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Now Playing June 28-July 4: Kindness, Quiet, and Hindu Gods

There’s plenty of great stuff on the big screen in Memphis, so quit doomscrolling and go see a movie this weekend.

Kinds of Kindness

Best Actress winner Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, and director Yorgos Lanthimos reunite for another absurdist comedy after the triumph of 2023’s Poor Things. They are joined by Jesse Plemons (whose performance earned him a Best Actor nod at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival), Margaret Qualley, and Hong Chau for a triptych of intertwined stories about love, death, and healing. 

A Quiet Place: Day One

The third film in the series goes back to the beginning, which is the end of civilization. Blind space monsters with extremely sensitive hearing land on Earth and start eating up all the tasty people. That’s not so yummy for Lupita Nyong’o, a New Yorker who witnesses the invasion, and must escape very quietly. But don’t worry, she’s got a plan.

Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 1

Kevin Costner directs Kevin Costner in this epic tale — a saga if you will — of American expansion in the West during the pre- and post-Civil War period. Expect horses, hats, and guns from this highly punctuated title. 

Inside Out 2

This brilliant sequel is the biggest box office hit of the year. Head emotion Joy (Amy Poehler) must keep her human Riley (Kensington Tallman) on track as the ravages of puberty take hold, and a new emotion named Anxiety (Maya Hawke) arrives at headquarters. Beautifully animated with stealthily profound screenplay, Inside Out 2 is a must-see. (Read my full review, which, spoiler alert, borders on the rapturous.)

Kalki 2898 AD

Malco has been getting a lot of Indian movies over the last couple of years. This one promises to be different. It’s not a Bollywood song-and-dance film, as much as we love them. Kalki 2898 is the most expensive film ever made in India, weighing in at an impressive $6 billion rupees (approximately $72 million). It’s a sci fi epic inspired by Hindu mythology which is intended to kick off a Marvel-style cinematic universe. And it looks pretty cool.

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Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: Inside Out 2 and the Best of the Coens

It’s hot, and you need to be in an air-conditioned movie theater. Lucky you, the lineup is stacked this week.

The Bikeriders

Arkansan Jeff Nichols, who is brother to Lucero frontman Ben Nichols, directs Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, and Jodie Comer in this biker gang epic. The Vandals MC began in the 1960s as a simple club for outcasts who like to ride. Over time, the organization slowly evolves into a dangerous organized crime syndicate. Can the original founders turn things around before the law cracks down? 

The Exorcism 

Russell Crowe stars as an actor who is playing a priest in a movie that looks a lot like The Exorcist, but for legal reasons is not. When he starts to see real demons, his daughter Lee (Ryan Simpkins) suspects he’s using drugs again. But the truth is much more complicated. 

Inside Out 2

Pixar’s latest is the biggest hit since Barbie, breaking the box office cold streak that has had some predicting the death of the theatrical experience. Well, turns out all you have to do get people in seats is make a great movie and market it properly. Who knew? Read my rapturous review in this week’s Memphis Flyer.

Time Warp Drive-In: Odd Noir

On Saturday, June 22, see three Coen Bros. masterpieces under the stars at the Malco Summer Drive-In: The Big Lebowski, Fargo, and No Country for Old Men. “Nobody fucks with the Jesus.”

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Film Features Film/TV

The Whale

The nominees for this year’s Best Actor Academy Awards include powerful performances, from Austin Butler in Elvis to Paul Mescal in Aftersun, but it’s going to be hard to outshine Brendan Fraser in The Whale. Offering a message that extends far beyond its two-hour screen time, The Whale interprets how society understands mental health and how we connect with others.

When we first meet Fraser as Charlie, he’s wheezing uncontrollably and clenching his chest in imminent fear of death. Shortly after this incident, Liz (Hong Chau), Charlie’s friend and occasional caregiver, diagnoses him with congenital heart failure. Charlie has been struggling with morbid obesity, but that’s hardly the only problem affecting his mental health. His partner, Alan, committed suicide, and his relationships with his ex-wife Mary (Samantha Morton) and daughter Ellie (Sadie Sink) are distant, at best. Overall, the prognosis for Charlie’s life is not good, especially since he refuses to go to the hospital or seek any outside help. Instead of saving his own life, Charlie uses all his energy to help others, despite what they think about him or themselves. By the end of the film, Charlie’s physical hindrances become the foundation for recognizing the inherent goodness of humans and the need for people to lean on others. 

I have to admit to not having seen many of Brendan Fraser’s films, beyond loving him as Elliot in Bedazzled (2000). Before watching The Whale, the biggest thought I had was, “Is Brendan Fraser going to prove that Oscar nomination right?” When starting the movie, I wasn’t immediately starstruck. Charlie, although representing realistic problems, was a relatively normal character. He was struggling, yet optimistic about life, and wasn’t afraid of death. Nice thoughts, but they could easily fall into cliche. But Fraser drew me in, and by the second half, I had so many tears in my eyes that my right contact lens fell out, and I had to pause to collect myself as the lights came up. That’s all a tribute to Fraser’s ability to transform this potentially flat character into a desperate man just trying to embrace damaged people with love. 

Fraser’s talent is evident in Charlie’s relationship with Ellie. She’s a fiery spirit, violently angry at the world and at Charlie, who abandoned her nine years prior. For her to even consider spending time with him, he has to pay her $120,000. In return, she feeds him sleeping pills and repeatedly calls him disgusting. Despite all this, Charlie keeps telling her she is amazing, perfect, and smart. The emotion between Charlie and Ellie is so real, and raw, and important in a tale about mental health. Their relationship shows how even the most damaged and wrongful people can come back from their mistakes and learn to love again. 

Appropriately for the story of a homebound person, The Whale is set in just one room of Charlie’s apartment, with staging that sometimes resembles a play rather than a movie. There is little to no music, which forces you to listen and pay attention to what each character has to say. Your sustained attention helps director Darren Aronofsky build complex characters such as Liz. She diagnoses Charlie with congenital heart failure, and then proceeds to feed him a jumbo sized bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken. She is Charlie’s only true friend, but over time, she uses him as a crutch to evade her own suppressed trauma.  

Hidden from the spotlight for some time, Brendan Fraser has definitely come back strong. I will be rooting for him for Best Actor recognition, and continue rooting for him long after the award window closes. Overall, this film definitely gave me hope that the film industry is not saturated with remakes and Marvel movies, but instead yields movies that can deliver a good watch, a good cry, and a heightened perspective. 

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Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing: Pinnochio, Iñárritu, and a Dangerous Dish

If you’ve already seen Black Panther: Wakanda Forever three times, there are plenty of other sources for your movie fix this weekend.

Fresh off the success of his Cabinet of Curiosities, Guillermo Del Toro unveils more potentially holiday-related eye candy with his long-awaited adaptation of Pinocchio. Del Toro says the $35 million stop motion film is the project he’s been wanting to do his entire life. Based on a version of the story by Nineteenth Century Italian novelist Carlo Collodi, it’s not the little wooden boy you remember from the Disney vaults. Voice actors include Ewen McGregor as Sebastian J. “Don’t Call Me Jiminy” Cricket, Tilda Swinton as a Wood Sprite who is totally not Tinkerbell, and Cate Blanchett as a monkey.

Ralph Finnes is serving the most dangerous dish in The Menu. Director Mark Mylod, late of HBO’s plute-shaming soap Succession, has gathered an all-star cast of Nicholas Hoult, Anya Taylor-Joy, John Leguizamo, and Hong Chau, for dinner, and class war is what’s for dinner. Yum!

As a journalist, I know that the best films of all time are all about newspaper people. As a filmmaker, I know Harvey Weinstein is a depraved, power-mad rapist who hurt a lot of people and did irreparable damage to the independent film world. She Said is the story of Megan Twohey (Carey Mulligan) and Jodi Cantor (Zoe Kazan), two New York Times reporters who broke the story of Weinstein’s reign of terror by convincing his victims to go on the record. He’s currently in jail for 23 years in New York, and yesterday the prosecution rested in his California trial, where he is facing 60 more years in the hoosegow.

Alejandro Iñárritu is no stranger to Memphis. He shot 21 Grams, his second feature film here. Since then, he’s won nine Academy Awards. He’s back with Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths, a satirical look at Iñárritu’s native Mexico through the magical realist filter of his mind.