C.)

CHERRY--Tom Holland reteams with his "Avengers" directors Joe and Anthony Russo to play a former Army medic whose PTSD leads to an opioid addiction that he finances by becoming a serial bank robber. Pretty much what you'd expect when Marvel guys attempt to make a Millennial "Deer Hunter." Over-directed, over-written and (generally) over-acted, it's like being trapped in a room with somebody yelling at you for two-and-a-half hours. Exhausting and ultimately self-defeating. Partially shot in Cleveland if that rocks your boat. (D PLUS.)

CHRIST STOPPED AT EBOLI--The version of Francesco ("Salvatore Giuliano") Rosi's adaptation of political activist Carlo Levi's autobiographical novel that I saw in New York City forty years ago ran just a little over two hours. At the time, I wasn't even aware that a longer cut existed. (Certainly Janet Maslin's New York Times review made no mention of it.) While the abridged Rosi, then simply called "Eboli," seemed perfectly fine to me at the time, it didn't really leave much of a lasting impression. After seeing the Criterion Collection's newly released Blu-Ray edition which preserves the original four-part, 220-minute "Christ Stopped at Eboli," I'm beginning to think it could very well be Rosi's masterpiece. A political filmmaker whose work at times has verged on the wonkily doctrinaire (take 1976's "Illustrious Corpses;" please!), this is the only Rosi film I've seen that hints at the closet humanist lurking beneath the Marxist polemics. As the Levi surrogate, screen legend Gian Maria Volonte ("A Fistful of Dollars," "Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion") gives a career performance as a man exiled by Mussolini to a rural village in southern Italy because of his anti-Fascist views. The experience proves revelatory for Volonte's citified intellectual who, possibly for the first time, grows to understand and appreciate the psychology of both his troubled country and its citizenry. Costarring the great Irene Papas, Alain Cuny and Lea Massari, this isn't the type of movie you casually dip into like an episode of a streamer series. Because it needs to be met head-on, don't even begin watching unless you're prepared to devote four hours to the experience. This is definitely one film you'll want to finish in one sitting. For such a major work, the extras are a little on the skimpy side (at least by Criterion's usual Tiffany standards). The worthiest supplement is a 1978 documentary contextualizing the movie within the tradition of Italian political cinema with both Rosi and Volonte. The rest--excerpts from a 1974 doc featuring Rosi and Levi; an excerpt from Marco Spagnoli's 2014 doc "Unico" in which Rosi discusses his working relationship with Volonte; a new interview with translator/author Michael F. Moore; an essay by Columbia University professor Alexander Stille--are fine, too, but it's the film itself which makes the disc a must-own. (A.)

CITY OF LIES--Brad ("The Lincoln Lawyer," "The Infiltrator") Furman's film about the investigation into the murders of rappers Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G. is surprisingly watchable for a movie that sat on the shelf for five years. Johnny Depp and Forest Whitaker (both very good) play a retired L.A.P.D. detective and the veteran crime reporter whose grunt work helped uncover some jaw-dropping criminal conspiracies and inspired "Labyrinth," Randall Sullivan's well-regarded non-fiction book which served as the basis for Christian Contreras' script. Worth seeking out, even if you're not a rap aficionado. (B MINUS.)

COMING 2 AMERICA--This long-delayed sequel to John Landis' 1988 blockbuster reteams Eddie Murphy with his "Dolemite is My Name" director Craig Brewer, but it's a half-hearted affair on every count. The "plot"--Murphy's Akeem returns to New York to meet the grown son he never knew existed--almost feels like an afterthought. You get the sense that everyone involved felt all they needed to do was repeat the same jokes from the first movie. Leslie Jones and Wesley Snipes are the best things here--and be sure to stick around for John Legend's song mid-credits. (C.)

THE COURIER--Benedict Cumberbatch plays English businessman Greville Wynne who became a courier for British Intelligence and the CIA during the Cold War build up to the Cuban Missile Crisis. As Wynne's Russian contact, Merasb Ninidze brings a soulfulness to the film that effectively cuts against its stiff-upper-lip facade. Director Dominic Cooke does a neat job of balancing the home lives of his spy protagonists with their skullduggery, and "Marvelous Mrs. Maisel" star Rachel Brosnahan and Jessica Buckley--seen last fall on FX's "Fargo" and in Charlie Kaufman's "I'm Thinking of Ending Things"--provide stellar distaff support as, respectively, Wynne's CIA handler and his long-suffering wife. A ripping good yarn for anyone with a yen for true-life cloak and dagger stories. (B.)

CRISIS--After making a minor splash with "Arbitage," his promising 2012 debut, director Nicholas Jareck falls victim to the dread sophomore jinx with this long-awaited follow-up, a labored attempt to do for the opioid crisis what "Traffic" brilliantly did 20 years ago for the U.S./Mexico drug war. Three parallel stories (Armie Hammer plays an undercover D.E.A. agent with an addict sister; Evangeline Lily is a recovering addict whose teenage son dies of an overdose; and Gary Oldman sleepwalk tinghrough his role of a researcher/college professor in bed with Big Pharma) coverage--oh so predictably--in the third act. While rarely boring, it's never remotely convincing either. Maybe it would've worked better as a cable miniseries. (C.)

THE CROODS 2: A NEW AGE--Formulaic sequel to the 2014 DreamWorks CGI caveman 'toon in which the Crood brood (Nicolas Cage, Catherine Keener, Emma Stone and Ryan Reynolds as Stone's boy-toy) moves to a more upscale prehistoric 'hood where their new neighbors (Peter Dinklage and Leslie Mann voice The Bettermans) turn out to be status-conscious snobs. Bananas, "punch monkeys" and Partridge Family songs factor into the equation which is punctuated by the sort of lame caveman jokes that would have been rejected by "Flinstones" staff writers in the 1960's. (C MINUS.)

THE DIG--For anyone nostalgic for tony Merchant Ivory literary adaptations like "Howards End" and "A Room With a View," Netflix's new British period flick should prove irresistible. Carey Mulligan--in a far cry from her "Promising Young Woman" role--plays a widow in 1939 England who invites archeologists Ralph Fiennes and Lily James to excavate a fabled sixth century Anglo-Saxon ship buried on her property. Based upon a true story, Simon Stone's gorgeously lensed film is structurally ambitious and brimming with reflections on class, history (and who gets to write it), gender inequality, et al. While it's a heady brew that moves at a rather stately pace, Stone and his terrific cast make it accessible and richly entertaining. (B PLUS.)

THE DRY--Eric Bana plays a federal cop who returns to his (literally) dusty hometown--it's in the middle of a year-long drought--for the funeral of a childhood friend suspected of killing his wife and son in a murder/suicide. Deciding to stick around for a spell, he begins some pro bono detective work to unravel the truth about his friend's death, and the murder of a teenage girl 20 years earlier which may be related. Robert Connolly's intelligent suspenser hearkens back to Australian New Wave bulwarks like "Picnic at Hanging Rock" and "Breaker Morant," and features Bana's best performance in years. (B PLUS.)

FALLING--Viggo Mortensen wrote, directed and stars in a beautifully made, but almost unremittingly bleak drama about the torturous relationship between a middle-aged gay man (Mortensen) and his absolutely horrible father (Lance Henriksen). As good as Henriksen is, his character is such a raging monster--racist, homophobic and misogynistic for starters--that the film becomes something of an endurance test. Why Mortensen chose to make this as his follow-up to the Oscar-winning "Green Book" is a mystery for the ages. It's hard to think of a less commercial (and less audience-friendly) movie. (B MINUS.)

FATALE--Two-time Oscar winner Hilary Swank plays an L.A.P.D. detective gone bad in Deon ("The Intruder," "Black and Blue") Taylor's amusingly bonkers action melodrama. As Swank's former one-night stand who finds himself enmeshed in her increasingly deadly head games, Michael Ealy isn't bad, but not as sympathetic as he probably should have been. Despite a title with smoky evocations of film noir classics like "Double Indemnity" and "Chinatown," it's actually more of an African-American/Millennial twist on Hitchcock's "Strangers on a Train." But (duh) not nearly as good. (C.) 

THE FATHER--As an elderly man riddled with dementia who desperately tries to make sense of his surroundings and the people in his life, Anthony Hopkins delivers one of the greatest performances of his career. Florian Zeller's directorial debut is among the most emotionally harrowing films I've ever seen: painful and lacerating, yet infused with so much humanity and compassion that it never becomes oppressive. It's a tour de force for both Hopkins and Zeller who uses the camera to navigate time, space and memory in ways that quietly take your breath away. "The Favourite" Oscar winner Olivia Colman is extraordinarily touching as Hopkins' daughter/primary caregiver. (A.)

FINAL ACCOUNT--Luke Holland's clear-eyed documentary is comprised of interviews with the last surviving German and Austrian citizens who played an active role in Hitler's Third Reich. Questions about complicity, responsibility and guilt are frequently met with denial and belligerence, but the litany of haunted faces speak an unimpeachable truth. They're a living embodiment of Hannah Arendt's "banality of evil." At a fleet 93 minutes, this is more of a Holocaust primer than a full meal, and would make a fitting gateway to Marcel Ophuls' "The Sorrow and the Pity" and Claude Lanzmann's "Shoah." (B.)

FLOWERS OF SHANGHAI--Hou Hsiao-hsien's 1998 masterpiece is so dreamy and gorgeously, sensuously tactile that it feels more like a film by Hou's Asian New Wave compatriot Wong Kar Wai instead. (It even stars Wong muse Tony Leung Chau-wai.) Set against the backdrop of Shanghai brothels in the late nineteenth century--the titular "flowers" are the courtesans who work there--the film casts an intoxicating spell that transports you back to a time and place that feels as ethereal as it is inexorably haunting. Hou's films ("The Puppetmaster," "The Flight of the Red Balloon," etc.) have traditionally been more grounded in poetic naturalism; this one soars into a heightened realm in which poetry supersedes realism. It's a heartening affirmation of cinema in its purest form. Unlike the bare-bones Winstar DVD from twenty years ago, the Criterion Collection's newly released Blu-Ray features a wealth of extras. Among them are an introduction by critic Tony Rayns (who also did the subtitle translation); Daniel Raim and Eugene Suen's documentary ("Beautified Realism") about the making of the film with interviews and copious behind the scenes footage; excerpts from a 2015 Hou interview, recorded for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences' oral history project; an essay by Stanford University film professor Jean Ma; and UCLA Chinese cultural studies professor Michael Berry's 2009 interview with Hou. (A.)

FOUR GOOD DAYS--Unlike recent male-oriented addiction dramas like "Ben is Back" and "Beautiful Boy," director Rodrigo ("Mother and Child," "Nine Lives") Garcia's film tells the story of a tough-love mom (Glenn Close) trying to help her grown daughter (Mila Kunis) kick heroin. Although Garcia isn't reinventing the wheel here, the bruising, lived-in performances of his two leads make this an eminently worthwhile endeavor. Based on a true-life story that was chronicled by Washington Post journalist Eli Saslow. (B MINUS.)

FRENCH EXIT--If you've been jonesing for a new live action Wes Anderson movie (hard to believe, but it's been seven years since "The Grand Budapest Hotel"), Azael ("Terri," "The Lovers") Jacobs' charming new dramedy--based on Patrick DeWitt's well-regarded novel--should satisfy your craving. Michelle Pfeiffer (fantastic) plays a newly destitute New York socialite who impulsively moves to Paris with her grown son (Lucas Hedges) and a cat who may, or may not be, the reincarnation of her late husband. A stellar ensemble cast--including Valerie Mahaffrey, Isach De Bankole, Danielle Macdonald and Imogen Poots--comprise the dispossessed New Yorkers' de facto "family" unit, and their sparkling screwball banter is echt Anderson, as is the meticulously composed mise-en-scene. A nonpareil delight with a bittersweet kicker that I found unexpectedly moving. (A MINUS.)

GEORGETOWN--Two-time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz's directorial debut very badly wants to be another "Reversal of Fortune"--and Waltz himself plays what is essentially the Claus Von Bulow role of a sociopathic social climber who murders his socialite wife--but it's a pretty wan affair all around. Too bad Waltz didn't ask his "Inglourious Basterds" and "Django Unchained" director Quentin Tarantino for helming tips. As Waltz's wife, Vanessa Redgrave is fantastic, though, and reason enough to check out the movie. The wonderful Annette Bening fares less well as Redgrave's cluck-clucking daughter; it's a pretty thankless role. (C PLUS.)

THE IRISHMAN--The third Netflix original to get the Criterion Collection treatment (their previously released 'flix films were "Roma" and "Marriage Story") is Martin Scorsese's three-and-a-half-hour mob drama magnum opus that ranks among the finest work of America's greatest living director. Suffused with a Proustian density and the kind of emotional weight and reflectiveness that only comes with age, it both demands and rewards multiple viewings. Fantastic performances by Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, Stephen Graham, Harvey Keitel, et al., too. The extras offer a groaning board of additional cinephile pleasures, including a 2019 roundtable conversation with Scorsese, DeNiro, Pacino and Pesci; "Making 'The Irishman'" featuring Scorsese, producers Irwin Winkler, Jane Rosenthal and Emma Tillinger Koskoff, cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto and various cast/crew members; critic Farran Smith Nehme's "Gangsters Requiem," a video essay contextualizing "The Irishman" within Scorsese's oeuvre; an inside baseball-y exegesis by Scorsese of the movie's Frank Sheeran Appreciation Night sequence; "The Evolution of Digital De-aging," a fascinating 2019 short on how the visual effects were created; 1999 and 1963 interviews with, respectively, Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran and Jimmy Hoffa; and "The Wages of Loyalty," an essay by critic Geoffrey O'Brien that takes a deep dive into the film. (A PLUS.)

JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH--The true story of F.B.I. informant William O'Neal (LaKeith Stanfield) who was indirectly responsible for the 1971 assassination of Illinois Black Panther chairman Fred Hampton ("Get Out" Oscar nominee Daniel Kaluuya). Stanfield and Kaluuya are both superb, and director Shaka King brings a real epic sweep to the historical material. Although a period film set 50 years ago, it still manages to seem bracingly, depressingly contemporary in the Black Lives Matter era. (A MINUS.) 

THE KILLING OF TWO LOVERS--Clayne Crawford (late of CBS' "Lethal Weapon" series) plays a blue collar dude (uneasily) separated from his wife (Sepideh Magfi) and the mother of their four children. When she begins dating a squirrely co-worker (Chris Coy), his already precarious equilibrium breaks. Writer/director Robert Macholan's gorgeously shot and superbly acted indie is probably too derivative of Terrence Malick for comfort (only Malick can properly do "Malick"), but I was shaken and stirred by Crawford's palpable desperation. It's a film that's likely to pick up an ardent cult following akin to the one that developed around Derek Cianfrances thematically similar "Blue Valentine." (B.)

LAND--Robin Wright directed and stars in this mournful, pensive drama about a middle-aged woman (Wright) who, after suffering the loss of her husband and child in a mass shooting, decides to move to a desolate cabin in Wyoming and live off the grid. As the local widower who teaches her important survival skills, Demian Bichir brings a much-needed warmth and humanity. His scenes with Wright are the heart of a very good, beautifully lensed movie that, regrettably, has the misfortune to be opening almost simultaneously with the thematically similar Oscar front-runner, "Nomadland." (B PLUS.)  

LET HIM GO--When their late son's widow surreptitiously moves to North Dakota with her abusive new husband, Montana ranchers Kevin Costner and Diane Lane embark on a road trip to keep tabs on their young grandson. The family reunion doesn't go especially well; soon shotguns are a-blazing and butcher knives wielded. Until derailing in its implausible third act, director Thomas ("The Family Stone") Bezucha's adaptation of Larry Watson's 2013 novel is suitably gripping and impeccably acted (Costner and Lane are predictably aces, and Jeffrey Donovan, Will Brittain and a deliciously villainess Lesley Manville impress as the in-laws from hell). Bezucha also does a nice job of establishing the film's early-'60s setting without hitting you over the head with Boomer signifiers. (B.) 

LET THEM ALL TALK--Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh's smashing new dramedy is set almost entirely aboard the Queen Mary 2 where a Pulitzer-winning novelist (Meryl Streep) is reunited with her college pals (Dianne Wiest and a scene-stealing Candice Bergen). Although the pretext for the ocean voyage is a chance for the three ladies to catch up, things don't quite go according to plan. Soderbergh--who shot the film in just 14 days--brings such a Gallic je ne sais quoi to the proceedings that I kept picturing Isabelle Huppert in Streep's role. Oui, oui! (A MINUS.)

LIMBO--A lovely, gentle and ultimately life-affirming blend of Bill ("Local Hero") Forsyth and Aki ("The Other Side of Hope") Kaurismaki, this Scottish film depicts the experiences of a group of refugees living in a new, and not terribly welcoming, country. The lead character, Omar (Amir El-Masry), is a Syrian musician who fled his country's long-running military conflict. His best friend, Farhad (the wonderful Vikash Bhai), is a closeted gay man who idolizes Freddy Mercury. Director/writer Ben Sharrock's deft touch with the hot-button topic of immigration prevents it from ever becoming preachy, cloying or merely "woke." Instead it's a very human, deeply empathetic dramedy that ranks among the very best films of this still new year. (A MINUS.)

THE LITTLE THINGS--After this and his revisionist 2019 Bonnie and Clyde movie "Highwaymen" which starred Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson as lawmen on the trail of the infamous bank-robbing duo, it's pretty clear that writer/director John Lee Hancock's days of helming feel-good movies like "The Blind Side" and "The Rookie" are officially kaput. In this serial killer procedural, Denzel Washington plays a veteran deputy sheriff who teams up with a hotshot LAPD detective (Rami Malek) to track down the psycho responsible for a series of grisly murders. Good enough to be mentioned in the same breath as David Fincher's genre classics "Se7en" and "Zodiac," it casts a haunting spell that's hard to shake long after it's over. Washington is dependably great and, as the cops' prime suspect, Jared Leto is utterly chilling. The teasingly ambiguous ending is guaranteed to launch pro and con (not to mention, "Did he, or didn't he?") debates for years to come. (A MINUS.)

LONG WEEKEND--An emotionally fragile aspiring writer (Finn Wittrock) meets a kooky free spirit (Zoe Chao) at an L.A. rep house. Soon they're falling in love over the course of a magical weekend that's slightly marred by some early warning signs: e.g., she's carrying a huge wad of cash and doesn't own a cellphone. First-time director Stephen Basilone's rom-com is an implausible, but irresistible blend of "Before Sunrise" and "Back to the Future," a highly original, immensely charming two-hander buoyed by appealing performers and a snappy screwball pace. (B PLUS.)

MANDABI--"A lie that unites people is better than the truth," someone says in Ousmane Sembene's fable-like 1969 film, and for a brief moment I thought they were referring to America's former president. Rest assured, this second feature by the godfather of African cinema--and the first ever made in the African language--has nothing to do with Donald Trump. Adapted from Sembene's own 1966 novella, the movie tells the story of the nightmarish problems that befall an unemployed layabout after he receives a money order for 25,000 francs from a nephew currently living in Paris. The bureaucratic chutes and ladders Sembene's holy fool protagonist is forced to navigate while trying to cash the order approaches a near (Samuel) Beckett-ian level of comic absurdity. Biliously funny and properly indignant, it paints a scathing portrait of a society whose colonial roots of greed and corruption continue to fester long after the French usurpers officially departed. While future Sembene works like "Ceddo," "Xala" and "Moolade" would be more ambitious and fully realized, "Mandabi" (which translates as "money order") remains one of his most purely enjoyable films. Extras on the Criterion Collection's new Blu-Ray include an introduction by film scholar Aboubakar Sangoo; a conversation between author/screenwriter Boubacar Boris Diop and feminist activist Marie Angelique Savane; "Praise Song," a video essay on Sembene's life and art featuring outtakes from the 2015 documentary "Sembene!;" the director's 1970 short, "Tauw;" an essay by Columbia University professor Tiana Reid; excerpts from French critic Guy Hennebelle's 1969 interview with Sembene that was originally published in "L'Afrique litteraire et artistique;" and the Sembene novella on which the film is based. (A.)

MA RAINEY'S BLACK BOTTOM--August Wilson's 1982 play--part of his ten-part "Pittsburgh Cycle" despite taking place entirely in a Chicago recording studio--is transferred to the screen with a minimum of frills by esteemed stage director George C. Wolfe who wisely turns it into a showcase for the thesping wattage of Viola Davis (blues legend Ma Rainey) and the late Chadwick Boseman (Rainey's new horn player). It's more canned theater than cinema, but powerhouse performances by the two dynamic leads make this an unforgettable experience nonetheless. (B PLUS.)

THE MARKSMAN--Liam Neeson plays an Arizona rancher and ex-Marine sharpshooter who makes it his mission to protect an 11-year-old Mexican migrant (Jacob Perez) fleeing the murderous drug cartel who followed him into the U.S. and murdered his mother. Directed by former Clint Eastwood protege Robert Lorenz (whose only previous film was 2012's "Trouble With the Curve" which starred Eastwood and Amy Adams), it evinces some of the virtues of a typical Eastwood movie. Although ultimately too formulaic for its own good, Neeson--in what is essentially the "Eastwood Role"--does some of his best screen work in years. (B MINUS.)

MASCULINE FEMININE--"The children of Marx and Coca Cola" are wittily--and indelibly-- embodied by Jean-Pierre Leaud and Chantal Goya in one of the greatest films by one of the greatest living filmmakers (Jean-Luc Godard). "Masculine Feminine" practically defines the JLG ethos: whiplash jump cuts, intellectual navel-gazing, an exhilarating Pop sensibility. Like Godard's best 1960's work, it's a dizzying sensory experience that demands a lot from audiences while amply rewarding them with the unbridled passion of a born filmmaker working at the peak of his creative powers. Sadly, when I showed it to my Y.S.U. class a few years ago, the Gen Z-ers were more bored than enthralled; a far cry from the '60s when college kids thought Godard was the grooviest cat under the sun. The newly issued Criterion Collection Blu-Ray merely recycles the extras from their 2005 DVD release, but they still constitute an impressive addendum to Godard's timeless masterpiece. Among them are a 1966 interview with Goya; 2004 and 2005 interviews with Goya, cinematographer Willy Kurant and frequent Godard collaborator Jean-Pierre Gorin; a 2004 discussion of the film with critics Dominique Paini and Freddy Buache; Swedish television footage of Godard directing the movie's justly famous "film within a film" sequence; an essay by Australian critic Adrian Martin; and French journalist Philippe Labro's 1966 on-set dispatch. (A PLUS.)

THE MAURITANIAN--Tahar Rahim is brilliant as Mohamedou Ould Slahi who, after being arrested by the U.S. military in the wake of 9/11, is detained and imprisoned for more than a decade at Guantanamo Bay without ever having been officially charged with a crime. Jodie Foster and Shailene Woodley play his defense team, and Benedict Cumberbatch is the military prosecutor who becomes an unwitting hero after experiencing a change of heart about the case. Based on a true story, director Kevin ("The Last King of Scotland") Macdonald's film is exceedingly powerful and, despite the downbeat subject matter, ultimately (improbably?) life-affirming. (B PLUS.)

THE MIDNIGHT SKY--While director/star George Clooney's dystopian sci-fi-er is visually stunning, the script--adapted from Lily Brooks-Dalton's 2016 book, "Good Morning, Midnight"--appears to have been recycled from countless other post-apocalyptic yarns. Clooney plays a dying astronomer living in the Antarctic, and Felicity Jones, Kyle Chandler and David Oyelowo are among the astronauts whose two-year mission climaxes with a global crisis that prevents them from returning to earth. A stirring score by the great Alexandre Desplat helps fill in some of the emotional beats missing from the actual film, but it's a lost cause. (C.)

MINARI--A family of Korean immigrants (led by "The Walking Dead" alumnus Steve Yeun) struggle to make a go of it as farmers in 1980's Arkansas. Director Lee Isaac Chung's warm, audience-friendly movie has the sort of universal, humanistic appeal that seems awfully quaint in the current climate. Which is probably why it's so darn irresistible, and has already been designated as a potential awards season spoiler The ensemble cast--including Will Patton, Yeun Yari Han, Alan S. Kim, Noel Cho and Yuh-jung Youn as the family's lovably gruff matriarch--is unimpeachable. (A MINUS.) 

THE MITCHELLS VS. THE MACHINES--During a family road trip to deliver their first-born to college, the Mitchell family (Danny McBride and Maya Rudolph provide the voices of mom and dad) find themselves smack dab in the middle of a robot apocalypse. (Beware smart phones and Furbys!) A fun and frisky animated film hatched by the comic braintrust of Chris Miller and Phil Lord who practically reinvented modern animation with "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" and the great LEGO movies. Directors Michael Rianda and Jeff Rowe follow ably in their mentors' footsteps, and the result is that rare 'toon adults will enjoy as much as their wee bairns. (B PLUS.)

MONSTER HUNTER--"Resident Evil" auteur Paul W.S. Anderson tackles another videogame franchise with more noisy, brain-dead nonsense that explains why critics hate most vidgame movies and resent the overuse of CGI at the expense of old-fashioned verities like plot and characterization. "RE" star (and Mrs. Anderson) Milla Jovovich plays U.S. Army Ranger Artemis who teams up with "The Hunter" (Thai martial arts superstar Tony Jaa who's the best thing here) to save the world from persnickety giant spiders. Instead of ending, it just stops--probably as a shout-out to the inevitable sequel. I'd say that was wishful thinking, but there were six (count 'em) "Resident Evil" movies after all. (D.)

MOUCHETTE--Only the great French ascetic Robert Bresson could make a film ending in the suicide of its lead character that somehow feels emotionally transcendent. The 1967 follow-up to what many--myself included--consider Bresson's greatest work (the previous year's ineffable "Au hasard Balthazar"), "Mouchette" is a movie that has only gained in stature with critics and audiences over the ensuing decades. It's now regarded as one of his seminal films, and certainly one of the most distinctly "Bressonian." The newly released Criterion Collection release looks amazing in its 4K digital restoration; unfortunately, the extras aren't nearly as plentiful as the Criterion norm. Included are a 2006 audio commentary track by critic Tony Rayns; "Au hasard Bresson" (cute title), Theodore Kotulla's 1967 documentary featuring Bresson on the set of "Mouchette;" a standalone episode of French tube series "Cinema" that includes on-set interviews with Bresson and actors Nadine Nortier and Jean-Claude Gilbert; the original French trailer (edited by none other than Jean-Luc Godard!); and a recycled 2007 essay ("Girl, Interrupted") by critic/poet Robert Polito. Perhaps the lack of frou-frou was intentional. After all, I did say that Bresson was an ascetic. (A.) 

NEWS OF THE WORLD--Although somewhat encumbered by a hushed solemnity, Paul ("United 93," "Captain Phillips") Greengrass' slow-burn revisionist western has a physical beauty--courtesy of virtuoso cinematographer Darius Wolski's painterly images--and moral authority that makes it compelling even when you're on the verge of dozing off. Tom Hanks plays a former Civil War captain tasked with escorting a young girl (Helena Zengel) to her only living relatives after having spent the past six years living with the Kiowa Indians who kidnapped her after murdering her family. It's sort of a cross between John Ford's "The Searchers" and "True Grit" (the John Wayne original or the 2010 Coen Brothers reboot: take your pick) with a soupçon of "Paper Moon" thrown into the mix for good measure. (B.)

NOMADLAND--Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose for Fern (Frances McDormand) in Chloe ("The Rider," "Songs My Brother Taught Me") Zhao's magnificent new film. After the death of her husband, Fern buys a van and drives across country, living a nomadic, hand-to-mouth existence with zero attachments. As a portrait of the disenfranchised and dispossessed barely surviving in the 21st century gig economy, Zhao's masterpiece feels like the most quintessentially "American" movie of recent years. Except for David Strathairn as the equally rudderless guy Fern meets on the road, the cast is largely comprised of non-professionals, all of whom are essentially playing themselves. Zhao's seamless blending of scripted/improvised material is as breathtaking as it is skillful On the basis of her first three films, Zhao has quietly emerged as the most distinctive new cinematic voice since Wes Anderson, Sofia Coppola and Quentin Tarantino in the 1990's. (A.) 

ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI--The "night" in question is February 25, 1964 when Cassius Clay (Eli Goree) defeated Sonny Liston in a championship bout. Later, Clay--on the cusp of his conversion to the Muslin faith and becoming Muhammad Ali--meets up with friends Malcolm X ( Kingsley Ben-Adir from "Pesky Binders"), Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge) and Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr., best known as Aaron Burr in "Hamilton") at Miami's Hampton House Motel. Adapted from a stage play by Kem Powers, Regina King's feature directing debut is essentially filmed theater. But the performances are so strong, especially Odom Jr. who deserves a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination, that Powers' apocryphal tale remains riveting from start to finish. (B PLUS.)

OUR FRIEND--When a young wife/mother (Dakota Johnson) becomes fatally ill, a family friend (Jason Segel) puts his life on hold to become her de facto caregiver while her journalist husband (Casey Affleck) is traveling for work. Director Gabriela ("Blackfish," "Megan Leavey" ) Cowperthwaite's deeply moving, splendidly acted new film is reminiscent of the sort of character-driven pieces ("Terms of Endearment," "Ordinary People," etc.) that used to be the bread and butter of Hollywood studios. In today's franchise-crazy, CGI-besotted universe, it feels positively revolutionary. For anyone hankering for a cathartic movie cry, you won't do any better than this. (A.)

PAPER SPIDERS--Lili Taylor is heartbreaking as a paranoid schizophrenic who makes life a living hell for her teenage daughter (newcomer Stefania LaVie Owen) in writer-director Inan Shampanier's affecting family drama. Besides the wonderful Taylor, LaVie Owen and Ian Nelson as a high school friend are both letter-perfect. Sometimes the best movies come in the smallest packages. (B PLUS.)

THE PERFECT CANDIDATE--A Saudi female doctor Maryam (Mila Al Zahrani) decides to run for local office in order to fix the dilapidated roads leading to her backwoods hospital. In the process, she becomes a community lightning rod, both reviled (mostly by the patriarchal hierarchy) and championed (largely by disenfranchised women like herself). A subplot dealing with Maryam's widowed musician dad feels like window-dressing, but director Haifaa Al-Mansour ("Wadjda," "Nappily Ever After") has crafted a rousing feminist parable that favorably recalls the best, most accessible films from the New Iranian Cinema. And the sensational Al Zahrani is a star in the making. (B PLUS.)

PIECES OF A WOMAN--Vanessa Kirby plays a young woman whose marriage to Shia LeBeouf falls apart after their baby girl dies post-childbirth. Director Kornel Mundruczo does such extraordinarily intimate work with his actors (including screen legend Ellen Burstyn as Kirby's mother) that the line between character and performer all but disappears. Like the John Cassavetes masterpieces it resembles (particularly 1974's "A Woman Under the Influence"), it can be an excruciatingly painful movie to watch at times. But chances are likely that you'll never forget it. (A MINUS.)

PIERROT LE FOU--In his Village Voice review, critic Andrew Sarris said that this early period Jean-Luc Godard masterpiece was the first Godard film he had to wait on line to see. Although it premiered at the 1965 Venice Film Festival--and screened at the New York Film Festival the following year--"Pierrot le Fou" didn't receive a U.S. theatrical release until early 1969. At that point, even the director's most ardent fans were beginning to suspect that the days of conventionally entertaining Godard movies like "Breathless," "Band of Outsiders" and "A Woman is a Woman" were long gone. No wonder "le Fou," arguably the last Godard film that could be categorized as "fun," became a hot ticket among Manhattan cinephiles. On paper, it didn't sound appreciably different than Gallic bon-bons like "That Man from Rio" and "Up to His Ears" that Godard leading man Jean-Paul Belmondo had been making for Philippe De Broca during the same mid-'60s period. But as always with Godard, his signature "JLG" touches were in the details. Belmondo plays Ferdinand, a romantic iconoclast who ditches his rich wife to go on an extended (and increasingly surreal, with playful comic book touches sure to endear it to Marvel and D.C. fans) road trip with ex-girlfriend/gangster moll Marianne (Godard's then wife/muse, Anna Karina). The pair is ostensibly rebelling against capitalist/consumerist culture and bourgeois society, but it's really just topical window-dressing for a giddy homage to the sort of "lovers on the run" Hollywood noirs like "They Live by Night" and "Detour" that Godard would soon reject. Among the extras on the newly released Criterion Collection Blu-Ray are a 2007 Karina interview; 2007 video essay "A 'Pierrot' Primer" helmed by frequent Godard collaborator Jean-Pierre Gorin; Luc Lagier's 2007 documentary, "Godard, l'amour, la poesie," about Godard and Karina's marriage and professional relationship; excerpts from 1965 interviews with Godard, Belmondo and Karina; an essay by Godard biographer/New Yorker film critic Richard Brody; Sarris' original review of the film; and a 1965 interview with Godard. (A.)

PINOCCHIO--Italian fabulist Matteo ("Gomorrah," "Tale of Tales") Garrone's live action rendering of Carlo Collodi's kid-lit perennial is a feast for the eyes: a veritable children's storybook come to magical life. As Geppetto, Roberto Benigni has considerable more success than he did playing the titular role in his 2002 disaster. Unfortunately, U.S. distributer Roadside Attractions is releasing the movie in a dubbed rather than subtitled version which means that everyone sounds like they're performing in a cheesy Japanese Godzilla flick. For shame. ("A MINUS" for the visuals; "C MINUS" for the soundtrack.)

PROFILE--Undercover British journalist Amy (Valene Kane of AMC's new hit series "Gangs of London") stealthily infiltrates an Islamic website where she quickly makes a connection with ISIS recruiter Bilel ("Star Trek Discovery" breakout Shazad Latin). Soon Amy is booking a flight to Amsterdam to meet Bilel and making plans to travel to Syria with him. Is she still "on the job," or has she fallen (hard) for this swarthy religious zealot's seductive mind games? The genius of Timur (best known for his kick-ass 2008 Angelina Jolie action flick "Wanted") Bekmambetov's heart-stopping thriller is that it keeps you guessing right up until the shocking climax. Shot in just 9 days (!) and filmed entirely on virtual screens (Facebook, text messages, Skype, etc.), it tops even Aneesh Chaganty's 2018 screen-capture sleeper "Searching." (A MINUS.)

PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN--Carey Mulligan gave the best female performance of 2020 in first-time director Emerald Fennell's remarkably accomplished, terrifically enjoyable black comedy that has the larkish Guignol spirit and flamboyant visual style of vintage Brian DePalma ("Carrie," "The Fury, "Body Double," et al). It also benefits from Fennell's diabolically clever script that keeps pulling out one surprise after another from of its considerable arsenal of narrative tricks. The fact that you're never entirely sure where it's headed makes the journey as exhilarating as it is (frequently) shocking. (A.) 

RIDERS OF JUSTICE--"Another Round" star Mads Mikelsen is terrific as an ex-soldier who, with the help of some techno nerds, plots revenge on the mobsters responsible for his wife's murder. Anders Thomas Jensen's terrifically entertaining film works as both a superb genre movie in the avenging daddy mode (think the "Taken" or "Death Wish" franchises), as well as a mordantly funny dark comedy. I'd be shocked if someone doesn't snatch up remake rights and turns it into a Hollywood blockbuster. (A MINUS.)

ROLLING THUNDER REVUE: A BOB DYLAN STORY BY MARTIN SCORSESE--The second Martin Scorsese Netflix movie released by the Criterion Collection in as many months is another masterful Scorsese music documentary (see "No Direction Home," his fantastic 2005 Dylan bio-doc). "Rolling Thunder Revue" incorporates (frequently rare) archival footage/interviews, generous clips from Dylan's undeservedly obscure 1978 mega opus "Renaldo and Clara" and more (much more) in the service of something altogether unique and largely unprecedented in music film annals: a playful, occasionally laugh-out-loud-funny meditation on time, memory, "truth" and illusion, and the tricks a brilliant director can wring from the so-called historical record. Set largely against the backdrop of Dylan's legendary 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue--essentially a traveling counterculture caravan featuring Allen Ginsberg, Joni Mitchell and Joan Baez among other Baby Boomer icons--the movie is consistently surprising, often revelatory and enormously entertaining. Extras include interviews with Scorsese, editor David Tedeschi and writer Larry Sloman; restored footage of heretofore unseen Rolling Thunder Revue performance footage (including a new, extended cut of "Tangled Up in Blue"); a nuts-and-bolts demonstration on how the original footage was digitally restored for the film; an essay by novelist Dana Spiotta; and "Logbook Entries" by Sam Shepard, Ginsberg and Anne Waldman. My only disappointment is that "Renaldo and Clara"--which has been notoriously difficult to see since its truncated theatrical release 40+ years ago--isn't included among the disc's bonus features. (A.) 

SAINT MAUD--If Lars von Trier had directed Roman Polanski's "Repulsion" between "Breaking the Waves" and "Dancer in the Dark," it might have looked something like first-time director Rose Glass' smashing religious horror flick. As hospice nurse Maud who makes it her mission to save the soul of her newest patient, Morfydd ("His Dark Materials") Clark is utterly chilling, and the wonderful Jennifer Ehle matches her every step of the way as Maud's terminally ill charge. Viscerally creepy and deeply haunting, it's one of the best scary movies in recent memory. (A MINUS.)

SILK ROAD--A true story so incredible it belongs in the Ripley annals. Nick Robinson plays Ross Ulbricht, a recent college graduate who brainstorms a get-rich scheme in which he uses dark web channels to sell illegal narcotics across the globe. Everything is hunky-dory until a D.E.A. agent (Jason Clark) begins to play cat-and-mouse games with the cocky Gen Z huckster. A slickly produced, highly entertaining cautionary tale. (B MINUS.) 

SIX MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT--Cross-dressing stand-up comedian Eddie Izzard is egregiously miscast as an undercover British Intelligence agent foiling a Nazi plot at the cusp of World War II in director Andy Goddard's arthritic bid at an Old School Hitchockian suspenser. Judi Dench turns in the best performance as a boarding school headmistress with mixed loyalties, but the estimable Jim Broadbent is wasted in a glorified cameo. There's nothing intrinsically wrong with the movie--allegedly based on a true story--that a different lead and snappier filmmaking couldn't have fixed. But what's onscreen is, unfortunately, a bit of a snooze. (C.)

SIX MORAL TALES--2020's first truly essential Blu-Ray release is also the most purely pleasurable: a lovingly packaged Criterion Collection box set of French New Wave master Eric Rohmer's self-described "Six Moral Tales." The features ("La Collectionneuse," "My Night at Maud's," "Claire's Knee" and "Love in the Afternoon") and shorts ("The Bakery Girl of Monceau" and "Suzanne's Career") have all been given scintillating 2K digital restorations, and collectively serve as the perfect gateway for anyone still unfamiliar with Rohmer's sublime oeuvre. Like pretty much every Rohmer movie, his "Moral Tales" are essentially romantic comedies, albeit rom-coms with a Ph.D. Hyperarticulate and effervescently witty, the nonpareil badinage between men and women in Rohmer Land would serve as a highly influential template to future filmmakers worldwide. Richard Linklater's "Before" trilogy would have never existed without Rohmer, nor would pretty much the entire filmography of South Korea's Hong Sangsoo. Befitting Criterion's usual standards of excellence, the 3-disc package has enough extras to keep a cinephile busy for weeks. There are four additional Rohmer shorts ("Presentation, or Charlotte and Her Steak;" "Veronique and Her Dunce;" "Nadja in Paris;" "A Modern Coed") from 1951, 1958, 1964 and 1966 respectively, and one that he served as adviser on (1999's "The Curve"); a 1965 episode from the French television series "En profil dans le texte" directed by Rohmer; archival interviews with Rohmer, actors Jean-Claude Brialy, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Beatrice Romand, and Laurence de Monaghan, film critic Jean Douchet and producer Pierre Cottrel; a 2006 conversation between Rohmer and director Barbet Schroeder; a 2006 "video afterward" by director/playwright Neil LaBute; a booklet featuring essays by critics Molly Haskell, Geoff Andrews, Phillip Lopate, Kent Jones, Ginette Vincendeau and even a remarkably sanguine piece from notorious contrarian Armond White; excerpts from cinematographer Nestor Almendros' 1984 autobiography in which he discusses his working relationship with Rohmer on the set of "La Collectionneuse;" Rohmer's legendary 1948 Les temps modernes essay "For a Talking Cinema;" and an English translation of the book of Rohmer stories which served as basis for the films. (A PLUS.)

SOUL--The best Pixar 'toon since "Inside Out," maybe "Up," makes a case for why living--even in our supremely imperfect world--is still worth fighting for. In a year when many of us have struggled with sundry existential crises on a daily basis, that message feels both tonic and reassuring. Jamie Foxx plays Joe, a failed jazz musician trying to return to earth after dying in a freak accident. As soul-in-training #22, Tina Fey provides the inner voice of Joe's "spirit." It's a match made in comic heaven, and the film is heaven-sent, too. (A.)  

SUPERNOVA--Longtime companions Sam (Colin Firth) and Tusker (Stanley Tucci) take a road trip from London to England's Lake District in director Harry Macqueen's touching character drama. Because Tusker is suffering from young-onset dementia, the journey has the bittersweet flavor of a "farewell tour" for both men. The level of delicacy and restraint that Macqueen brings to his film is admirable, and Firth and Tucci born turn in well-nigh career performances. (A MINUS.)

THREE FILMS BY LUIS BUNUEL--The Criterion Collection's first box set of 2021 contains the final three films directed by the late Spanish surrealist extraordinaire, made during the greatest creative period of a decades-long career that stretched back to the silent era. Except for 1964's "Diary of a Chambermaid," I was never a particularly big Bunuel fan until 1967's "Belle de Jour." Sure, like everyone I dug "Un Chien Andalou" when I saw it as part of a midnight movie program in college. But Bunuel "masterpieces" like "The Exterminating Angel" and "Viridiana" left me strangely cold. The symbolism felt obvious, trite even, and the patches of dark humor seemed jejune. "Belle" turned the corner for me, and my enthusiasm continued unabated with "The Milky Way," "Tristana" and the trilogy (of sorts) that comprise this set. 1972's "The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie" is possibly my favorite Bunuel, and one of the most perfectly realized--and funniest--comedies ever made. 1974's "The Phantom of Liberty" ranks among Bunuel's most undervalued works: hopefully it will pick up new devotees thanks to this Criterion release. And 1977's "That Obscure Object of Desire" remains among the greatest swan songs of any pantheon director. Befitting the Criterion norm, the extras are suitably bountiful. Included are "The Castaway of Providence Street," a 1971 Bunuel homage made by friends and fellow directors Arturo Ripstein and Rafael Castaneda; the 2000 documentary, "Speaking of Bunuel," about the filmmaker's life and career; a 2011 television special about the making of "Discreet Charm;" interviews from 2000 with screenwriter Jean-Claude Carriere about his many collaborations with Bunuel; archival interviews on the three films featuring actors Fernando Rey, Michel Piccoli and Stephane Audran; a 1985 documentary about Serge Silberman who produced five of Bunuel's final seven movies; film scholar Peter William Evans' deep-dish analysis of "Liberty;" 2017 documentary "Lady Doubles" which features actresses Carole Bouquet and Angelina Molina who (jointly) played Conchita in "Obscure Object;" excerpts from a 1929 silent ("La femme et le pantin") based on the same 1898 Pierre Louys novel that Bunuel and Carriere would later adapt for "Obscure Object;" "Portrait of an Impatient Filmmaker: Luis Bunuel," a 2012 documentary with cinematographer Edmond Richard and assistant director Pierre Lary; scholarly essays by critics Gary Indiana and Adrian Martin; and Bunuel interviews from 1975 and 1977 conducted by Mexican film critics (and Bunuel confidants) Tomas Perez Turrent and Jose de la Colina. (A PLUS.)

TOGETHER, TOGETHER--Ed Helms plays a middle-aged Silicon Valley techie who hires twentysomething barista Patti Harrison to be the surrogate mother to his child. During the course of the pregnancy, these two social misfits develop a nurturing, but not romantic (thank heavens) relationship thanks to their forced intimacy. Writer-director Nikole Beckwith does such a nice job with her actors (including a scene-stealing supporting turn from Julio Torres as Harrison's gay coworker) that it's regrettable she felt the need to throw in some gratuitous Woody Allen bashing--and ends the movie on such a flat, inconclusive note that you'd swear the producers ran out of money and just scrapped the last few pages of Beckwith's script. (B MINUS.)

UNDINE--Memorably played by Paula Beer, the titular character is an architectural historian working as a Berlin museum guide. After breaking up with her two-timing boyfriend (Jacob Matschenz), she quickly hooks up with a hang-dog industrial diver (Franz Rogowski). But their idyllic love affair is jeopardized when Undine unexpectedly disappears: it turns out that she's actually a mermaid! Director Christian ("Barbara") Petzold, the most accomplished Teutonic filmmaker since the halcyon days of the German New Wave, has crafted a hypnotic, teasingly enigmatic love story/character study, and Beer and Rogowski--reunited from Petzold's 2019 masterpiece "Transit"--make an unforgettable couple. (A.) 

THE UNITED STATES VS. BILLIE HOLIDAY--An electrifying Andra Day blows a hole through the screen as the titular blues legend in Lee ("Precious," "The Butler") Daniels' Brechtian biopic. Starting in 1947 and focusing on the last decade of the singer's life, the movie is a dialectical, unabashedly political sensory blur, and all the stronger for its unconventional approach. As Federal Bureau of Narcotics commissioner Harry Anslinger whose relentless pursuit of Holiday contributed to her death, Garret Hedlund makes a more vivid impression than Trevante Rhodes (rather wan as the undercover agent who, curiously, wound up becaming Holiday's most trusted confidante after setting her up for a bust that resulted in a lengthy prison sentence). Less romanticized and more emotionally bruising than Diana Ross' guilty pleasure 1972 Holiday biopic, "Lady Sings the Blues," and the music, of course, is fierce. (B PLUS.)

THE VIRTUOSO--Overwrought, pretentious thriller about a contract killer (Anson Mount) who has a crisis of conscience while on his latest job in a sleepy little town. The only thing that gives this generic throwaway a shred of distinction is that it features Anthony Hopkins--with a risible stab at an American accent--in a glorified cameo role as Mount's boss. There's a quasi-neat twist at the end involving Abbie Cornish's diner waitress, but it's not enough to salvage Nick Stagliano's thoroughly pedestrian film. Hollywood's continued inability to find worthy post-"Hell on Wheels" roles for the gifted Mount continues to astonish and depress me. (D PLUS.)

VOYAGERS--Neil ("The Upside," "Limitless") Burger's dystopian YA sci-fi meller about a 2063 expedition to colonize a distant planet squanders a good cast (including Colin Farrell, Lily-Rose Depp and Tye Sheridan) on hackneyed material and dreary execution. The only amusement comes from identifying all the sources it borrows from: a little bit of "Alien;" a soupçon of "Gravity;" some "Maze Runner" and "Divergent;" et al. At least the ending doesn't tease a sequel, proving that even the filmmakers weren't deluded into thinking this long-delayed turkey was going to be a hit. (C MINUS.)  

WITHOUT REMORSE--Michael B. Jordan plays Tom Clancy's John Clark in a serviceable actioner directed by "Sicario: Day of the Soldado" helmer Stefano Sollima and cowritten by the great Taylor ("Hell or High Water," "Yellowstone") Sheridan. Jordan's Clark is a Navy SEAL out for revenge after his wife (Lauren Lender) is killed by Russians. Aiding his stealth mission are another SEAL (Jodie Turner-Smith) and a CIA agent (Jamie Bell). The fate of the world--it's Clancy Country after all--is at stake as escalating global tensions serve as topical backdrop for Clark's vendetta. (B MINUS.) 

THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW--Joe ("Atonement," "Darkest Hour") Wright's adaptation of A.J. Finn's best selling novel is perfectly cast (Amy Adams, Julianne Moore, Gary Oldman, Wyatt Russell, Brian Tyree Henry, oh my, expertly crafted, intelligently written (Pulitzer Prize winning playwright--and character actor extraordinaire--Tracy Letts penned the taut screenplay) and just the type ofsatisfying, medium-budgeted adult movie that Hollywood stopped making years ago. Although originally slated to be a theatrical release last fall, Netflix stepped in at the last minute, so it's now a streamer vs. theatrical premiere. Netflix's gain is multiplexes' loss. (B PLUS.)

WONDER WOMAN 1984--This only quasi successful follow-up to the 2017 D.C. blockbuster reunites director Patty Jenkins with stars Gal Gadot and Chris Pine whose romantic chemistry is still off the charts. The major reason the sequel doesn't have quite the same joie de vivre as the original is an indulgent, and frequently lumbering, 151 minute run time. As a result, this is only fun intermittently, usually whenever Kristen Wiig is onscreen as WW antagonist Barbara Minerva. The film's "be careful what you wish for" theme has even more resonance than probably intended thanks to the year that 2020 was. (B MINUS.) 

THE WORLD TO COME--In 1865, two unhappily married farm women find themselves inexorably drawn to each other in director Mona Fastvold's gorgeously tactile lesbian romance. As the women in love, Katherine Waterston and Vanessa Kirby (most recently seen in the shattering "Pieces of a Woman") are very good, as are the always welcome Casey Affleck and Christopher Abbott as their respective spouses. It's unfortunate that the film is opening so soon after "Ammonite" and "Portrait of a Lady on Fire," two other period same-sex love stories. Through no fault of its own, Fastvold's movie can't help but feel a tad second-hand. (B.)

---Milan Paurich


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