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Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: From Book Clubs to Blackberries

Silver foxes Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, and Mary Steenburgen head out on a bachelorette party trip to Europe in Book Club: The Next Chapter, a sequel to the 2018 sleeper hit comedy. Craig T. Nelson rand Don Johnson also reprise their roles as frigid husband and seasoned himbo with whom our heroines must negotiate new relationships. 

Before Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone to the world in 2008, there was the Blackberry. Known to its army of corporate users as the “crackberry,” it demonstrated both the advantages and disadvantages of 24/7 connectivity long before the first Instagram post. Blackberry by indie filmmaker Matt Johnson tells the story of Research In Motion, the company who ruled the mobile world in the Bush era. Wary of another disingenuous hagiography of a tech oligarch? Don’t worry, this one’s a comedy!

Charlie Day, star of the TV comedy staple “It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia,” makes his film-directing debut by biting the hand that feeds him. For Fool’s Paradise he enlisted Ken Jeong, John Malkovich, Kate Beckinsale, Adrien Brody, Jason Sudeikis, Edie Falco, Jason Bateman, Common, and a whole bunch more, to satirize showbiz as it is practiced today. You can be excused if you get a strong Being There vibe from this one.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 represents the end of an era for Marvel and Disney. The main cast is retiring, and director James Gunn is moving to helm the rival DC movies. The Memphis Flyer‘s Sam Cicci saysGuardians Vol. 3 is the most creative Marvel film in years, a fitting end to Gunn’s time with Disney.” So far it’s pulled in $365 million worldwide, and shows no signs of stopping.

Judy Blume’s revolutionary young adult novel Are You There Go? It’s Me Margaret gets a worthy adaptation from director Kelly Fremon Craig and Simpsons producer James L. Brooks. Abby Ryder Fortson stars as Margaret, the confused middle-schooler who must navigate a move to the suburbs, puberty, and religious doubt all at once. Rachel McAdams and Memphian Kathy Bates give excellent support as Margaret’s mother and grandmother. Read my review, then watch the trailer.

Sam Raimi’s pioneering horror-comedy franchise continues its perfect record with new director Lee Cronin in Evil Dead Rise. This one’s definitely more scary than funny, but Cronin nails the franchise’s irreverent tone, and Alyssa Sullivan kills as a single mom possessed by demons who stalks a haunted apartment building. A must-see for horror fans, this one’s got legs.

South Korean director Hong Sang-soo and his frequent collaborator Kwan Hae-hyo are back together with Walk Up. Indie Memphis screens this affecting slice-of-life film, which premiered to laurels at the Toronto Film Festival, at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 17 at Studio on the Square.

The Super Mario Bros. Movie

 What’s the beeping noise in the distance? It’s the sound of The Super Mario Bros. Movie collecting coins. You just saw Guardians, but you can’t get enough Chris Pratt? Good news! You can hear him phoning it in as Mario in this animated adaptation that has earned enough to build Princess Peach a very nice castle. 

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 44, Bowling Green 41

In a game that saw two teams combine for 85 points and 1,124 yards of offense, the Memphis Tigers scored last — on a 29-yard field goal by Jake Elliott — to secure the program’s first 3-0 start in 11 years and the first 10-game winning streak (dating back to the 2014 season) in more than 50. Junior quarterback Paxton Lynch completed 29 of 40 passes for 386 yards and three touchdowns (and no interceptions). Lynch’s heroics were just enough to offset those of his Bowling Green counterpart, Matt Johnson, who completed 28 of 44 attempts for 447 yards and four touchdowns, three of them to Roger Lewis who hauled in a total of seven passes for 261 yards.

The Tigers have now scored at least 40 points in five straight games, a first for the program.

Larry Kuzniewski

Paxton Lynch

Lewis caught the first of his three lengthy touchdown passes with just 1:16 expired in the first quarter, setting the tone for an afternoon in Ohio that left two defenses winded and weary. A Lynch pass to reserve tight end Daniel Montiel gave the Tigers a 17-14 lead with 9:40 to play in the second quarter, but Johnson scored seven minutes later to regain the lead for Bowling Green. The Falcons would not trail again until Elliott’s game-winning kick.

Memphis tied the game three times after halftime, trading touchdown drives with the Falcons. Sam Craft ran for a three-yard score with 5:15 left in the third (after a 32-yard completion from Lynch to Tevin Jones on fourth down) to even things at 27. After Lewis countered with a 94-yard touchdown reception, Craft took a midrange pass from Lynch and ran 60 yards to again tie the game (34-34). Early in the fourth quarter, Lewis caught a 62-yard strike from Johnson to give Bowling Green a 41-34 lead, which merely set up the play of the game.

With just under 12 minutes left on the clock and the ball at the Falcon 48-yard line, Tiger coach Justin Fuente called a double-reverse flea-flicker — a play in which four players touch the ball, one of them twice — and Lynch found Jones across the middle for the Tigers’ fifth touchdown of the day.

Amid all the offensive fireworks, the game was actually decided by the Memphis defense, which held the Falcons scoreless on their final three possessions of the game. Junior cornerback Arthur Maulet deflected one final heave from Johnson toward Lewis to clinch the victory with just over a minute left to play.

Doroland Dorceus led the Memphis ground attack with 75 yards on 16 carries (and a touchdown). Jones compiled 98 yards on his three receptions while Mose Frazier caught seven passes for 66 yards.

The last 10-game winning streak for the Memphis program began with Dwight D. Eisenhower in the White House (in 1960) and ended with John F. Kennedy in the oval office a year later. The Tigers will have a chance to extend the country’s third-longest winning streak next Thursday when Cincinnati comes to town for the U of M’s first American Athletic Conference clash of the season. The Bearcats improved to 2-1 Saturday with a 37-33 win at Miami-Ohio.