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Now Playing July 26-August 1: Deadpool and Playtime

It’s looking like a rainy weekend in Memphis. Lucky for you, there’s some new movies out.

Deadpool & Wolverine

The Merc with the Mouth teams up with Canada’s favorite mutant to repair a rift in the multiverse. Ryan Reynolds returns as Deadpool, the only Marvel comic book character who knows he’s in a comic book — or in this case, a movie. Hugh Jackman comes out of superhero retirement to reprise his role as Wolverine. This time he’s wearing that fetching yellow outfit Logan wore in the comics, but was deemed too cheesy for the screen. This is the first R-rated Marvel movie, so expect some cussin’. 

The Fabulous Four

Bette Midler’s getting married in Key West, and her college besties Susan Sarandon, Megan Mullally, and Sheryl Lee Ralph are on coming to the party. This outrageous road trip will rekindle friendships and open old wounds. 

Longlegs 

The art horror sleeper hit directed by Osgood Perkins is the creepy slow burn you’re looking for. Maika Monroe stars as an FBI agent, who may or may not be psychic, assigned to a case that has stumped the agency for decades. Nicolas Cage delivers a tour de force performance as a satanic serial killer with a glam rock fetish. This film is even weirder than it sounds, and I mean that in a good way. Read my full review.

PlayTime

The eyes of the world are on Paris this week, as the City of Light hosts the Summer Olympics. So it’s an appropriate time for Crosstown Arts’ film series to feature one of the great masterpieces of French film. Jacques Tati’s PlayTime is something rare: an epic comedy. Shooting over the course of three years in the 1960s on gigantic sets built to mimic (and mock) the glass and steel architecture that was taking over Paris at the time, it was the most expensive French film ever made. It’s nearly wordless, nearly plotless, and hilariously slapstick.

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Film Features Film/TV

The Last Of Robin Hood

Nobody epitomized Old Hollywood like Errol Flynn. He was the original action star whose performances in The Sea Hawk and The Adventures of Robin Hood remain among the genre’s greatest. He was elegant, debonair, and inhumanly charming. He was also an egomaniacal, hard-drinking, hard-living morphine addict whose posthumously published autobiography was titled My Wicked, Wicked Ways. But Flynn’s biggest vice was women. “In like Flynn” was coined because no woman could resist the advances of Hollywood’s biggest star.

Kevin Kline as Errol Flynn in The Last Of Robin Hood


The Last Of Robin Hood
tells the story of Flynn’s final female conquest, Beverly Aandland (Dakota Fanning), an aspiring actress, singer, and dancer whom Flynn met on a set in 1957. The birth certificate Aandland gave to the studio said she was 18, while in reality she was only 15. But as her mother Florence (Susan Sarandon) says, “She can play 20.” 

Flynn is played by Kevin Kline, whose performance is the highlight of the film. Kline is one of the few people to ever win an acting Academy Award for a comedy, 1988’s A Fish Called Wanda, and once played Douglas Fairbanks opposite Robert Downey Jr. In Chaplin. He transcends imitation to bring out the deep sadness in the aging star trying to the party going even as his health fails.

Flynn starts the affair by summoning Beverly to his dressing room to “audition” for a part in a Broadway play he is starring in. The audition moves to a swanky restaurant, then to the luxury lodge where he is staying after being kicked out of his home by his third wife. He instantly and effortlessly seduces Beverly, telling her to “face her destiny” before deflowering her and sending her on her way.

Beverly is young, but she is no fool. Her mother was a dancer until she lost a leg in an auto accident, so Beverly grew up in show business, making her first appearance as a model when she was five years old. Fanning portrays her as, if not quite a schemer, at least an opportunist. She cries as she is being driven home from her first night with Flynn, but she is used to being taken advantage of and seems to chalk it up to experience. After all, who wouldn’t want a date with Errol Flynn? Expecting to be dumped, she is completely unprepared when an obsessed Flynn comes back for her.

One of the strengths of The Last Of Robin Hood is also its greatest weakness. It is based on a book called The Big Love, written by Florence two years after Flinn’s death in Beverly’s arms, and Sarandon is terrific in a series of flash-forwards that should serve to frame the story. But the writer/director team of Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland repeatedly refuse to pass judgement on their characters, which means the film is not really from Florence, or indeed anyone’s, point of view, leaving the story to meander into some disturbing territory. Scenes of Flinn plotting with his lawyer to get away with statutory rape can’t help but make you feel queasy, but Kline as Flinn, makes the whole thing sound charming. Unlike the swashbuckling films that made Flinn famous, The Last Of Robin Hood lacks heroes and villains.

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Film Features Film/TV

Jones, Sarandon Get a Taste of the South

Director Paul Haggis (Oscar winner for Crash) spent four days shooting scenes for his new film, In the Valley of Elah, in the town of Whiteville, just east of Memphis, in Hardeman County. But according to the film’s stars, Tommy Lee Jones and Susan Sarandon, it wasn’t all work. As Jones and Sarandon recently told MoviesOnline, there was time too for some off-camera perks. And that means, in the Mid-South, pork chops and greens (plus music and moonshine).

TOMMY LEE JONES: You know, there was a café – you’ll like this. Our trailers were parked on Martin Luther King Blvd. in Whiteville, Tennessee. And around the corner there was a place called the Dove of Paradise Café, and really, what made the whole trip worthwhile were the pork chops and the greens.

SUSAN SARANDON: Some good music there too.

TOMMY LEE JONES: Yeah, pretty good music.

SUSAN SARANDON: Outside of Memphis, I went to a club and it was really good.

TOMMY LEE JONES: I don’t get out very much. I remember y’all went.

SUSAN SARANDON: It was at the very end of the shoot. … [T]he old guy whose club it was died and his widow wanted me to know. I just got a message on my service.

TOMMY LEE JONES: Oh.

SUSAN SARANDON: Yeah.

TOMMY LEE JONES: Was it down on Mud Island?

SUSAN SARANDON: It was outside of Memphis. I have no idea where I was … .

TOMMY LEE JONES: It was outside of Memphis?

SUSAN SARANDON: Yeah, yeah, it was right outside the city. It wasn’t when we were on location. Although I did get a lot of homemade fudge and some moonshine that somebody gave me. I got a lot of presents there.

TOMMY LEE JONES: So now, you really understand what acting is all about. Pork chops and moonshine.

SUSAN SARANDON: It’s the perks.

TOMMY LEE JONES: Yeah.

Valley of Elah is scheduled to open in Memphis on Friday, September 21st.