Friday, March 20, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 20 March 2026 - 26 March 2026

Four or five film festivals this weekend! And some (kind of) play nice with each other!
  • The Boston Underground Film Festival continues at The Brattle Theatre (with Friday and Saturday midnights at the Coolidge), including local shorts package "The Dunwich Horrors", Obsession, and Cramps! A Period Piece on Friday; "Animation Disorientation", "Die Laughing", Boorman and the Devil, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre 2 (35mm), and The Devil's Rejects (35mm) on Saturday; and ending Sunday with "Death, Love, and Road Trips", "New England Esoterica", CAMP, Saccharine, and The Furious.

    After that, the Brattle downshifts a bit with a double feature of Paddington & Paddington 2 on Monday & Tuesday, the Ralph Bashki version of Lord of the Rings for Tolkien Reading Day on Wednesday, and Only Lovers Left Alive on Thursday.
  • The Somerville Theatre hosts Irish Film Festival Boston on Friday & Saturday evenings - their first regular festival since 2019! - with Irish-language crime thriller Báite on Friday, while Saturday has Beat the Lotto with director Ross Whitaker on hand for a Q&A and Christy later on. There's a final screening of The Napa Boys on Monday, with cast member Mike Mitchell on-hand to introduce the film, by Ciclismo Classico Bike Travel Film Fest on Tuesday, Sideways on 35mm as the Wednesday Feel Good Film, and the Mellow Climbing film set on Thursday.

    The Capitol Theatre opens Sirât, brings back One Battle After Another, and plays Double Indemnity for Capitol Classics on Friday.
  • There's a blockbuster-sized opening for Project Hail Mary, based on the Andy Weir novel, directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, and starring Ryan Gosling as a scientist who has been sent light-years from Earth to somehow find a way to counter a galactic wave of dying suns before it reaches ours, encountering an alien with the same mission. It's at the Coolidge (many shows on 70mm film), the Somerville, Fresh Pond, The Museum of Science (Omnimax Friday/Saturday evenings), Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday-Sunday), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema & XL), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay (including Imax Xenon & Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    Not quite a blockbuster is Ready or Not: Here I Come, which picks up in the immediate aftermath of 2019's Ready or Not to pit Grace (Samara Weaving) and her previously-unmentioned sister (Kathryn Newton) against a new wave of super-wealthy folks who have sold their souls, featuring Elijah Wood, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Nestor Carbonell, and David Cronenberg. It plays Fresh Pond, CiinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay, Assembly Row (including Dolby Cinema), and Arsenal Yards.

    The Pout-Pout Fish is an unusually wide opening for a Viva Kids animation, with Nick Offerman and Jordin Sparks voicing a pair of mismatched sea creatures looking to save their home. It's at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Tow opens at Boston Common and the Dedham Community Theatre, with Rose Byrne as an unhoused woman who has to fight a predatory tow truck company when the bill for her car being removed spirals over $20,000. A lot of interesting folks in the supporting cast.

    Indie thriller Wardriver only gets two showtimes at Apple Fresh Pond, Saturday & Sunday at 6pm. Boston Common has 40th anniversary shows of Rad on Sunday & Tuesday. There's a mystery (horror) preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday. Concert film Bring Me the Horizon: L.I.V.E. in São Paulo plays Boston Common on Wednesday.
  • In addition to a 70mm print of Project Hail Mary The Coolidge Corner Theatre bring back Oscar winners Sinners and One Battle After Another, and also opens Best Documentary Feature winner Mr. Nobody Against Putin, albeit in the smallest room and not in the 7pm slot. They also open another documentary, André Is an Idiot, which follows advertising executive André Ricciardi as he attempts to find a way to die happy with colon cancer that probably could have been dealt with had he gotten a colonoscopy; there's a special "Panorama" presentation with filmmaker Tony Benna on-hand Sunday afternoon.

    BUFF takes over the midnight slots this weekend with the "I Hate It Here" shorts package and Exorcist II: The Heretic on both Friday and Saturday. They also have kids' shows of Finding Nemo on Saturday & Sunday mornings; Sunday also has Goethe-Institut presenting the new film by Christian Petzold, Mirrors No. 3, and a marathon of the Lord of the Rings films (they're doing this for three weeks, with the 22nd and 29th sold out but tickets still available for 5 April). Two special presentations on Tuesday appear to be sold out: A "Science on Screen" presentation of Best in Show with Harvard's Canine Brains Project leader Erin Hecht, and a preview of PBS Documentary Henry David Thoreau. Wednesday has Dee Rees's Mudbound for "Calling the Shots", and Thursday has a 35mm print of Tank Girl for the "Cult Classics" show.
  • The two big Indian movies for Eid al-Fitr opened Wednesday, with Hindi-language action epic Dhurandhar The Revenge (filmed alongside last year's Dhurandhar playing Apple Fresh Pond, Boston Common, and Causeway Street and Telugu-langauge action-comedy Ustaad Bhagat Singh playing Fresh Pond and Causeway Street.

    Thai romantic comedy Food Truck: Stolen Love… and Moo Deng opens at Boston Common and Causeway Street, with Mario Maurer playing a TikTok star whose friends say they spotted a kid who looks just like him with his Korean ex-girlfriend, with the efforts to get to the bottom of this somehow leading to the kid stowing away in the truck and also accidentally abducting an internet-famous baby hippopotamus.

    Korean film The King's Warden sticks around for a few scattered showings at Causeway Street.
  • The Harvard Film Archive repeats their "The Lady and the Typewriter" movies, this time with The Hudsucker Proxy at 7pm Friday, His Girl Friday at 9pm Friday, and Meet John Doe at 7pm Saturday. Sunday's "Complete Stanley Kubrick" show is a sort of what-if situation, with Marlon Brando's One-Eyed Jacks originally intended for Kubrick to direct. Monday's screening of A Clockwork Orange is sold out, but tickets may be released if there are no-shows. Everything this weekend is on 35mm film.
  • The Seaport Alamo has episodes 13-15 of Twin Peaks: The Return on Saturday, a "Book Club" screening of Project Hail Mary on Saturday afternoon, wraps the weekly screenings of the Extended Editions of Lord of the Rings with The Return of the King on Sunday. They screen graphic novel adaptation Paying for It Sunday & Thursday evenings, Melancholia Monday & Tuesday, Daisies on Monday, and have both an early access show of Forbidden Fruits and an AGFADrome "Mystery Voyage" 1990s Hong Kong classic (my guess, based on the description, is Stephen Chow's The God of Cookery).
  • The Regent Theatre has music documentary A Man Called Hurt on Monday, playing as part of a benefit for the Mississippi John Hurt Foundation, with a number of the musicians featured in the film playing on-stage beforehand.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts has Fatih Akin's Amrum on Friday evening to open the Boston Turkish Film Festival, with more over the next two weekends. The Turner and Constable Exhibition on Screen plays Sunday afternoon.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has From Up on Poppy Hill for the Studio Ghibli Retro Replay on Tuesday, and an "Directors in Focus" screening of Martin Scorsese's The Departed on Wednesday. They're also the last holdouts showing the Oscar-nominated shorts (Animation & Live Action) after the awards.
  • Movies at MIT lists My Neighbor Totoro Friday & Saturday night; not sure if non-MIT folks are still welcome and if they want an email beforehand.
  • Boston Jewish Film begins an Israeli Film Series at their new parent organization JCC Greater Boston in Newton, with The Property on Sundayand Nina Is an Athlete on Tuesday.
  • Last weekend that The Boston Baltic Film Festival has movies available to stream (those go down after the 23rd).
  • The Lexington Venue has EPiC (Friday to Sunday plus Thursday), It Was Just an Accident (Friday to Sunday plus a movie-club screening on Wednesday), Mr. Nobody Against Putin, (Friday to Sunday plus Thursday), Sirât (Friday to Sunday and Tuesday/Wednesday), Father Mother Sister Brother (Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday/Wednesday). There's a free screening of The League of Gentlemen Saturday morning, All That's Left of You on Tuesday, and The Voice of Hind Rajab on Wednesday.

    The West Newton Cinema hosts the Lois Weber Film Festival this weekend, celebrating over a century of women in film with Weber's 1921 film The Blot on Friday night (Jeff Rapsis on the organ), Riot in Bloom Saturday evening, and the world premiere of Punkies Sunday afternoon, with various shorts programs, panels, and formal events. They also open Project Hail Mary, reopen Sentimental Value, and hold over Reminders of Him, The President's Cake, Hoppers, Pillion, Marty Supreme, and Hamnet. Cosmic Coda plays Wednesday and Minari plays Thursday afternoon.

    The Dedham Community Theatre opens Tow and holds over EPiC.

    Cinema Salem plays Project Hail Mary, Ready or Not Here I Come, Hoppers, and The Bride! from Friday to Monday. The Spooky Picture Show hosts Tom Savini's Night of the Living Dead on Saturday, there's a Whodunit Watch Party on Sunday, and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde '31 is the Wednesday Classic, with Weirdo Wednesday next door.

    Out at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, they have late shows of Vampires of the Velvet Lounge, which stars Mena Suvari and Dichen Lachman in a movie about vampires looking for vampire hunters on dating apps, and the "with/and…" section of the cast includes the likes of Stephen Dorff, Tyrese Gibson, Rosa Salazar, and Tom Berenger.
I will mostly be living at the Brattle for BUFF this weekend, but decamping to Davis Square when Irish FIlm Festival Boston is going on (it works out well; I'll see Obsession when it releases wide, tend to skip movies-about-movies, and haven't much interest in the Bill Mosely visit). The work week will probably feature Project Hail Mary in 70, the AGFADrome show, and probably Ready or Not 2 and catching The Bride! before it leaves. Probably enough updates to my Letterboxd page to make up for all that baseball and travel!

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Film Rolls Season 2, Round 09: Shipwrecked and Dream Lovers

A couple days later, a couple more movies.

Dale rolls an 8, moving down to the next row and silent movie territory with Shipwrecked, another crowdfunded disc featuring a woman on the run from the murder of an abusive man. Honestly, kind of impressed how okay the silent era was with this.
Centipede, meanwhile, rolls a 13 and jumps from the silent era to 1980s Hong Kong and the pairing of Chow Yun-fat and Brigitte Lin in Dream Lovers. Looking at my camera roll, it looks like I came home to do that right after treating myself to some swordfish schnitzel before starting the pre-colonoscopy fast!



So, uh, that was fun. How about the movies?


Shipwrecked '26

* * ½ (out of four)
Seen 19 December 2025 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, crowdfunded Blu-ray)

Shipwrecked is an amiable little silent with a very pleasant cast that sort of stumbles a bit when the plot has to matter more than just watching them bounce off each other. That's hardly fatal at its 74-minute length, though even at that scale, one kind of feels like the movie could have done a little bit more.

It starts with ship's cook Larry O'Neil (Joseph Schildkraut) seeming none too excited to set sail again with Captain Klodel (Matthew Betz) and his ragtag crew, but, hey, it's a living. Meanwhile, Lois Austin (Seena Owen) fought back against a prominent man who tried to rape her and attempts to throw herself into the sea, but Larry pulls her out. Larry eventually finds her hiding among his stores after the ship sails, but can't keep her hidden; the captain installs her in the first mate's cabin (and Larry in the brig), expecting sexual favors as he plans to turn her in. A storm leads the crew to abandon ship and Lois to rescue Larry, eventually making landfall on a small island more or less run by a British trader (Lionel Belmore). They carve out a decent life there, but Klodel is returning, blackmail on his mind.

The name of the movie is "Shipwrecked", but the good stuff happens on the ship and before. Well, for certain values of "good", considering that we're talking about Klodel being a gross letch who puts Lois and Larry in very uncomfortable positions after we've had the fun of Larry sneaking around to make sure Lois gets fed without alerting the crew to how their supplies are dwindling a little faster than they should be. They've got nice chemistry, with Larry pushing the boundary of being just a little too eager to be a white knight and Lois being a bit more of a survivor than she initially thought. The storm's a nicely done action scene, too, recalling Buster Keaton's The Navigator even if it's not quite so elaborate.

Ideally, this would either be most of the movie or an exciting first act that sets up the bulk of the film on the island, but that's never quite set up to be truly exciting. There's Laska Winter as island girl Zanda (she seemed to play a lot of "exotic" beauties in her brief career), who is smitten with the handsome newcomer, men with an interest in Lois, and the question of whether Klodel will be able to force the genteel trader to surrender Lois before news reaches them that she's not as wanted for murder as they think, but not much comes of it. Lois and Larry are seemingly not a couple at this point for vague, unsatisfying reasons, but there never seems to be any real threat of them ending up otherwise.

The way they get there, on the other hand, isn't ideal; the last half of the movie hasn't necessarily been leading to much, but Larry jumping from assertive to aggressive doesn't quite seem like the right call, at least from a hundred years later. All the ingredients for a more active finale or there, but the second half just doesn't lead to them.


Mung chung yan (Dream Lovers)

* * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 20 December 2025 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Hong Kong Blu-ray)
Where to stream it

I wonder just how much trend-chasing was going on when Dream Lovers was made; the filmmakers don't really hide the attempt to draft on how popular the Terra Cotta Soldier exhibit in Hong Kong was at the time even as they don't seem to have much ability to actually include it. In some ways, the way Hong Kong filmmakers turned so many movies around quickly from all sorts of inspiration is what made it so exciting, in that someone with a shotgun is bound to hit something, but it turns out to be more fun in a goofy action movie than this sort of romantic fantasy, despite the star power brought to bear.

Though conductor Song Yu (Chow Yun-fat) has roots in Hong Kong, he has spent much of his career working internationally, but makes sure to visit the exhibition when his latest stop brings him to the Crown Colony. His girlfriend and manager Wah Lei (Cher Yeung Suet-Yee) notes that he bears a striking resemblance to one of the soldiers, which triggers strange, erotic dreams involving a distant age and a beautiful concubine. Jeweler Cheung Yuet-Heung (Brigitte Lin Ching-Hsia) has many of the same dreams, from the other perspective, and when their paths cross, they feel a powerful attraction, the sort where even Lei's blind spiritualist grandmother (Wong Man-Lei) warns her that she should probably not just prepare for their relationship to end, but encourage it; this sort of love across incarnations is undeniable.

Dream Lovers often feels like an attempt to build an entire romantic film out of chemistry, and when it reaches its finale, they've almost pulled it off: The final embrace between Chow Yun-fat and Brigitte Lin in the rain is beautiful and sad, the culmination of a ton of scenes where director Tony Au Ting-Ping dials in on the pair's powerful charisma, and the screenplay by Manfred Wong Man-Chun and Chiu Kang-Chien builds up the attendant mythology without making it a puzzle that must be solved to accomplish some sort of task. Cher Yeung leans into the utter thanklessness of her role; Lei is a good person who has put real effort into this relationship and knows she deserves better than being cast aside just because this Yuet-Heung chick has done little more than exist, and Yeung makes this jealousy both righteous and corrosive.

The trouble is, there's not much of a story grappling with what it means. The idea that having a fated lover suddenly appear and turn you on might actually be less romantic than horrifyingly disruptive is buzzed about, but treated as a problem for Lei rather than the reincarnated lovers, who don't really do anything or fret about how these versions of themselves from thousands of years ago are overriding their present selves. There's flashbacks, both to the Qin Dynasty and to the night they were born, and Chow & Lin have the necessary spark, but the eeriness of the start dissipates quickly and there's not a lot to replace it aside from sheer attraction and lust. What makes Yu and Yuet great together besides having this prehistory? I'm open to the idea that, for a culture with a stronger belief in reincarnation than mine, you don't necessarily need more, that a lot of this is assumed and one can see the pairs' reactions in their personalities from the start and the fantasy itself is much more basic and relatable, but, I don't know, it feels like it still needs more.

As an aside: One of the things I do when my mind wanders during a movie is prime factor numbers that get mentioned, and the oft-repeated '2197 years" is 13*13*13. Does that mean something? Is this some powerful Chinese numerology? Not to dismiss numerology - after all, it's kind of fascinating serendipity that my rolling dice paired these two movies, made on opposite sides of the planet and separated by sixty years, but both featuring an intriguing setup and fine casting allowed to fizzle by a back half that knocks around, kind of coasting to an expected ending.


All told, I liked Shipwrecked a little more than Dream Lovers, and when they're expressed in star ratings, it results in the pair pulling even!

Dale Evans: 39¾ stars
Centipede: 39¾ stars

Tight as can be, with more serendipity to come!

Film Rolls Season 2, Round 08: Jagko and Beggars of Life

Heh, whoops!

No mistakes for Dale, who rolls a 14 and makes it almost to the end of the first row, landing on another from the Korean Film Archive, Jagko. You know what's kind of cool? You can search the Harvard Film Archives's website to see if they've played a movie over the past 25 years or so, and I'm kind of mildly surprised this hasn't. They play a fair amount of Korean cinema and this seems up their alley. I'm also kind of surprised that the program I figured it would have played in was 20 years ago. Time flies!

The "whoops" came a couple days later when Centipede rolled a 4 and landed on Beggars of Life, which really shouldn't have been on the shelf full of movies I haven't seen before because I saw it back in 2017, at the Archive, coincidentally enough. It didn't exactly feel familiar while watching it so much as like the sort of thing I've absorbed through osmosis, so I'm keeping it in. Kind of envying those who can be asked if they've seen a movie and just remember their every thought about it, though.

Solid as heck couple days here:


Jagko (aka Pursuit of Death)

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 14 December 2025 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Korean Film Archive Blu-ray)

Yeah, I'm very glad I bought a bunch of Korean Film Archive discs sight unseen when they were on sale a couple years back. Jagko is a terrific little drama with just enough thriller in it to keep it interesting and probably a whole ton of extra layers for people in 1980 Korea.

It starts by introducing the audience to Song Gi-yeol (Choi Yun-Seok), once a cop but now an alcoholic vagrant, being picked up and sent to a "rehab center" that doesn't offer much in the way of services or chance to leave - if its residents had family they hadn't alienated, they wouldn't be there - only to discover with shock that one of the other residents (Kim Hui-ra) appears to be Baek Gong-san aka "Jagko", the communist guerilla whose capture soon after the war was going to seal Song's reputation as a fast-rising star, but whose embarrassing escape left Song looking incompetent at best and complicit at worst. He's been chasing this white whale for decades, and does not intend to stop just because the guy at the other end of the bunkhouse says he's never even heard of this Jagko guy.

Writer Song Kil-han and director Im Kwon-taek don't leave the audience in suspense very long; it's hard to have parallel flashbacks if Jagko is not around, somewhere, to do the flashing back. Happily, Im and company do good work revealing what is the case to the audience while still making Song's certainty be more the result of his obsession than any evidence that "Kim" is actually the man he is looking for. It sets up a tight game of cat-and-mouse, as both parties try to recruit their fellow inmates to help them thwart the other, the stakes objectively small and petty but also all that both of them have got. Heck, at times they're all that the other people in this dormitory have; none of them really have any investment in Song's obsession or special fondness for Kim beyond the anti-communist background noise the ROK has been putting out their entire lives (that the institution keeping them off the streets is pretty socialist barely even registers as irony), but it's a little exciting and something to do, although most would prefer not to rock the boat. This isn't a case where the feud is going to spill out and metastasize into some larger cancer, but where it might be remembered as a weird thing that happened this one time.

The flashbacks fill it out, establishing why the stakes are so high for the pair of them. Im jumps back and forth and from one to the other, building a sense of tragedy as it's not always clear whether either could have stepped back and lived a normal life: For all that Song is clearly making self-destructive decisions which wind up dooming both himself and his quarry, the suggested magnitude of Jagko's crimes and the stigma associated with communism during these years may have been worse, such that Jagko could never fully open up to any of his lovers and Song maybe never could live down even the suspicion that he let the other man escape on purpose. There's still a litany of lives ended or ruined in their wake, and each episode feels substantial as it asks the question of whether things would turn out different if Song just stopped here without taking the audience away from the present for too long.

Choi Yun-seok and Kim Hui-ra both impress as Song and Jagko, respectively; though the audience never gets to see either at their peak, but we do get a sense of their decay, and how, even in this state, Song's got this vestigial arrogance and Jagko a certain charisma that probably made him a successful revolutionary back in the day, whether never going long without a girlfriend, even living off the grid, or convincing folks that Song might pose a threat to them as well. The film is populated by a number of entertaining minor characters, and the filmmakers have a knack for giving each marginal environment they find themselves in have a distinct feel and be a notable step down.

It wavers a bit toward the end, when the pair must explicitly confront that they are, ultimately, the only constants in each other's lives, and that the world has in many ways moved on from their conflict. I gather Im was a workhorse director cranking out genre films, and even if he was playing with grander ideas here, there's still an odd directness in the last act and curtness at the very end that's not really unlike what came before at all, but isn't quite what it could be. Jagko is sort of a grindhouse film with ambitions, ones it lives up to more along the way versus at the conclusion.


Beggars of Life)

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 16 December 2025 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Kino Lorber Blu-ray)
Where to stream it, or buy the DVD at Amazon (wait, is my BD really out of print?)

The bulk of Beggars of Life can't measure up to its opening scenes, which can shock a modern audience with just how frank and sophisticated a silent movie can be. When most of what one sees from the era is slapstick comedy or grand epics, the grim tableau an amiable train-hopper finds and the double-exposed flashback where he gets an explanation are a heck of an eye-opener.

That hobo is Jim (Richard Arlen) - "The Boy" - who pokes his head into a farmhouse and sees what initially seems to be an abandoned meal, although on closer examination, the farmer is at the table, dead. His stepdaughter Nancy (Louise Brooks) admits to killing him, but it's pretty clear that he had it coming after years of abuse. Though Jim is reluctant to get mixed up in this, he eventually lets her tag along, disguised as a boy, as he makes his way to Canada, where a relative supposedly has a job waiting for him. Eventually, though, the body will be discovered and a reward posted, word of which makes it to a hobo camp led by The Arkansaw Snake (Robert Perry), possibly leaving Nancy's fate in the hands of the eccentric Oklahoma Red (Wallace Beery).

The billing of the stars is interesting, almost a hundred years later - most today will think of this as a Louise Brooks film, and she's pretty great; Brooks establishes Nancy as someone just strong enough to be able to move forward but still kind of reeling from what she's had to do to get to this point; Nancy's a haunted heroine who never quite comes off as a damsel in distress but also clearly can use the support Jim offers. Richard Arlen (second-billed) is pleasant enough as Jim, who is maybe more of a match for Brook's Nancy that a complement, someone who has seen his own sort of hard times but still has a good core, and as the film goes on one gets the impression that what's awaiting him in Canada is not nearly as sure as he claims, but he's trying to will it into being for Nancy's sake. Arlen is one of a large number of matinee idols who run together now, handsome and capable enough to have had notable roles in a number of films for decades, but never quite had the combination that made him an icon remembered the way his co-stars were. Both are billed below Wallace Beery, who makes hobo "Oklahoma Red" memorable but an oddity to a later audience, like we're supposed to enjoy the familiarity of his shtick as much as its content. He'd become an icon of sorts, and he's pretty good here, enough that one can see why he's positioned as the central character despite not showing up until relatively late; he grabs the audience's attention and there's at least a genuine arc and question about whether he will ultimately defend or betray the young pair.

The opening is the best part, though, direct and filled with genuine horror without much in the way of euphemism or equivocation on whether or not Nancy is in the right; director William A. Wellman jumps from Jim's stark discovery to Nancy's somewhat dazed telling without skipping a beat. It's a tough bar to clear, but if the film never has another sequence that good, it at least lets those scenes hang over the rest of the movie: What could have been a bit of ill-advised comedy becomes something more sinister, and every further threat of violence reflects what specific horrors might await Nancy. When the film attempts to impress in other ways - for instance, a runaway train that makes for a nifty climax without making this the sort of thrill picture one associates with Harold Lloyd or Buster Keaton - it's generally done very well.

I'm tempted to give this another watch relatively soon, rather than wait another decade for it to reclassify itself in my head as primarily one of Louise Brooks's iconic roles, just to see how it hits when expecting all three stars to have the same sort of weight.


Well, that's a push.

Dale Evans: 37¼ stars
Centipede: 37½ stars

Centipede still ahead by the same nose as before.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 13 March 2026 - 19 March 2026

Aw Yeah BUFF's Back!
  • That would be The Boston Underground Film Festival, which The Brattle Theatre hosts starting on Wednesday with a 35mm premiere of Ben Wheatley's new action thriller Normal hosted by star Bob Odenkirk and a late show of Bullet Infinity. Thursday features The Serpent's Skin, The Hedonist, and Sugar Rot, with the festival continuing through Sunday the 22nd.

    But first, Kate the Great: Oscar's Favorite Actress continues with a Friday Film Matinee of Summertime, Pat and Mike & Desk Set on Saturday, The Lion in Winter on Sunday & Monday, On Golden Pond as part of a double feature on Sunday, and The Philadelphia Story & Bringing Up Baby on Tuesday.

    They also show Night of the Living Dead with author Daniel Kraus discussing his Dead-related memoir on Friday, and without on Saturday. There's also an open-crafting show of Footloose Monday evening.
  • The big opening this week is Reminders of Him, in which a woman (Maika Monroe) who spent seven years in prison after causing the accident that took her boyfriend's life winds up falling for his best friend (Tyriq Withers) and her new boss, who has apparently been helping raise their daughter but didn't recognize her based on the trailer, and, I don't know, was she just knocked up after a really quick fling where he never posted anything on social media or does this take place in 1995 or what? It's based on a Colleen Hoover novel and it's got Bradley Whitford & Lauren Graham as the grandparents, and plays at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, West Newton, Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema & XL), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay (including Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Dolby Cinema), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    It's honestly kind of odd to me that The Undertone (now just undertone) got picked up by a major-ish studio after seeing it at Fantasia last summer; it's decent, but the creepy bit is not the podcast reviewing a cursed recording that's in the foreground. Nice solo performance by Nana Kiri and banger finale, though. It's at the Somerville, the Coolidge, Fresh Pond, Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay (including Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Dolby CInema), and Arsenal Yards.

    An edgier horror-comedy is Slanted, in which a Chinese-American teenager (Shirley Chen) undergoes experimental surgery that leaves her looking like a white girl (Mckenna Grace), horrifying her family but maybe not giving her a social leg up because now she's The New Girl. It's at Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, and South Bay. Thriller The Gates has three young black men witnessing a murder in a gated community and hunted by the residents who think they did it, one of whom appears to be James Van Der Beek in his final role. It's at Boston Common.

    Shot-in-English Croatian sci-fi adventure Storm Rider: Legend of Hammerhead looks like a kick; shame it's mostly playing Boston Common for late shows when it looks kind of Young Adult-y.

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze gets a 35th-anniversary re-release at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row; The Revenant gets a regular re-release at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row after a couple Imax one-offs; Tommy plays Boston Common (Imax Laser) on Tuesday and Wednesday for its 50th anniversary.

    Boston Common has the second half of the Best Picture Marathon on Sunday, with Sentimental Value, F1, Marty Supreme, Sinners, and Bugonia; several are also returning to theaters or more prominent on the schedule in anticipation of a boost around the ceremony on Sunday. Boston Common also has one-offs of "The Blue Angels" in Imax 3D, a Pi Day showing of Pi, and the original Leprechaun on Saturday. The Optimist with Stephen Lang & Elsie Fisher has encore screenings at Boston Common and Kendall Square on Sunday afternoon. There's a preview of The Pout-Pout Fish at Boston Common and South Bay Sunday afternoon, and secret previews at Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday. Project Hail Mary has Amazon Prime early shows at Boston Common (Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), South Bay (Imax Xenon & Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), and Arsenal Yards (CWX) on Monday.
  • Apple Fresh Pond opens Hindi-language thriller Charak and Malayalam-language horror film Sambhavam Adhyayam Onnu on Friday. An uncut version of Tamil-language crime film Aaranya Kaandam plays Saturday, and Hindi-language action epic Dhurandhar The Revenge opens Wednesday, roughly 3 months after its predecessor (also at Boston Common, Causeway Street). Telugu-langauge action-comedy Ustaad Bhagat Singh also opens at Causeway Street on Wednesday (and may be at Fresh Pond; they're not showing a full schedule that far out on their website).

    A couple more Lunar New Year movies make it Stateside this weekend, with Per Aspera Ad Astra, a sci-fi adventure from Animal World & Go Away Mr. Tumor director Yan Yan playing Boston Common and Causeway Street (mostly afternoons), with animated fantasy Boonie Bears: The Hidden Protector playing matinees at Boston Common. Still playing are Pegasus 3 at Boston Common and Causeway Street; and Blades of the Guardians at Causeway Street. No word yet on Panda Plan 2.

    Kiki's Delivery Service gets a giant-screen re-release, playing dubbed and subbed at Boston Common (Imax Laser), South Bay (Imax Xenon), Assembly Row (Imax Laser). There's also a Crunchyroll Anime Nights Sneak Peak at Boston Common, the Seaport, Assembly Row on Monday. Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle gets a second week at Boston Common.

    Apparently The King's Warden has been doing pretty well in limited release, as it's back up to a full screen at Causeway Street and also playing Boston Common.
  • The Somerville Theatre has the Mahoning Drive-In Road Show on Friday, with a 35mm double feature of Smokey & the Bandit & The Car and, I presume, fun to be had before, after, and between. Indie comedy The Napa Boys plays Saturday and Tuesday (and Monday the 23rd with co-star Mike Mitchell on hand), with indie thriller Jit plays Monday. The silent version of Alfred Hitchcock's Blackmail plays Sunday afternoon with a new score by Neil Brand performed live by the New England Film Orchestra. The Princess Bride is Wednesday's 35mm Feel Good Film.

    The Capitol Theatre holds over The President's Cake and brings back the Oscar-Nominated Documentary & Animated shorts.
  • The Harvard Film Archive starts a new series, "The Lady and the Typewriter", with Meet John Doe at 6pm Friday, His Girl Friday and 7pm Saturday, and The Hudsucker Proxy at 9pm Saturday. Sunday's screening of Dr. Strangelove on a new print is sold out, but there may be seats available if there are no-shows.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre will be showing Project Hail Mary in 70mm, and has three sold-out preview shows this weekend. They also make up for not doing any Friday the 13th stuff last month with a double feature at 11pm on Friday (Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday & Freddy vs. Jason, with Saturday the 14th and Eraserhead playing midnight on Saturday. They've also got kids' shows of The Peanuts Movie Saturday & Sunday mornings, The Thin Blue Line as the BIg Screen Classic on Monday, a 35mm print of Monsoon Wedding with a seminar led by BU's Dr. Shilpa Parnami on Tuesday, and Clair Denis's Beau Travail for "Calling the Shots" on Wednesday.
  • The Seaport Alamo continues the Jurassic Park Movie Party series with The Lost World on Friday and Jurassic Park III on Sunday, has episodes 10-12 of Twin Peaks: The Return and Pi on Saturday, has the second weekly screening of the Extended Editions of Lord of the Rings with The Two Towers on Sunday. Maximum Overdrive plays for Terror Tuesday, while Dead Lover is Weird Wednesday. The Gorillaz-programmed member screening on Thursday is Britannia Hospital.
  • The Regent Theatre has documentary Billy Idol Should Be Dead on Friday, short film "Between Two Worlds" followed by a panel discussion with South Sudanese community leaders on Wednesday, and Mountains of the Moon, which combines outdoor sports and the music of the Grateful Dead, with a live Scott Damgaard set to kick the night off on Thursday.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts has two exhibitions-on-film - Caravaggio and Turner and Constable on Saturday, and concludes their Oscar preview series with One Battle After Another on Sunday.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has Spirited Away for the Studio Ghibli Retro Replay on Tuesday, and an "Directors in Focus" screening of Martin Scorsese's After Hours on Wednesday.
  • (Probable) last call for Oscar-Nominated Short films start continue this week, with the Animated Shorts at the Coolidge, Kendall Square, the Capitol, the Lexington Venue (Saturday/Sunday), and CinemaSalem (Friday/Sunday); the Live Action Shorts at the Coolidge, Kendall Square, the Venue (Saturday), and CinemaSalem (Friday/Sunday); and the Documentary Shorts at the Coolidge, the Capitol, the Venue (Saturday), and CinemaSalem (Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Monday).
  • The Boston Baltic Film Festival has movies available to stream through the 23rd.
  • The Museum of Science has a second weekend of The Bride! on the Omni screen Friday & Saturday, with Project Hail Mary taking those slots next weekend.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday/Wednesday with One Battle After Another (no show Wednesday), Sinners, Train Dreams, and the Oscar shorts programs. Documentary Suburban Fury plays with director Robinson Devor present for a Q&A on Friday, and there's a free screening of Free for All: The Public Library on Tuesday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Reminders of Him and The President's Cake, continuing Hoppers, Sirât, EPiC, Pillion, Father Mother Sister Brother, Marty Supreme, and Hamnet. GoodFellas plays Thursday.

    The Dedham Community Theatre continues to show For Worse and EPiC.

    Cinema Salem rolls with the Oscar Shorts (though not every one every day), Scream 7, Hoppers and The Bride! from Friday to Monday. Excalibur is the Friday Night Light show, The Incredible Shrinking Man is the Wednesday Classic (with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall), and Carrie plays Thursday (costumes encouraged).

    If you can make it out to the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, they've got indie horror Scared to Death, with a cast that includes Lin Shaye, Bill Mosely, and Rae Dawn Chong among the younger folks.
I guess Houston just isn't really a movie town - there's like one 6-screen AMC downtown and a Regal somewhat further out that really doesn't make getting back to the hotel easy - so Maybe I'll see something before the only show of Per Aspera Ad Astra that works for me and then BUFF. Updates to my Letterboxd page vaguely possible!

Friday, March 06, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 6 March 2026 - 12 March 2026

Got a good, solid two and a half weeks of not really getting to the multiplexes ahead of me, so let's see what's going to pile up!
  • Kind of crazy that Jessie Buckley is picking up awards for Hamnet during the release of The Bride! - has there ever been a bigger tonal difference between what you're repping at the Oscars and in theaters? In it, she plays a corpse reanimated to be the bride of Frankenstein (Christian Bale), with Annette Bening as the a mad doctor, Plus Penelope Cruz, one of the Skarsgaards, and director Maggie Gyllenhaal's kid brother Jake. It's at the Coolidge, the Somerville, Fresh Pond, Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday-Sunday), CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay (including Imax Xenon), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    The latest Pixar film is Hoppers, which has an animal lover's brain uploaded into a robotic beaver so she can observe them, only to have everything get chaotic. Is it just me, or are Pixar movies not the events they once were any more, either from getting shuffled to streaming or a few lackluster entries? This one opens at the Arlington Capitol, Fresh Pond (including 3D), Jordan's (Imax Friday-Sunday), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema 2D & RealD 3D), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay (including Imax Xenon 2D & Dolby Cinema 2D & RealD 3D), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema 2D & RealD 3D), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    Rejoice, for the opening of Protector means its preview will no longer be before Every Single Movie, although to be fair this Milla Jovovich-chasing-her-kidnapped-daughter flick looks more generic than bad. It's at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row. Another well-trailered movie, Youngblood starring Ashton James as an African-American hockey prodigy clashing with an otherwise all-white team in Ontario, opens at Fresh Pond and Boston Common.

    Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man has Cillian Murphy reprising his role of Tommy Selby to show what the gangster was up to during World War II; doesn't appear to have a lot of other returning characters, but Rebecca Ferguson, Barry Keoghan, and Tim Roth are a nice cast regardless. It plays Fresh Pond, Kendall Square, and the Seaport for a couple weeks before Netflix.

    Horror movie Dolly stars Fabianne Therese as a woman kidnapped by folks intending to put her in the role of a child; it's at Boston Common, Causeway Street, and the Seaport.

    There's a Dolby Cinema preview of undertone at Boston Common and Assembly Row on Monday, and a mystery preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row the same night. The first two episodes of the new season of One Piece play Boston Common (including XL) and Assembly Row on Tuesday. Boston Common also has the two-day Best Picture marathon, with Train Dreams, The Secret Agent, One Battle After Another, Hamnet, and Frankenstein paying this Saturday and the rest next week (and, yes, they're including the Netflix-produced movies this year!). Music flicks Enhypen: Walk the Line (Summer Edition) and Aurora: What Happened to the Earth? play Boston Common and the Seaport on Saturday. Imax doc "A Beautiful Planet" plays Boston Common in Imax 3D on Saturday. The Optimist, a drama about a Holocaust survivor played by Stephen Lang who connects with a young woman played by Elsie Fisher, plays Boston Common, Kendall Square Wednesday evening.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre has a 35mm print of Sirât (on Screen #2), with Sergi López as a father searching for his missing daughter in Morocco, following her trail deeper into the rave scene. It also plays digitally at West Newton, Boston Common.

    The Coolidge has two things going during the midnight hour this weekend - at 11pm, they welcome Lloyd Kaufman, with Mr. Melvin on Friday and Sgt. Kabukiman NYPD on Saturday; Oscar nominee The Ugly Stepsister plays in the new wing at 11:59 both nights. On Sunday, they've got a sold-out Cinema Masala screening of Dil Chahta Hai; The Battle of Algiers plays on 35mm film for the Big Screen Classic Show on Monday; there's both Open Screen and a digital restoration of Mira Nair's Mississippi Masala on Tuesday; and The Last Showgirl is the "Calling the Shots" show on Wednesday.
  • The Indian movies seem to be at the other 'plexes this week, with one Telugu-language comedy, Mension House Mallesh, at Causeway Street and another, Sampradayini Suppini Suddapoosani at Boston Common, Causeway Street; Telugu-language thriller Mrithunjay opens at Boston Common. Apple Fresh Pond plays Telugu-language comedy Sathi Leelavathi Friday and Sunday, and Malayalam-language sci-fi film Sathi Leelavathi on Saturday, with Tamil-language comedy Thaai Kizhavi held over for the week.

    Lunar New Year movies hanging around include Pegasus 3 at Boston Common and Causeway Street; Hong Kong Lunar New Year comedy Night King at Causeway Street; and Blades of the Guardians at Causeway Street.

    Anime blockbuster Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle returns to Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay. Uma Musume: Pretty Derby: Beginning of a New Era and Japanese Oscar nominee Kohuko continue at Boston Common.

    Korean historical comedy/drama The King's Warden continues at Causeway Street.
  • The Somerville Theatre has independent thriller Heel on Friday & Sunday, Eastern Western with Biliana & Marina Grozdanova and cinematographer/editor Cameron Wheeless on-hand for a Q&A on Sunday, comedy Paying for It on Monday & Tuesday, Good Will Hunting for the 35mm Feel Good Film on Wednesday, and the 4K restoration of Henry Jaglom's Can She Bake a Cherry Pie on Thursday.

    The Capitol Theatre continues to be the place showing The President's Cake, hosts the second day of "Boston Bitdown 2" on Friday, and has a "Capitol Classics" screening of To Kill a Mockingbird on Saturday.
  • The Brattle Theatre kicks starts the weekend with a Friday Film Matinee of Easy Rider, and then plays the new reconstruction of Queen Kelly from Friday to Sunday, with The Ugly Stepsister mostly playing later Friday to Monday. They've also got a 35mm print of A League of Their Own playing Saturday & Sunday; a revolutionary-makeup double feature of Planet of the Apes '68 & An American Werewolf in London on Tuesday, and then kick off "Kate the Great" with The Philadelphia Story & Holiday on Thursday, the former on 35mm film.
  • Oscar-Nominated Short films start continue this week, with the Animated Shorts at the Coolidge, Kendall Square, The ICA (Saturday/Sunday), the Lexington Venue (Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday/Wednesday), and CinemaSalem (Saturday/Sunday/Monday); the Live Action Shorts at the Coolidge, the ICA (Saturday/Sunday), Kendall Square, the Venue (Friday/Sunday/Wednesday), and CinemaSalem (Friday/Sunday); and the Documentary Shorts at the Coolidge, the Venue (Saturday/Wednesday), West Newton, and CinemaSalem (Friday/Saturday/Monday).
  • The Harvard Film Archive goes an starts a Korean crime series while I'm out of town with Life Line on Friday and The Last Witness on Saturday. Saturday also has a matinee double feature of The Flowers of St. Francis & Network, both on 35mm film. The Kubrick series continues with a vintage print of the original cut of Spartacus on Sunday and a sold-out show of 2001 on Monday (although you may get lucky if there's no-shows).
  • The Museum of Fine Arts has Bi Gan's Resurrection on Friday night, Swiss Oscar submission Late Shift on Saturday afternoon, and Hamnet Sunday afternoon.
  • The Seaport Alamo kicks off weekly screenings of the Jurassic Park series with sold-out shows of the first on Friday & Sunday, continues showing Twin Peaks: The Return with episodes 7-9 on Saturday, and starts weekly screenings of the Extended Editions of Lord of the Rings with Fellowship on Sunday. Dark comedy Idiotika plays Saturday & Wednesday, and then they appear to be closed Monday with free member screenings of everything playing on Tuesday, plus a member screening of Bad Santa on Thursday.
  • The Boston Asian American Film Festival presents two films at ArtsEmerson's Paramount Theater this weekend: Diamond Diplomacy with director Yuriko Gamo Romer on Friday night, and Chris Grace: As Scarlett Johansson playing Saturday afternoon.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has Princess Mononoke for the Studio Ghibli Retro Replay on Tuesday, and an "Directors in Focus" screening of Akira Kurosawa's Dreams on Wednesday.
  • The Regent Theatre has African Academy Award winner Nawi: Dear Future Me (Kenya's Oscar submission) on Wednesday evening.
  • The in-person portion of The Boston Baltic Film Festival has wrapped, but many selections are still available to stream.
  • The Museum of Science has Friday & Saturday screenings of The Bride! on the Omni screen, with Project Hail Mary slated to start the 20th.
  • Movies at MIT has The Dark Knight Friday & Saturday evenings. They're not sending emails to the list (at least, not to those of us not at MIT), but I'm sure they still appreciate a heads-up on attendance.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Monday with All That's Left of You (no show Wednesday), The Voice of Hind Rajab, and the Oscar shorts programs. There's a free screening of The Outer Limits: The Inheritors, a two-part episode of the original series starring Robert Duvall, on Sunday morning, and "Exhibition on Screen" documentary Turner & Constable on Thursday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens the Oscar Documentary shorts, Hoppers, and Sirât, also continuing EPiC, Pillion, Father Mother Sister Brother, Marty Supreme, and Hamnet. Pianist Bruce Vogt accompanies Buster Keaton in "The Scarecrow" and Lilian Gish in The Wind on Sunday; The Holdovers plays Thursday.

    The Dedham Community Theatre opens independent comedy For Worse, with writer/director Amy Landecker as a new divorcee who attends a wedding with a much younger date, with EPiC on the other screen.

    Cinema Salem has all of the Oscar Shorts (though not every one every day), Scream 7, Hoppers and The Bride! from Friday to Monday. The Wizard of Oz is the Wednesday Classic (with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall).
I am currently on vacation in Houston to watch the World Baseball Classic and, folks, this does not seem like a great city for both getting to a movie if there's no ballgame in the evening and getting back to the hotel afterward (there are buses but the sidewalk infrastructure is lacking). So, don't expect many updates to my Letterboxd page, although I will be making up for lost time soon after!

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Lunar New Year 2026: Pegasus 3

So, as we go to Pegasus 3 in what isn't quite Causeway Street's largest screen, how's it doing in China? As of today, $514M in the 11 days since Lunar New Year, which is a bit more than Scare Out, Blades of the Guardians, Boonie Bears: The Hidden Protector, Panda Plan 2, Night King, and Per Aspera ad Astra put together. I don't know that it's an insane juggernaut like Ne Zha 2 was last year, but it's a big 'un.

I'm kind of upset that I didn't get to see it in Imax earlier in the week. It got two days on the giant screen in Assembly Row, but the first aligned with the day all the theaters were closed due to snow, and then I opted for the secret show at the Somerville on the second day with no regrets. I'll bet it's a heck of a thing to see in one of those D-Box or 4DX theaters that shake you around.

Oh, something kind of amusing is that, while it's very easy to come across a lot of social media and economics articles about how Chinese electric vehicles are going to upend the motor vehicle world order, I just randomly saw that a whole bunch of Chinese electric vehicle manufacturers have gone bankrupt in the past few years. It puts a fair amount of the plot of Pegasus 2 into focus (Zhang Chi was sponsored, you may recall, but a company that had been making devices somewhere between golf carts and mobility aids for the elderly but were expanding into full-size EVs) and how this one starts (they are bankrupt).


Fei Chi Ren Sheng 3 (Pegasus 3)

* * * (out of four)
Seen 27 February 2026 in AMC Causeway Street #12 (first-run, laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available), Pegasus (Prime link), and Pegasus 2, or buy the first on DVD at Amazon

When I watched the first two Pegasus movies a couple years ago, I made the kind of flip comment that as a writer/director, Han Han was a very good racecar driver. This is still more or less true, although he's improved just enough over the course of this series that the parts of the movie that aren't folks behind the wheel are only a bit of a slog and the parts that are make them worth it.

In the last film, Zhang Chi (Shen Teng) and Li Xiaohai (Fan Chengcheng) won the final running of the Bayanbulak rally, but it was not enough to save the electric vehicle company sponsoring them from bankruptcy, though Zhang, his navigator Sun Yuqiang (Yin Zheng), and mechanic Ji Xing (Zhang Benyu) received the factory as a new venue for their driving school. It's only losing money slowly when they are approached by SKYLAD executives Cai (Sha Yi) and An (Duan Yihong) to head up a national team to compete in the new Asian Muchen 100" race, although friction with the company's European partners and a disastrous qualifying round lead them to team up with rival Manager Ye (Wei Xiang), now working as a rideshare driver, to form a "privateer" team.

This set-up is, quite honestly, kind of brutal to sit through at times. Han Han and co-writers Zhou Yunai & Meng Wenyu have happily remembered that the first film was a comedy and are managing to keep things lubricated with the occasional joke here (the second, for better or worse, played things fairly straight), but there is still a lot of awkwardness in the script and editing, as a fair amount of information gets repeated early on while at other times the plot seems to hinge on technical details or the politics of how these teams are selected. There are something like ten drivers of some consequence to the story though only a couple are fleshed out at all, which is kind of a problem when you get to the big rally and everybody is wearing the same sort of jumpsuit and the color-coding is not nearly enough to remind you of what the dynamic between this guy and Team Zhang Chi is while a lot is going on.

(And on the one hand, props for at least recognizing that doing so much damage to the hero car that it needs to be almost completely rebuilt has happened a lot over the course of the series, and the metaphor of how, Zhang Chi will push things to the point of disintegration and self-destruction loses power with each iteration; on the other, they keep doing it!)

The core cast still works, though. Shen Teng may get stuck with a lot of lousy dialogue early on, but he absolutely gets that, like a lot of elite athletes, Zhang Chi is a sweet guy with a hypercompetitive monster inside, even if he's maturing into someone who can control it, and Yin Zheng does will making Yuqiang a man who is a natural sidekick. Zheng Benyu plays Xing as a big, goofy engineering savant, while Sha Yi and Duan Yihong make Cai and An into folks who can more or less get away with stabbing people in the back because they don't necessarily like the system they're in. Wei Xiang often proves to be the MVP, though, with Ye seeming to struggle to hold his tongue even as he's being glib early on and, after announcing that the team needs "a villain", embracing that role with relish.

The main event, though, is the major race that takes up basically the second half of the movie and may occur in what amounts to real time. Han has kind of cleverly lowered expectations by making the qualifying segment dangerous but also a bit anticlimactic, and also created a sort of split course that allows the two cars on the team to deal with different challenges rather than repeating everything (although the rules this time around feature much more head-to-head competition than the rallies in the first two films). He spends a lot of the early going yammering on about tires in a frustrating way, but thankfully pays it off in an unexpected but exciting manner, and from then on, the race is on, gorgeously shot with fairly seamless visual effects, often putting racers in dangerous positions but in a casual way that balances the thrill of how folks could get killed in really impressive fashion if they missed a cliffside hairpin turn at 150 kph with how these guys are clearly good enough that having one tire winding up in midair during such a turn is an expected part of their strategy. As the race takes Zhang Chi & Sun Yuqiang through a bunch of different terrain and conditions, Han turns out to be really good at giving the audience necessary information at speed and both tossing in and keeping up with situations that have these seasoned pros quickly glancing at each other as if to say "can you believe this?", eventually racing to a photo finish.

That back half is seldom truly showy as opposed to filled with well-composed shots and beats that are individually fairly plausible but pile up in impressive fashion without stopping for a flashback or any such similar nonsense, until by the end you realize that this race is one of the most impressive sustained action sequences going. It doesn't exactly make the early going better, but it certainly makes it worth sitting through. It must be amazing in the deluxe auditoriums with personal subwoofers enveloping screens, and maybe that explains why this has been the big hit of the season in China, because it definitely won't be the same when reduced to fit in one's living room.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 27 February 2026 - 5 March 2026

I wonder how many of the local holdovers are theaters seeing if they can get the tickets they had to cancel earlier in the week back.
  • Scream 7, the latest (final?) in the long-running series springs to bring Neve Campbell (who sat out the last one), but loses Melissa Barrera and needed Kevin Williamson to replace Christopher Landon when he dropped out as director, so it seems like kind of a mess, but who knows? It opens on a lot of screens at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday-Sunday), CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema & XL), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay (including Imax Xenon & Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser and Dolby Cinema), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    Dreams, starring Jessica Chastain as a socialite who sponsors a Mexican ballet dancer (Isaac Hernández) before stalking him, opens at Fresh Pond and Boston Common.

    K-Pops!, which has writer-director-star Anderson .Paak as a musician who travels to Korea to team with his long-lost son for a competition show, plays Boston Common, Causeway Street, and South Bay as an AMC exclusive after sitting on the shelf for a year and a half.

    After a week as an Imax exclusive, Baz Luhrmann's EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert expands and moves to regular screens at the Coolidge, Fresh Pond, West Newton, Boston Common, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards. Another more contemporary concert film, Twenty One Pilots: More Than We Ever Imagined, opens at Jordan's (Imax Friday-Sunday), Boston Common (including Imax Laser), South Bay, and Assembly Row (including Imax Laser). AURORA: What Happened to the Earth plays Boston Common and the Seaport Wednesday; K-pop concert film Enhypen: Walk the Line Summer Edition plays Boston Common and the Seaport Thursday.

    Black History Month shows at Boston Common and South Bay this week are Get on the Bus and The Woman King (with some make-up shows of Fruitvale Station).

    Boston Common continues screening Imax docs on Saturday mornings with "Born to Be Wild". There are early access screenings of Hoppers on Saturday at Boston Common (Dolby Cinema), South Bay (Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (Dolby Cinema), and Chestnut Hill; Dolly shows early on Tuesday at Boston Common and the Seaport. The Imax re-release of The Revenant encores Sunday at Boston Common and Assembly Row.
  • Pegasus 3, in which the rally-car driver from the first two films coaches a team that heads to Europe, has made half a billion dollars after a week and a half in China, and opens at Boston Common and Causeway Street for its regular run this weekend. Hong Kong Lunar New Year comedy Night King continues at Causeway Street; Blades of the Guardians continues at Causeway Street and South Bay; Scare Out continues at Causeway Street. John Woo/Chow Yun-Fat classic A Better Tomorrow plays Boston Common (Sunday/Monday/Wednesday) and the Seaport (Sunday/Monday/Tuesday).

    Apple Fresh Pond turns their South Asian selection over to open Tamil-language comedy Thaai Kizhavi, Telugu-language comedy Vishnu Vinyasam, Hindi-language drama The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond (no show Sunday), and Gujarati-language thriller Paatki (through Sunday).

    Anime feature Uma Musume: Pretty Derby: Beginning of a New Era opens at Boston Common, South Bay. Japanese Oscar nominee Kohuko continues at Boston Common.

    Korean historical comedy/drama The King's Warden continues at Causeway Street.
  • The Capitol Theatre opens The President's Cake, which was Iraq's first submission to the Oscars' foreign-film category and follows a little girl given the task of making a cake for Saddam Hussein, who is visiting for his birthday, very difficult in a poor town. Surprisingly, they're the only place in metro Boston playing it, considering how many times the trailer played at the big chain 'plexes.

    The Somerville Theatre has a double feature of Annie Hall (35mm) & Modern Romance on Friday night, a "restoration and recreation" of Erich von Streheim's never-completed Queen Kelly on Sunday afternoon & Monday evening, a make-up screening of snowed-out documentary The Right Track (and a single show of Marty Supreme) on Tuesday, and My Cousin Vinny on 35mm as Wednesday's Feel Good Film.
  • Oscar-Nominated Short films start continue this week, with the Animated Shorts at the Coolidge, Kendall Square, The ICA (Saturday/Thursday), the Lexington Venue (Friday/Sunday/Wednesday/Thursday), and CinemaSalem (Friday to Monday); the Live Action Shorts at the Coolidge, the ICA (Friday/Saturday), Kendall Square, West Newton, and CinemaSalem (Friday to Monday); and the Documentary Shorts at the Coolidge, the Venue (Friday/Saturday/Wednesday/Thursday), and CinemaSalem (Friday to Monday).
  • In addition to EPiC and the documentary shorts, The Coolidge Corner Theatre showcases Oscar nominee for Best Makeup The Ugly Stepsister at midnight Friday & Saturday, with the other screen showing 35mm prints of Bram Stoker's Dracula (Friday) and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (Saturday).

    There's a special Science on Screen presentation of the new documentary Starman on Sunday, with both director Robert Stone and subject Gentry Lee in attendance. They start a Mira Nair series on Tuesday with Salaam Bombay!, and also kick off two month-long courses: "Irish Ayes" Tuesday mornings and "Calling the Shots", focused on women filmmakers, on Wednesday evenings, whose companion screenings starting with a 35mm print of Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles. Thursday is also busy, with the opening night shows of Sirât including introductions & Q&As with director Oliver Laxe, a big-screen classic show of Saving Face with BU Professor Arianna Qianru James leading a pre-film seminar, and a cult classic screening of The Doom Generation.
  • The Brattle Theatre kicks off the weekend with Flashdance for the Friday Film Matinee, and then experiments with a couple of Ultimate Double Features, in which they show a film where characters go to the movies, pausing it so that the audience can watch film with in a film. Vivre Sa Vie with The Passion of Joan of Arc embedded plays Friday (and as a conventional double feature Saturday); Donnie Darko shows with The Evil Dead on 35mm film in the middle on Saturday (and as a normal twin-bill on Sunday). There's also a standard double feature of The Last Picture Show & Red River on Sunday (I wonder whether it was Columbia or United Artists who said no).

    They also show the new restoration of Hard Boiled on Friday & Saturday, and then on Monday they begin to flash back to some the first films that the Brattle Film Foundation showed upon taking the theater in 2001: The Mystery of Picasso (Monday/Tuesday), The Gleaners and I (Monday Tuesday), a 35mm print of The Seventh Seal (Tuesday/Wednesday), Ugetso on 35mm Tuesday, a double feature of Crime Wave (35mm) & Devil in a Blue Dress on Wednesday, and Daughters of the Dust on Thursday.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has music documentary Billy Idol Should Be Dead on Sunday, My Neighbor Totoro for the first of a month of Studio Ghibli Retro Replays on Tuesday, and Akira Kurosawa's The HIdden Fortress on Wednesday.
  • The free member screening at The Seaport Alamo on Friday is Longlegs. Interview with the Vampire plays Saturday & Sunday matinees. There's also a free member screening of Sweet Charity on Thursday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive wraps the Antonion/Bertolucci/Olmi series with The Fiancés and Il Poto on Friday and The Sheltering Sky on Saturday. After that, the Kubrick series continues with the restored/uncensored version of Spartacus on Sunday and a 35mm print of Dr. Strangelove on Monday. They also have a special presentation of Gardner Film Study Center Fellow Ali Cherri's The Dam with the filmmaker present on Wednesday; admission is free but there are no advance tickets.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts continues to show Oscar-nominated films and those they could have reasonably expected to be nominated. Bugonia plays Friday night, Die My Love on Saturday afternoon, No Other Choice Sunday afternoon, and Marty Supreme on Thursday evening.
  • The Boston Baltic Film Festival has a pretty packed schedule in the Bright Screening Room of ArtsEmerson's Paramount Theater this weekend: Frank (Estonia) onFriday; To Be Continued Teenhood (Latvia), Rolling Papers (Latvia), Fresh, Blood, Even a Heart (Latvia), and Renovation (LIthuania) on Saturday; Tasty (Lithuania), Borderline (LIthuania), Aurora (Estonia), and Red Code Blue (Latvia) on Saturday. Almost all of them have filmmakers in town for Q&A, with To Be Continued Teenhood and another dozen-plus movies available to stream starting on Monday.
  • The Museum of Science celebrates Black History Month with Sinners on the Omni dome Friday and Soul there on Saturday; tickets are already on sale for weekend shows of The Bride! over the next couple weeks with Project Hail Mary on tap starting the 20th.
  • The Regent Theatre has Nepali drama Harsha on Friday and music doc Billy Preston: That's the Way God Planned It on Thursday, the latter featuring Leon Beal doing a live set of Preston's music before the film.
  • Movies at MIT is apparently getting a late start this semester, with Die Welle showing Friday night.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday to Sunday and Wednesday/Thursday with Midwinter Break and the Oscar shorts programs. There are free screenings of Nine Queens Saturday morning, documentary The Public Library on Tuesday, and "The (M) Factor 2: Before the Pause" on Wednesday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens the Oscar Live-action shorts and EPiC, continuing Pillion, Midwinter Break, GOAT, Father Mother Sister Brother, Marty Supreme, and *Hamnet. The Six Triple Eight plays Saturday, IFFBoston alum Come See Me in the Good Light plays Tuesday followed by a remote Q&A with director Ryan White, Rebel with a Clause returns on Wednesday, and there's a "Producers' Circle" screening of The Last Yztari on Thursday.

    Cinema Salem has all of the Oscar Shorts, Scream 7, and "Wuthering Heights" from Friday to Monday. Deep Cover is the Friday Night Light show, Misery encores on Saturday afternoon, there's a (rescheduled?) Whodunnit Watch Party Sunday evening, and the original King Kong for the Wednesday Classic (with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall).

    If you can make it out to Woburn, an English dub of Czech animated film Proud Princess is playing there. The Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers is apparently the only place to see Undercard, featuring Wanda Sykes as the getting-clear former fighter mentoring her son, despite having its trailer play a lot downtown for the past few weeks.
Oh dang, I'm traveling for vacation on Thursday, so that means I'd better catch the Oscar shorts right quick! I'll also try to fit Pegasus 3 and possibly The President's Cake in, though that's a real hit taken on a lot of good rep. Follow along at my Letterboxd page!

Lunar New Year: Night King

Lunar New Years celebrations continue at the Causeway Street AMC, although I don't know that The King's Warden is a LNY release in South Korea if they even celebrate the holiday, and this doesn't include Vietnamese film A Gift from Heaven. All of this is continuing into the next weekend, both because the crowds have been pretty good and I suspect to recover some of the ticket sales lost during the snow.

It was a pretty good crowd for a Cantonese-language film on a Wednesday night, and though I liked rather than loved it, I'm also tempted to bump my opinion up a bit because there were folks behind me laughing in moments when I wasn't even entirely aware that jokes were being told. Maybe a lot of these jokes just land better in Cantonese, or call upon context that I, as a guy who just goes to movies and visited the place once, mostly hitting the touristy stuff, just don't have.

Afterward, I did chuckle a bit at a post on Bluesky talking about how part of what's nice is that it mostly keeps the metaphor for Hong Kong as subtext, because it seems like every movie that comes out of the Special Administrative Region is seen as a metaphor for it and its history/relationship to the larger China. I can sort of see it in this case, and I suspect that it's true for a lot of movies - if your movie is not going to be very HK-specific, there are literally over a billion incentives to cast mainland actors and shoot in Putonghua Mandarin to the north - but I also kind of imagine filmmaker Jack Ng sighing, saying he was just trying to tell a funny story.


Night King (夜王)

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 25 February 2026 in AMC Causeway Street #4 (first-run, laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available)

I learned about the Hong Kong Lunar Year Comedy as a genre - that is, a broad, mostly family-friendly farce that often ends with the cast breaking the fourth wall to wish the audience a happy new year - just about as it was more or less going extinct. Now, it seems, the Hong Kong film industry has contracted enough that a movie like Night King - pretty entertaining but not quite that sort of thing - gets that slot. And I didn't think it at the time, but it's kind of ironic that the movie spends a fair amount of time talking about the end of an era and how the next generation wants kind-of-similar entertainment.

East Tsim Sha Tsui was the center of Hong Kong nightlife in the 1980s and 1990s, but now the clubs have dispersed around Hong Kong, and one of its longest-standing managers, Foon Kwan (Dayo Wong Chi-Wah) is running the last outpost in East TST, the EJ Entertainment hostess club, aided by assistant "Turf" (Alan Yeung Wai-Lun) and two "mama-sans", Mimi (Fish Liew) and Coco (Louise Wong Dan-Ni). They're short-staffed as the film starts, because their freelance girls have been poached by "Madame V" Koo (Sammi Cheng Sau-Man), who manages the clubs run by the Muses company… And who divorced Foon ten years ago. When EJ's owner dies, his widow sells to Muses, putting Madame V in charge and ready to replace most of Foon's girls with low-paid foreign/Mainland ringers. The thing is, she doesn't realize just how much her boss's son "Prince Fung" (Lo Chun-Yip) hates her, and has rigged the sale to bankrupt her and EJ.

This is hardly the first movie that sort of flips the script such that the fun-loving older couple fall (back) in love while trying to save their neighborhood club from the young businessmen, but it does feel kind of oddly re-aligned, especially since the narration from the start implies that saving EJ will still be kind of a last gasp, and it actually feels like it could be set pre-2020, in that there's no talk of Covid hurting this sort of social club or shots of phone or cars that might fix a more specific moment in time (the Asian Financial Crisis is mentioned, maybe as something more recent than it is today). It's not really important, I suppose, though as an outsider I have a bit of trouble getting a grip on the changes the city/district/business is going through: It's a Hong Kong (and Macau) devoid of westerners, though there's talk of people leaving for America, an influx of pretty Mainland girls who don't speak Cantonese (and who are called "foreigners"), and hints that Vietnam may become southeast Asia's new hot spot. It's a bit odd, to me, since recent Hong Kong movies have often been specific enough about the time and place they're grounded in to give even folks like me a sense of the identity characters are trying to hold on to.

It doesn't really matter, much, although it might make the run at the end when Foon, V, and company are trying to outwit Fung a bit more fun, as well as help flesh the girls out more. They're a lively group but kind of under-baked, a bunch of pretty faces with reduplicative names and comic flaws tossed out too quickly to attach them to names and faces or have them become recurring jokes. It would be kind of nice to nail down just how prostitution-adjacent these jobs are, too, considering that the last act has Coco and Mimi catching customers' eyes and how they seem to love Foon despite his beating them early on. The gags about running this sort of club are generally pretty good, at least, with Yeung Wai-Lun easily walking off with every scene he's in.

The heart of the film, however, is Dayo Wong and Sammi Cheng, who spark from the first time we see them cross paths even though we can easily imagine what led to them divorcing ten years earlier even if the filmmakers never explicitly tell us. They contrive three or four different reasons to throw these characters together and we're happy with all of them, because there's a fondness and history between them that sharpens and softens their rivalry as need be, and all the beats hit right. Dayo Wong has carved himself a nice niche as this sort of well-intentioned but kind of hapless guy, while Sammi Cheng is a superstar who excels as women who shine bright despite their foibles.

They're so good together here that it can throw off the rest of the movie; it's kind of hard to see Foon & V flirting and then have to believe that Mimi in Foon's bed is more than just a casual hookup, even though Fish Liew does her part. The movie winds up having to conclude a lot more business than reuniting Foon and V, and nothing else is quite as satisfying as that part.