In Wide Release: Michael Douglas steps back into his crocodile loafers as iconic disciple of greed Gordon Gekko in "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps." Inspired by the economic collapse of the last couple of years, director Oliver Stone thought the time was right to catch up with Gekko, recently released from prison, and see how he navigates the uncharted waters of the current financial climate. He must also come to terms with his grown daughter, played by Carey Mulligan, who wants nothing to do with her criminal father. She is engaged to be married to a driven young trader (Shia LaBeouf) who, impressed by her father's reputation, urges her to give him a chance. We're fans of the original, as cheeseball as it is these days, but were a bit concerned when Fox pushed the film from its original April release date back for several months to now. We posted our review earlier this week and found the film to be an absolute mess, but a hugely entertaining one. RT: 58% Metacritic: 63.
Also opening wide is the comedy "You Again" starring Kristen Bell, Jamie Lee Curtis, Sigourney Weaver and the ubiquitous Betty White. Bell plays a woman returning home to expose her brother's fiance (and her own high school rival) as the monster she really is. We missed out on this one, so you're on your own here. RT: 17% Metacritic: 29.
Expanding into semi-wide release is the comedy "The Virginity Hit," which opened in selected cities a couple of weeks back. RT: 31% Metacritic: 40.
Expanding into semi-wide release is the comedy "The Virginity Hit," which opened in selected cities a couple of weeks back. RT: 31% Metacritic: 40.
Woody Allen's latest, the London-set "You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger" opened Wednesday in limited release. The comedy stars Naomi Watts, Josh Brolin, Antonio Banderas, Anthony Hopkins and Freida Pinto as people in interlocking Allen-esque relationships and all their pratfalls and pitfalls; mostly comic but never shying from key emotional truths. After last year's lukewarm "Whatever Works," Allen sets on to more solid "Crimes and Misdemeanors"-territory, and that can't be a bad thing. We reviewed the film at TIFF, finding it familiar but never dull. RT: 47% Metacritic: 57.
"Waiting for Superman" is the latest documentary from filmmaker Davis Guggenheim, whose past films include the award-winning "An Inconvenient Truth" and "It Might Get Loud." This time he focuses on the education system in the United States, examining the reasons why a student might end up at an exceptional public school versus a below average one. We're itching to see this one and judging from the reviews, we should be. RT: 90% Metacritic: 78.
Also out in limited release, provocateur Gaspar Noe ("Irreversible," "I Stand Alone")'s "Enter the Void." The movie focuses on a brother and sister (Nathaniel Brown and Paz de la Huerta) wandering through the drug fueled, psychedelic Tokyo club scene. As we noted in our review from last year's Toronto International Film Festival, the film tries to break every convention in the book, but mostly succeeds in trying the patience of its audience. RT: 75% Metacritic: 64.
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