Friday, December 19, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 19 December 2025 - 24 December 2024

Kind of surprised there are four wide releases when one's a juggernaut!
  • That juggernaut is James Cameron's latest sci-fi spectacle Avatar: Fire and Ash, which sees Jake Sully and his Navi family exploring a new region of Pandora and encountering a more hostile tribe, and also discovering secrets that may put humanity and the local people on even more of a collision course. It's on all the deluxe screens, playing The Capitol Theatre (including RealD 3D), Fresh Pond (including 3D), The Museum of Science (Omnimax Friday/Saturday), Jordan's Furniture (Imax & open all week), West Newton, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 3D & Dolby Cinema 2D/3D & RealD 3D), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Landmark Kendall Square (including RealD 3D), the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay (including Imax 3D & Dolby Cinema 2D/3D & RealD 3D), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser 3D & Dolby Cinema 2D/3D & RealD 3D), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill (including RealD 3D). Supposedly it's also being released with some scenes projected at 48fps, although none of the local theaters are indicating "HFR" or "3D+".

    The Housemaid, meanwhile, features Sydney Sweeney as the title character, hired by a frazzled mother played by Amanda Seyfried, although there's almost certainly more going on than meets the eye. It's at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, Boston Common (including XL), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, Arsenal Yards, and Chestnut Hill.

    A possible big #2 this week is The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, a new CGI adventure with the goofy sponge joining a pirate crew who have other plans for him, because that thing has been going strong for decades. It's at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, West Newton, Boston Common (including XL & RealD 3D), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay (including RealD 3D), Assembly Row (including RealD 3D), Arsenal Yards, and Chestnut Hill. There's more animation in musical Bible story David at Fresh Pond, West Newton, Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards.

    Christmas shows include the CGI Grinch at Boston Common Saturday/Monday/Tuesday; Elf at Boston Common Saturday/Wednesday and the Seaport Saturday (movie party)/Sunday/Monday; National Lampoons Christmas Vacation at the Seaport Sunday (movie party)/Monday; Christina Aguilera: Christmas in Paris at Boston Common Sunday; The Polar Express at Boston Common Sunday (RealD 3D)/Tuesday (flat); Love Actually at Boston Common Monday. There's a mystery horror-movie preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, Assembly Row Monday.
  • After last week's preview, The Coolidge Corner Theatre opens The Librarians, which follows a group from Texas who are on the front lines of book-banning battles.

    The Coolidge still has a few 70mm screenings of the unified Kill Bill through Sunday. Their Planet Hollywood Holidays midnight continue with Die Hard on Friday and Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle on Saturday. Saturday & Sunday mornings feature kids' shows of The Muppet Christmas Carol. Sunday has a Panorama screening of Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire, with director Oren Rudavsky and Elie Wiesel Center Associate Director Dr. Ingrid Andersson on hand with a Q&A. Monday's Big Screen Classic is White Christmas.
  • Malayalam-language action-comedy Bha Bha Ba opens at Apple Fresh Pond . Hindi blockbuster Dhurandhar continues at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, and Causeway Street.

    Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution continues at Boston Common and Assembly Row.
  • The Brattle Theatre chosen When Harry Met Sally as the Friday Film Matinee in tribute to Rob Reiner. There will probably be a larger one for Reiner in the new year, but they spend the next week celebrating Robert Redford with That Natural (Friday/Saturday), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid & The Sting (Saturday), All the President's Men (35mm Sunday), The Candidate (35mm) & The Hot Rock on Sunday, Jeremiah Johnson & The Electric Horseman (35mm) Monday, Oridnary People & Downhill Racer (35mm) Tuesday. They're closed so the staff can finish their holiday shopping on Wednesday.
  • The Somerville Theatre picks up The Secret Agent.
  • The Seaport Alamo is calling Monday's show of The Long Kiss Goodnight queer film theory rather than Christmas for some reason. They've also got Batman Returns and Eyes WIde Shut Tuesday and matinees of It's a Wonderful Life Tuesday & Wednesday.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Monday with Dust Bunny, Sentimental Value (no show Wednesday), and Hamnet. They also have free screenings of short "Star in the Night" Saturday to Wednesday mornings (free popcorn with toy/canned good donation) and a free screening of documentary featurette "The Nude" with director Alvin Case and model Natalia Carbullido on hand for a Q&A Sunday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Avatar 3, SpongeBob, The Secret Agent, David, holding over Hamnet, Wake Up Dead Man, Zootopia 2, Wicked: For Good, and Nuremberg.

    Cinema Salem adds Sentimental Value to Ella McCay, Zootopia 2, Wicked: For Good, and Five Nights at Freddy's 2 from Friday to Monday. They also host three films from the Indie Chinese Film Festival which was scheduled to play New York last month but which was cancelled under pressure from the Chinese government - Zhu Rikun's documentaries No Desire to Hide and "The Questioning" and Liu Yonghong's Tangle - on Sunday afternoon, with Zhu (who also spearheaded the festival) on hand for a Q&A. The Wednesday classic is It's a Wonderful Life.
Man, I've got the rest of the year off (though in part for disruptive doctors' appointments), and it's like the least amount of interesting film programs you can find! I'll do some catch-up, check out Avatar 3 and The Housemaid, and hopefully squeeze in some Redford.

(Follow my my Letterboxd page for what I do get to)

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

While You Can: Scarlet and Dust Bunny

I'm a bad "the guy you know who sees everything and recommends the good stuff online" these days, but it's especially acute with these two movies that I quite liked and which I knew were going to be short-timers. They're fun and deserve the biggest screens you can see them on, and they've got maybe a day or so of that left, as both seem to have got these releases to fill screens before the blockbusters arrive on the 19th.

Scarlet might be back on Imax screens come 6 February, depending where you live; none of the other things being released that day seem likely to bump Send Help and, at least in the Boston area, big anime releases tend to get the big screen, and this release may give Sony Pictures Classics more reason to open it wide: The 12-18 November run is an Oscar qualifying release, but while LA and NYC have traditionally been enough for that, this getting Imax screens in ten cities. There doesn't seem to be an animated feature shortlist, but of the 35 qualified features there are six big-studio ones (The Bad Guys 2, Dog Man, Elio, KPop Demon Hunters, Zootopia 2), two big animes (Chainsaw Man, Demon Slayer), and a few wild cards (this, Arco, Fixed, The Legend of Hei 2, Night of the Zoopocalypse). I don't know how many Academy members/voters there are in the Boston area, or the other places it's released, but it could be the difference between being 6th in the voting and 5th, and thus being able to be advertised as an Academy Award Nominee when it gets its regular release.

I must admit, the idea that Sony has rented out the biggest screen at Assembly Row for a week on the off chance that Frederick Wiseman decides to watch some anime tickles me. It should be there tomorrow (Wednesday), then bumped to a regular laser screen on Thursday, then so long for a month and a half.

Dust Bunny, on the other hand, is more a "grab some screens during a window between big weekends and hope you get lucky" play. It's got a 2024 copyright date on the end, so it's possible Lionsgate/Roadside Attractions weren't really sure what to do with it for a year or so, and I kind of get that. It's a weird one that probably mostly appeals to folks who know who writer/director Bryan Fuller is, and maybe folks figure that television/streaming is its natural home because that's where he's done almost all of his work. It'll look really cramped there, though - it's got a super-wide 3.00:1 aspect ratio and a lot of detail - and I'd kind of love to see if it would hit with a bigger crowd, or a different one. It was kind of hardcore nerds.

It's playing Boston Common & the Seaport on Wednesday, just matinees at the Common on Thursday, and after that, you have to head to the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, where it's holding spots until the Christmas releases.

I wonder how both will play with younger viewers, too - Scarlet is PG-13 and Dust Bunny is R, both for violence, and I kind of wonder if that would be reversed if Scarlet used guns and Dust Bunny used knives. They both feel like things that could drop tween/teen jaws.


Hateshinaki Sukâretto (Scarlet)

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 12 December 2025 in AMC Assembly Row #1 (limited release, Imax Laser)
Where to stream it (when available)

Scarlet may be writer/director Mamoru Hosoda's best since The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, and it's not like the other films he's made since haven't been some of the best anime coming out of Japan. It's certainly his most ambitious. Those ambitions aren't subtle, but they're earnest, and he's willing to let them wind up a frayed mess by the finale where some might engineer a more pat resolution. Heck, it feels like he can see the audience watching for the moment when he cheats and dances around it.

Scarlet (voice of Mana Ashida) is a princess in 16th Century Denmark, beloved of the people and her father King Amleth (voice of Masachika Ichimura), a pacifist who favors negotiation with his neighbors rather than competition. But, well, something is rotten in the State of Denmark, and Amleth's brother Claudius (voice of Koji Yakusho) usurps the throne and marries Queen Gertrude (voice of Yuki Saito), and while Scarlet aims to take revenge, he strikes first, poisoning her. She wakes up in The Otherworld, a purgatorial afterlife out of time, and when she finds out Claudius is there as well, sets out to finally end his existence. What she doesn't count on is falling in with Hiriji (voice of Masaki Okada), a paramedic from 21st Century Tokyo, who is kind-hearted and even treats the foes Scarlet fights along the way to confront Claudius in his castle near the gate to the next world.

Along the way, Scarlet is a frequently-dazzling piece of animation that mixes its traditional and digital pieces in smart ways: The cel-shaded CGI Otherworld looks kind of uncanny while the hand-drawn Denmark feels real, but not jarringly so; the two styles are just similar enough that one might not necessarily clock a difference in style versus tone, especially during a later visit to what may be the living world. There are more action beats than Hosoda usually goes with, with swordfighting that's exciting enough for one to notice there's quality choreography, and a fantastic dragon that explains its purpose with action rather than any exposition. It's more intentionally multi-ethnic than anime often is - it feels noteworthy that many of the nomads Scarlet and Hiriji encounter are Middle Eastern, both fitting the desert environment and perhaps a reference to how many laborers in Japan are Kurdish and other MENA refugees - and merges its influences well.

The action is intense, but there's also a fair amount of fun amid the intensity, with the Hamlet references playful ("get thee to a monastery!") and a bit more fun for those of us who have seen Hamnet a week earlier. That's kind of important because Hosoda is putting Scarlet and Hiriji through the ringer for a purpose: Hiriji's quiet decency does not quite seem naive compared to Scarlet's grim desire for revenge - he's aware that he comes from a more peaceful era - but it's a constant, non-judgmental reminder that Scarlet has fallen from the girl who truly believed in her father's ideals, and regaining them is hard; she's seen too much and committed to doing too much. We've seen her shed the lovely princess gown and put on armor like she'd decided that was her true self, and her glimpse of Hiriji's world is both inspiring and the cause of some despair - how can there be a place like that when so many suffer?

It's that confusion that makes her final confrontation with Claudius raw and stressful - she's been both laid low by Claudius and Gertrude's betrayal and hurt as she has crossed a barren wasteland, but has also seen the good examples of Amleth and Hiriji, and how they have had an effect on those she would see as enemies. She wants to do the right thing, but knows that any kindness on her part will be met with violence and cruelty by Claudius. One can feel Hosoda trying to find a resolution to this that is both hopeful but honest, and doesn't use the circling dragon as a heavenly deus ex machina that says everything will be put right, and he mostly manages it. It's tricky and messy, but then, one shouldn't be completely reassured that things will work out.

Here's hoping that Sony's gambit to get this in front of some Academy voters so they can market this as an Oscar Nominee in February works; it's a worthy film that deserves the boost.


Dust Bunny

* * * (out of four)
Seen 13 December 2025 in Alamo Seaport #1 (first-run, laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available) (Prime pre-order link)

Somewhere around the middle,Dust Bunny becomes rather a lot, piling more and more on but not necessarily paying things off to make room, writer/director Bryan Fuller maybe being a little too coy about the nature of his genre crossover and not quite having the time to service everything he's got in play without tipping his hand too much. But even when you can see the movie straining, Fuller is filling a Barry Sonnenfeld-shaped void at the movies that I hadn't quite realized was there, in a way that's very much his own. It's instantly recognizable for those who have seen his TV work, and makes you wonder why he hasn't done film before.

The story at least seems simple enough - eight-year-old Aurora (Sophie Sloan) is convinced there is a monster under her bed, and the disappearance of the parents who pooh-poohed the possibility doesn't exactly give the audience reason to suppose that the lint underneath coalescing into something is anything but what it looks like. A neighbor (Mads Mikkelsen) catches her attention, especially when she seems to see him slaying a dragon late at night in Chinatown. She offers him money to kill her monster, but the fact that she has seen his "monster-slaying" activities puts him in a bind, and the pair of them in danger.

That sequence with the neighbor and the dragon and everything around it is a delight, a merger of elaborate production design, whimsical choreography, and well-used visual effects that sets the stage for the film's heightened world and balances the different perspectives of Aurora and the unnamed neighbor without tipping its hand too much. It's full of movement that is fluid but also kind of unnatural. A thing one can't help but notice in this and other scenes at this end of the film is that Fuller doesn't have Mikkelsen or Sloan speak when their characters wouldn't, trusting their particular body language to say what needs to be said and allowing them to demonstrate and withhold in a way that feels natural. The action piece that balances the film on the other end is a different beast, chaotic and with a fair amount of talk to make things clear, but that's kind of right, in its way; the film is setting up and resolving mysteries through action, and each fits that purpose.

The rest of Dust Bunny, filled with contention between the central pair and those in their orbit, is an odd duck. It's the rare movie that gets an R rating for "some violence", and I wouldn't be surprised if the studio spent the last year trying to squeeze it into a PG-13 - I suspect it's the use of guns rather than fantasy weapons that keeps that from happening - and because it feels like the sort of thing that made tweens go for Tim Burton 40 years ago, an ornate darkness with corners to explore where every character worth the audience's affection has innocent and cynical sides in conflict (I'd have little trouble recommending it to my 14/15-year-old nieces). It can't quite square that circle, and you can kind of feel Fuller circling around something about violence being difficult to escape once it's unleashed or monsters inside everyone but not quite landing, seemingly struggling to turn his script into a story that does more than look cool and make you grin at its eccentricity.

That eccentricity is a ball, though, with the visual team going full-on maximal in the extremely wide screen frame - it is very much from the imagination of the creator of Pushing Daisies and Wonderfalls - and the combination of puppetry and digital animation for the titular monster is nifty: It must, at various times be unnerving both believable and unbelievable in turn, and mostly manages that. One can feel Mads Mikkelsen getting into a groove as the movie goes on, his weathered cool a perfect sort of contrast with Sophie Sloan's cherubic agitation. David Dastmalchian shows up to steal a bunch of scenes in the end, and Sheila Atim does fairly nice work as someone who is often a catalyst but seems real enough that she's not just there to make things happen. Sigourney Weaver gets a tough draw, her shadowy but stylish operator is threatening but not quite charismatic.

It's a mess, but the visuals and performances and fun soundtrack tend to be elaborate and charming without ever losing track of how it's a kid's scary story set in a John Wick-like world. I had a blast with it, even when it was treading water; it's all the colorful fantasy invention of a Fuller TV show compacted down to about 100 minutes, and I hope Fuller gets to do more like it on the big screen.

Friday, December 12, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 12 December 2025 - 18 December 2024

It kind of feels like a quieter week than is traditional for mid-December, but maybe the placement of Thanksgiving and Christmas this year has studios feeling like there's not a slot in between.
  • Ella McCay is the new film from James L. Brooks, starring Emma Mackey (not confusing at all!) as a young woman suddenly elevated to governor. The nifty cast includes Jamie Lee Curtis and Woody Harrelson as her parents. It's at Fresh Pond, CinemaSalem, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row (including Dolby Cinema).

    The second film this year directed by Joe Carnahan (with another hitting Netflix in January) is Not Without Hope, with four gym-bro friends (Zachary Levi, Quentin Plair, Terrence Terrell, Marshall Cook) lost at sea when their sport-fishing boat capsizes and Josh Duhamel as the Coast Guard captain leading the rescue. It plays Boston Common and Causeway Street.

    Dust Bunny is writer/director Bryan Fuller's first foray into cinemas - surprising, because he's done some of the most visually impressive TV out there - and has an eight-year-old girl recruiting her neighbor (Mads Mikkelsen) to help fight the monster under her bed. It's at the Lexington Venue, Boston Common, and the Seaport.

    The new film from Paolo Sorrentino, La Grazia, opens at Boston Common; it stars Toni Servillo as a president in his last months in office confronting matters of life and death - his late wife's infidelity, legislation about euthanasia, and potentially pardoning murderers.

    Can't say Mike P. Nelson is a particularly notable auteur for the Silent Night, Deadly Night remake opening at Boston Common and South Bay, but there should be plenty of gore.

    The Shining gets an Imax release at Boston Common, South Bay, I guess to celebrate the winter solstice. Rolling Stones at the Max also plays the Imax screens at Jordan's Furniture and Boston Common through Sunday. One Battle After Another also returns to Boston Common's Imax screen.

    The Ron Howard/Jim Carrey How the Grinch Stole Christmas has a 25th Anniversary run at Fresh Pond, West Newton, Boston Common, the Seaport, and South Bay. One-off Christmas screenings include the Illumination Grinch at Boston Common (Friday); Love Actually at the Seaport (Friday) and Boston Common (Monday); The Polar Express at Jordan's (Imax Friday/Saturday/Sunday) and Boston Common (RealD 3D Sunday/2D Tuesday); Elf at Boston Common (Saturday/Wednesday), Kendall Square (Tuesday), and the Seaport (Movie Party Wednesday); plus National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation at the Seaport (movie party Sunday) and Boston Common (Thursday).

    An encore of The Cure: The Show of a Lost World plays Sunday at Boston Common and Kendall Square; REBECCA: Becky G plays Boston Common Saturday afternoon. Christina Aguilera: Christmas in Paris plays Boston Common Sunday. Sense and Sensibility has 30th Anniversary shows on Sunday/Tuesday/Wednesday at Boston Common.

    Song Sung Blue has Dolby Cinema early access screenings Sunday at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row; David also previews Sunday at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row; No Other Choice has an early show at Boston Common (Imax Laser) on Monday. There are secret preview screenings at Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row Monday night; the three chains are probably showing the same thing (PG-13, 120-140 minutes) but maybe not! There's also early access "fan event" screenings of The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants on Wednesday at Boston Common (RealD 3D), South Bay (RealD 3D), Assembly Row (RealD 3D), and Chestnut Hill.
  • The Secret Agent, with Wagner Moura as a man who suddenly finds himself a target of Brazil's military government in 1977, opens at The Coolidge Corner Theatre and Boston Common. The Coolidge has introductions and Q&A from filmmaker Kleber Mendonça Filho for the Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon shows, although those look to already be sold out (maybe they'll release tickets, or maybe you just don't want to take the C line out there to be disappointed).

    They also hold over their 70mm print of Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair. Planet Hollywood midnights are Striptease (Demi More) on 35mm Friday and Pumping Iron (Arnold Schwarzeneggar) on Saturday. Saturday afternoon also has a (sold-out) Panorama presentation of documentary The Librarians with director Kim A. Snyder and others on-hand. The Goethe-Institut German film on Sunday morning is Hysteria, and there's a "Rewind!" screening of The Santa Clause on Thursday.
  • This week's Netflix awards run at Landmark Kendall Square is Goodbye June, with Kate Winslet directing her son Joe Anders's script and co-starring as one of several siblings saying farewell to their terminally ill mother (Helen Mirren). It looks like the Netflix four-pack option is expired (although they will be playing five Netflix movies this weekend).
  • Scarlet, the new anime film from Mamoru Hosoda, opens on the Imax Laser screen at Assembly Row but apparently nowhere else in the area, a month and a half before its main American release. Visually, it's a big departure from his previous stories and has a princess waking up in limbo and meeting a man from the modern age. There's also a special "Crunchyroll Anime Nights Sneak Peak" Monday night at Boston Common, the Seaport, and Assembly Row, featuring episodes of series that will debut on the service in January. Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution continues at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Apple Fresh Pond opens Telugu-langauge fantasy adventure Akhanda 2 - Thaandavam and Telugu-language jungle adventure Mowgli (also at Causeway Street). Telugu-language drama Naa Telugodu opens at Causeway Street. Hindi-language comedy Kis Kis Ko Pyaar Karoon 2, about a man with three wives of different religions planning a fourth wedding, opens at Boston Common, South Bay. There's also a re-release of Sholay, considered by many to be the greatest Bollywood film ever made, in its "Final Cut" at Fresh Pond, who also celebrate Rajinikanth's birthday with Tamil-language Padayappa (through Sunday).

    Held over is Hindi-language crime epic Dhurandhar at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, and Causeway Street. Gujari-language family drama Laalo: Krishna Sada Sahaayate plays Saturday & Sunday at Fresh Pond and Marathi-language political drama Punha Shivajiraje Bhosle plays Fresh Pond Sunday.
  • The Brattle Theatre has their annual screenings of It's a Wonderful Life on 35mm this weekend, and as usual they are selling out quickly. That also means they have their annual "Alt X-Mas" late shows, with Do Not Open Till Christmas Friday (introduced by Justin La Liberty with a Vinegar Syndrome pop-up shop), Female Trouble on Saturday, The City of Lost Children on Sunday, and Eyes Wide Shut on Monday.

    On Tuesday, they team with neighbor Lovestruck Books to celebrate Jane Austen's 250th with a double feature of the 2005 Pride & Prejudice and the 2020 Emma.. On Wednesday they welcome Whit Stillman to host his debut film Metropolitan, and then on Thursday they begin their Robert Redford tribute with a double feature of All the President's Men (35mm) & Three Days of the Condor.
  • The Capitol Theatre has a secret "Celluloid Confidential" screening on 16mm film Tuesday (the 16th) (it sure looks like Ten Little Indians, FWIW).
  • The Seaport Alamo has a bit of unconventional Christmas programming with Carol Tuesday evening.
  • The Regent Theatre has a "First Descents" pairing of two outdoor films focused on Trango and Lhotse on Thursday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive continues with Columbia Rarities, with My Sister Eileen on Friday evening, Together Again later that night, Women's Prison at 7pm Saturday and Pickup at 9, a pairing of short features Vanity Street & Three Wise Girls Sunday afternoon, and None Shall Escape Sunday evening, most on 35mm film. Saturday afternoon is a student-programmed double feature of Rebel Without a Cause (35mm) and High School (16mm), and then they complete the fall calendar with a rescheduled screening of Mikio Naruse's Every-Night Dreams, with Robert Humphreville accompanying on the piano.
  • The Museum of Science has Wicked: For Good on Friday and Saturday through next week, with Avatar 3 on the giant screen next weekend.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Monday with Dust Bunny, Sentimental Value, and Hamnet. They also have their annual free screenings of short "Star in the Night" Saturday & Sunday morning (free popcorn with toy/canned good donation), a free screening of locally-shot indie Fear of Flying on Sunday, and a special screening of The Librarians Thursday (no guests, but the show at the Coolidge is sold out).

    The West Newton Cinema opens How the Grinch Stole Christmas and Sentimental Value, keeping Hamnet, Five Nights at Freddy's 2, Wake Up Dead Man, Zootopia 2, Wicked: For Good, and Nuremberg. A Face in the Crowd plays Thursday afternoon, and Drink and Be Merry that evening with director Adam Volerich there for a Q&A.

    Cinema Salem has Ella McCay, Zootopia 2, Wicked: For Good, and Five Nights at Freddy's 2 from Friday to Monday. The original Silent Night, Deadly Night is Friday's Night Light show, there's a shadow-casted Elf hosted by Miz Diamond Wigfall Saturday night, "VHXMas" on Sunday (a physical media market in the afternoon and a holiday horror movies screened off VHS in the evening), Anatomy of a Murder Sunday evening. Hitchcock's second take on The Man Who Knew Too Much (with James Stewart & Doris Day) is the Wednesday classic, with a Weirdo Wednesday show next door, and Crimson Peak plays Thursday.

    Eastern Western, a film about a Bosnina immigrant raising a son in the mountains of Montana, opens at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers.
Kind of under the weather, so I'm glad to have a chance to catch up with Kill Bill on the big film, and will likely hit Ella McKay, Not Without Hope, Dust Bunny, Goodbye June, and Scarlet. (Follow my my Letterboxd page for what I do get to)

Friday, December 05, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 5 December 2025 - 11 December 2024

Ah, the traditional first week of December, when theaters are mostly letting what opened for Thanksgiving ride and some oddities grab what screens open up!
  • The week's big opening is Five Nights at Freddy's 2, and is it just me not being up on what the kids like, or has this seemed to drop out of pop culture since the first film came out a couple years ago? More bloody possessed-robot shenanigans, I gather, at The Capitol Theatre, Fresh Pond, West Newton, CinemaSalem, 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.

    British drawing-room spoof Fackham Hall opens at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row; it's very much in the Naked Gun tradition of the individual jokes being about as clever as that title but delivering a chuckle roughly every twenty seconds.

    Fantasy romance 100 Nights of Hero, with a neat cast including Maika Monroe, Emma Corrin, Nicholas Galitzine, Richard E. Grant, Felicity Jones, and Charli XCX, plays Boston Common and the Seaport.

    A filmed version of the recent theatrical revival of Merrily We Roll Along starring Daniel Radcliffe, Jonathan Groff, and Lindsay Mendez plays Boston Common and Causeway Street.

    Hamnet expands from the Coolidge, Boston Common, Kendall Square, and Assembly Row to The Somerville Theatre, the Lexington Venue, West Newton, the Seaport, and Chestnut Hill.

    Christmas rep includes the CGI The Grinch at Boston Common (Friday); Love Actually at Boston Common (Friday/Monday/Tuesday); Elf at Boston Common (Saturday/Tuesday/Wednesday) and the Seaport (movie party Saturday); National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation at the Seaport (Saturday/movie party Tuesday), Boston Common (Sunday/Thursday), and Landmark Kendall Square on Tuesday; The Polar Express at Boston Common (RealD 3D Sunday/2D Tuesday); The Holiday at the Seaport (Sunday/Tuesday); and A Christmas Story at Arsenal Yards (Tuesday).

    Music documentary The Doors: When You're Strange plays Boston Common Saturday afternoon and REBECCA: Becky G plays Boston Common Wednesday evening. There are early access screenings of Park Chan-wook's No Other Choice at Boston Common (Imax Laser), South Bay (Imax Xenon), Assembly Row (Imax Laser) on Monday. Concert films this week are Monsta X: Connect X at Boston Common Sunday; Rolling Stones at the Max at Boston Common (Imax Laser) Wednesday/Thursday and Jordan's Furniture (Imax) Thursday (the start of a weekend run); and The Cure: The Show of a Lost World playing Thursday at Boston Common and Kendall Square. Wedding Crashers also plays Boston Common on Thursday.
  • Also opening kind of wide is Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair, which re-edits the two movies together with a little re-arrangement and a new animated bit. The Coolidge Corner Theatre has a 70mm print, but it also plays in lesser formats at Boston Common, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    December midnights at the Coolidge are "Planet Hollywood Holidays", featuring the four initial investors in the chain (Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis and Demi Moore); it kicks off with Commando on Friday and Demolition Man on Saturday. Earlier Saturday is the next "Cinema Masala" show, with Shah Rukh Khan and Aiswarya Rai in Devdas; director Bi Gan visits for a (sold-out) screening of Resurrection on Monday; Jeff Rapsis accompanies the Sound of Silents Show of Our Hospitality on Tuesday (there's also an Open Screen night that day); the Coolidge Award tributes to Ethan Hawke continue with First Reformed on Wednesday; and Satoshi Kon's Tokyo Godfathers is the Big Screen Classic on Thursday.
  • South Asian films opening this week include Hindi-language crime epic Dhurandhar at Apple Fresh Pond and Causeway Street, Gujari-language family drama Laalo: Krishna Sada Sahaayate at Fresh Pond, and Malayalam-language crime drama KalamKaval at Fresh Pond Hindi-language drama Tere Ishk Mein continues at Fresh Pond Friday & Saturday. Telugu-language Andhra King Taluka plays Fresh Pond early Friday & Sunday.

    The new anime release is Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution, which slots between the second and upcoming third season; subbed & dubbed at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row. Chainsaw Man - The Movie: Reze Arc is still at Boston Common.

    Hong Kong thriller Under Current plays Causeway Street, with Alan Mak of the Infernal Affairs and Overheard series directing Aaron Kwok, Simon Yam, and Francis Ng as three people involved in the investigation of a possibly-corrupt charity.

    Vietnamese action movie Hijacked opens at South Bay (although the Friday shows are apparently sold out/held back).
  • The Friday Film Matinee at The Brattle Theatre is the first of three inspired by "Wonder" at the ART, with Parenthood playing on 35mm film Friday afternoon, Little Miss Sunshine at noon Saturday, and Eighth Grade at noon Saturday.

    Much of the week there is built around a restored re-release of Yi Yi ("A One and a Two"), the final film of Taiwanese director Edward Yang which follows a Taipei family over the course of a year.

    Friday and Saturday night also include "Don Hertzfeldt's Animation Mixtape", an 85-minute program curated by Hertzfeldt which includes new and classic works; he contributes an introduction and closing credits. There's a "Best of RPM Fest show Sunday afternoon (RPM Fest also has three free short film programs at Goethe-Institut on Saturday), two screenings of The Nightmare Before Christmas on Monday (lights on at 6:30 for crafting, down at 8:30), a free screening of documentary short "Cambridge Mosaic" with post-film reception on Wednesday, and a double feature of both the 1955 and 1989 editions of We're No Angels on Thursday, with Cinématographe’s Justin La Liberty introducing the second (which his label recently released on disc).
  • The Seaport Alamo shows TikTok-derived romantic comedy Two Sleepy People, about two co-workers who marry every night but wake up strangers the next morning, on Friday night. They also bring Highest 2 Lowest back Saturday night, show Risky Business Saturday & Monday and Saturday Night Fever Tuesday & Wednesday for "Josh Safdie Selects", plus Kiss Kiss Bang Bang as part of Shane Black Christmas on Monday.
  • Wicked Queer has a quick "Fall Focus" series at the The Museum of Fine Arts, since you can't expect things to have long runs on the festival circuit these days and need to check back in 6 months later: Cactus Pears Friday night, Four Mothers on Saturday, and Jimpa on Sunday.
  • The Regent Theatre has an encore of You Got Gold: A Celebration of John Prine on Saturday, documentary Girl Climber on Tuesday, and winter collection "Mountains on Stage" on Thursday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive has Columbia rarity None Shall Escape, a film speculating on how the Nazis should be punished made while World War II was still going on in 1944. There are also free screenings of student films Friday afternoon and evening
  • Movies at MIT has Alien in 26-100 on Friday & Saturday; remember to give them a head's up if you're not part of the MIT community. Also on campus is the next show in the MIT Museum's "Time Travel on Screen" program, Rian Johnson's Looper, playing with short film "Steeplechase" on Friday.
  • The Museum of Science has Wicked: For Good on Fridays and Saturdays through next week, with Avatar 3 taking over after that. There's also a Spanish-language show of "Superhuman Body" on Saturday.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Monday with Hamnet and Wicked. "Exhibition on Screen" documentary Caravaggio plays Sunday and Thursday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Hamnet (including a "Behind the Screen" show on Sunday), Five Nights at Freddy's 2, keeping Wake Up Dead Man, Zootopia 2, Wicked: For Good, and Nuremberg. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind plays Thursday.

    Cinema Salem has Zootopia 2, Wake Up Dead Man, Wicked: For Good, and Five Nights at Freddy's 2 from Friday to Monday. Spooky Picture Show presents Black Christmas '74 on Saturday, and the Wednesday Classic is Anatomy of a Murder, with Weirdo Wednesday on another screen.
Most of what I want to see this weekend is really long - Yi Yi is almost three hours, Devdas a hair over, Dhurandhar three and a half, and Kill Bill an hour longer than that! It does not leave a lot of time to fit Under Current, 100 Nights of Hero, and the Hertzfeldt mixtape in, let alone getting to South Bay for the Vietnamese action!

(Follow my my Letterboxd page for what I do get to)

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 26 November 2025 - 4 December 2024

Big wave of movies for Thanksgiving!
  • Zootopia 2, which appears to add a reptilian underclass below the predator and prey animals of the first, opens at The Capitol Theatre, Fresh Pond, Jordan's Furniture (Imax 2D), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema 2D & RealD 3D & Spanish dubs), 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, and Chestnut Hill.

    Also opening wide is Eternity, a riff on Defending Your Life with Elizabeth Olsen as a woman who died soon after her second husband (Miles Teller), only to be forced to choose between him and her first husband (Callum Turner) in terms of her companion until the heat death of the universe. It plays at the Somerville, the Coolidge, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards.

    There's also Hamnet, the new film from Chloe Zhao, starring Jessie Buckley as Agnes Shakespeare and Paul Mescal as Will in a story about how their son dying young inspired Hamlet. It's at the Coolidge, Boston Common, Kendall Square, and Assembly Row, expanding wider next week.

    The Thing with Feathers opens Thursday at Boston Common, with Benedict Cumberbatch as a widowed father whose grief manifests itself in an odd way.

    National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation plays Arsenal Yards Friday to Sunday (and the Seaport on Sunday). There's a mystery preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday. Fantasy romance 100 Nights of Hero has a preview at Boston Common on Tuesday, and there's one for drawing-room spoof Fackham Hall at Boston Common on Wednesday. K-pop concert/doc Monsta X: Connect X plays Boston Common on Wednesday, while The Doors: When You're Strange plays there on Thursday. Wedding Crashers also plays Boston Common on Thursday.
  • Lots of folks pick up this week's Netflix picture, Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery, which has a somewhat different look as Daniel Craig returns with Benoit Blanc with a new ensemble cast of suspects around him as he tries to solve a locked-room mystery. It's at Landmark Kendall Square (part of their Netflix package), the Coolidge, Fresh Pond, West Newton, CinemaSalem (starting Friday), and the Seaport.

    The Tuesday Retro Replay series for December kicks off with Gremlins, one of three "holiday essentials".
  • In addition to the new releases - including a "Shakespeare re-imagined" show of Hamnet on Sunday with a panel discussion - The Coolidge Corner Theatre continues to celebrate Ethan Hawke with Training Day on Wednesday, Boyhood on Sunday afternoon, sold-out presentations of Blue Moon and an award ceremony Wednesday the 3rd (no shows on the other 5 screens that day).

    Midnights this weekend wrap up the M. Night Shyamalan with The Visit on Friday and Trap on Saturday. There are kids' matinees of Where the Wild Things Are on Saturday & Sunday, a Big Screen Classics show of Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World on Monday, a sold-out screening of Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie with Q&A, Nimona with author ND Stevenson on Thursday the 4th, with Carol as the cult classic that night.
  • Apple Fresh Pond opens Telugu-language Andhra King Taluka, whose description reads like an obsessed-fan thriller but which may not be quite so intense, on Wednesday. Hindi-language thriller Tere Ishk Mein opens there (plus Causeway Street and South Bay) Friday, while Telugu-language action comedy Revolver Rita opens at Causeway Street on Friday (with a preview late Thursday), while Hindi-language drama Gustaakh Ishq opens at Boston Common. Telugu-language fantasy adventure Akhanda 2 - Thaandavam opens at Fresh Pond next Thursday the 4th.

    There's an early-access event for Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution at Boston Common (Imax Laser), Assembly Row (Imax Laser) on Wednesday. Chainsaw Man - The Movie: Reze Arc hangs on at Boston Common.
  • The Brattle Theatre has a big "Give Thanks for Chicago" series through the holiday weekend and beyond: The Blues Brothers (35mm) & Ferris Bueller's Day Off on Wednesday; Home Alone & Risky Business on Thursday; They Live & Josie and the Pussycats, both on 35mm, early Friday and Child's Play & Poltergeist III (35mm) later Friday; The Untouchables & The Fugitive, both on 35mm, on Saturday; Call Northside 777 early Sunday; About Last Night… (35mm) & Love Jones Sunday; Cooley High on Monday; Candyman '21 later on Monday; Go Fish on Tuesday; High Fidelity on Wednesday the 3rd; and Jupiter Ascending on 35mm later that night. There's also a Grrl Haus Cinema show on Thursday, focused on "Suspense, Horror, and Camp!"
  • The Seaport Alamo has a Greta Gerwig's Little Women Saturday afternoon, a Christmas Vacation movie party on Sunday, the director's cut of Brazil on Monday, Lethal Weapon on Tuesday, and Elf movie party on Wednesday, and a preview of No Other Choice with Park Chan-wook doing a live-streamed Q&A afterward later that night.
  • The Somerville Theatre is about to give the main room over to The Slutcracker, and also has a couple screenings of Hundreds of Beavers on Wednesday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive is mostly dark for the holiday, but continues their Gore Vidal series with matinees of Ben-Hur on Saturday (with an introduction by Leslie Morris) & Sunday and Myra Breckinridge on Monday.
  • The New England Aquarium shows Finding Nemo on the giant screen Saturday night.
  • The Regent Theatre has You Got Gold: A Celebration of John Prine on Wednesday the 3rd, with filmmaker Flora Prine (also John's widow) on hand for a Q&A.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts wraps its "Cozy Crime" series with 8 Women on Thursday the 4th.
  • The Museum of Science has Wicked: For Good on Fridays and Saturdays into December.
  • The Lexington Venue has its last show of Nuremberg on Wednesday, keeping Wicked and Jay Kelly. There's a second weekend of matinees for documentary The Nutcracker at Wethersfield on Saturday & Sunday mornings, and the theater is closed Monday & Tuesday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Wake Up Dead Man and Zootopia 2, continuing Rental Family, Sentimental Value, Wicked: For Good (double feature with the first on Friday), and Nuremberg. Smoke Signals plays Thanksgiving (Thursday), and there's a Producer's Circle rough cut presentation of documentary Nine a week later, on Thursday the 4th.

    Cinema Salem opens Zootopia 2 on Wednesday, with The Maltese Falcon for the Wednesday classic and a Weirdo Wednesday show on the other screens, and then has the Disney movie, Wake Up Dead Man, Wicked: For Good, and Rental Family from Friday to Monday. Friday's Night Light show is Society, and the Wednesday classic on the 3rd is The Spirit of St. Louis (with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall).

    The Liberty Tree Mall AMC in Danvers opens Aftershock: The Nicole Bell Story on Friday; which appears to be a TV miniseries cut into a feature film.
Almost (but not quite) tempted to forgo heading north for Thanksgiving to get more movie-seeing time in, since I'd like to see Zootopia, Wake Up Dead Man, Hamnet, Rental Family, and The Thing with Feathers among the new releases (and maybe one or two of the Indian ones), a fair chunk of the Chicago movies at the Brattle, and I am torn on Monday night between liking gender-bending stuff (Myra Breckinridge) and especially wanting to see Master and Commander again on the big screen since the 4K is just not coming back into stock fast enough.

(Follow my my Letterboxd page for what I do get to)

Friday, November 21, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 21 November 2025 - 25 November 2024

One of the all-time great bits of counterprogramming going on in theaters this weekend!
  • A year after breaking for intermission, Wicked: For Good, covering the second half of the play, hits most of the theaters and almost all the premium screens: It's at the Capitol, Fresh Pond (including 3D), the Museum of Science (Omnimax Friday/Saturday), Jordan's Furniture (Imax), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema 2D & XL 2D/3D & RealD 3D), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Landmark Kendall Square (including RealD 3D), the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), 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.

    For those who do not particularly care for nuanced takes on people previously presented as simple villains, there is Sisu: Road to Revenge, which moves the action to after World War II and has its relentless Finnish antihero (Jorma Tommila) looking to settle a score with the Soviet officer who killed his family (Stephen Lang). It is, supposedly, even more nuts than its satisfyingly violent predecessor. It plays Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Also opening is Rental Family, which stars Brendan Fraser as a North American actor working in Japan who is starting to see roles dry up and signs up with an agency that has people fill gaps in social situations. First challenge: Posing as the absent father of a little girl who does not know he is not her real dad. It's at the Coolidge, the Capitol, Fresh Pond, West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    There's also Rebuilding at Boston Common, starring Josh O'Connor as a farmer whose home has been erased by wildfires, bonding with others in similar situations, including his ex-wife and daughter. Writer/director Max Walker-Silverman also did the pretty darn good A Love Song.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre gets a 35mm print of Jay Kelly, Noah Baumbach's latest which stars George Clooney as a movie star on a European press tour with the manager who has been the greatest constant in his life (Adam Sandler) in tow. Interesting combination there, with Laura Dern in the mix as well. It's also at the Lexington Venue and Kendall Square (eligible for the Netflix discount package).

    The Coolidge's "M. Night after Midnight" series features Signs on Friday and Old on Saturday. The week's Coolidge Award Ethan Hawke film is Before Sunrise on Sunday afternoon; there's an encore of last month's Cinema Masala show of Diwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (it sold out!), and Tuesday features both a Noirvember show of The Big Heat with Alex Kittle leading discussion afterward and two presentations of It Was Just an Accident with famed Iranian director Jafar Pahani on hand (both currently listed as sold out).
  • Apple Fresh Pond opens Hindi war drama 120 Bahadur, Hindi comedy Mastiii 4. Malayalam-language film Eko plays Saturday afternoon (and appears to have a more substantial release at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers) while Telugu-language drama Vilayath Budha plays Sunday afternoon. Held over is Hindi-language romantic comedy De De Pyaar De 2.

    Chainsaw Man - The Movie: Reze Arc continues at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row.
  • The Brattle Theatre starts the weekend with a mystery title for the Friday Film matinee (a late 70s/early 80s obscurity from someone big in the 1970s, with the original release print kind of beat up).

    They also have two new releases playing through Tuesday: Peter Hujar's Day (35mm), the new film from Ira Sachs, with Ben Whishaw as the title character, a photographer describing his day to a friend played by Rebecca Hall. Also opening is The Ice Tower, a French film that blurs the line between reality and fantasy as a teenage runaway hides out on the set of an adaptation of The Snow Queen and is transfixed by its imperious star. Clara Pacini and Marion Cotillard star.

    There are also a couple one-offs: Explanation for Everything, playing Sunday afternoon, is a Hungarian film where a teenager's crush sets off a domino effect that becomes a national scandal; director Gábor Reisz will be on-hand for a Q&A. Monday evening, they have a free Elements of Cinema screening of The Crucible on 35mm film with post-film Q&A.
  • The Seaport Alamo has a sold-out preview of Wake Up Dead Man with streamed Q&A on Sunday, so I guess I'm just reminding folks who already have their tickets. On Monday, they have a couple movies that are good and out there: Branded to Kill, one of Seijun Suzuki's best, plays at 7pm, and Reflection in a Dead Diamond, a tribute to 1960s spy-fi by Hélène Cattet & Bruno Forzani in their always-eye-popping style, plays at 10pm. There's also a matinee of Trains, Places & Automobiles on Tuesday.
  • On top of opening Wicked: For Good, Rental Family, and Sentimental Value, The Capitol Theatre has Capitol 100 screenings of of Pulp Fiction (Friday), Titanic (Saturday), Legally Blonde (Sunday), Moneyball (Monday), and the series-capping Casablanca on Tuesday.

    The Somerville Theatre continues playing Bugonia on 35mm film.
  • The Harvard Film Archive has more "Columbia 101: The Rarities": Bitter Victory and The Walking Hills (35mm) on Friday, The Killer That Stalked New York and The Glass Wall (35mm) on Saturday; and Address Unknown (35mm) and Gunman's Walk on Sunday. They also have a rescheduled matinee of Hong Sang-soo's By the Stream on Saturday, plus a 16mm program of experimental films by Jordan Belson curated by Raymond Foye on Monday.
  • The Museum of Science adds "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" to its 4D offerings starting Saturday (admission to the exhibit halls required), and brings back "Deep Sky" as part of the Omnimax rotation, also showing Wicked: For Good on Fridays and Saturdays into December.
  • Joe's Free Films shows two presentations of Inundation District with director David Abel on-hand this weekend - one at 15 Necco Street in Fort Point Friday afternoon (I think it's the first time actually in the reclaimed area), and one at The Foundry in Cambridge on Sunday afternoon.
  • Movies at MIT has Legally Blonde in 26-100 on Friday & Saturday; remember to give them a head's up if you're not part of the MIT community.
  • The Lexington Venue is closed Monday but ope Tuesday with Wicked, Nuremberg (no show Sunday), and Jay Kelly (no show Sunday). Documentary The Nutcracker at Wethersfield, about New York Ballet dancers putting the show on outside during Covid quarantine, plays Saturday & Sunday mornings.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Rental Family, Sentimental Value, and Wicked: For Good (double feature with the first on Saturday), continuing It Was Just an Accident, Nuremberg, and Blue Moon.

    Cinema Salem has Wicked: For Good, Rental Family, Nuremberg, and Bugonia from Friday to Monday. 2021's Black Friday (with a ton of fun folks in the cast) plays Friday night with director Casey Tebo on hand for a Q&A; there's also an open-crafting matinee of Addams Family Values on Saturday.
Is there time to catch up with Nuremberg and Train Dreams, see Jay Kelly on film, catch the two new ones at the Brattle, plus Diwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, Sisu 2, Rebuildng, and maybe Rental Family before the next big wave of new releases hits on Wednesday? Looks tight! (Follow my my Letterboxd page for what I do get to)

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Film Rolls Season 2, Round 04: Modesty Blaise and Maybe It's Love

These come quicker when there's no local baseball (and you're not picking up the Fox and/or ESPN services for just a week) and theatrical offerings are thin/the same old Halloween stuff!

So, just before Halloween, Dale rolled an 11 and jumps into a "western" block, landing on Modesty Blaise. Fun fact: This Blu-ray replaces a DVD that was never watched, whose age is pretty easily determined because it's one of several in brightly-colored cases that Fox released to capitalize on the popularity of Austin Powers!

Then two days later, Centipede rolls a 13 and gets to the very end of the first Chinese block and Maybe It's Love. I'm not going to lie, it threw me to see the Shaw Brothers logo before something that was not a genre film, whether it be martial-arts action or horror. These days, you probably only see a Shaw Brothers logo (updated and digitally animated for the twenty-first century) in front of movies made by their associated TV station (TVB, I think, although maybe it's ATV), ironically more likely to be this sort of movie than the kung fu and horror most folks know them for.

So, how did that work out?


Modesty Blaise

* * ¼ (out of four)

Seen 30 October 2025 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Kino Lorber Blu-ray)

Where to stream it (when available), or buy the disc (used) at Amazon

One reason that I'm much more fond of the first Austin Powers movie than is sequels is that there's something more akin to a real movie under the silliness, and in fact it's probably got more going on than the movies it sends up, a list that includes Modesty Blaise. This is a thin little flick, which may or may not bear much resemblance to the adventure strip which inspired it - I've only occasionally flipped through collections at the comic shop - if only because it's full of Swinging Sixties color rather than the strip's strong black lines.

Its coolness may peak with its first scene, with Monica Zitti's Modesty at ease in her penthouse apartment, bantering idly with her Chinese butler. It's clearly her space rather than that of a mistress, as one might have assumed it to be at the time, and it says her flighty mien might be deceptive. Once she's out of that room and talking with various officials, accomplices, and villains, Vitti and the filmmakers are seldom able to imply or demonstrate that her breezy attitude comes from being so capable that she seldom has to break a sweat; people know who she is and prior adventures are name-checked, but she never feels formidable. Vitti is saying the lines but not adding subtext to them, and it's the sort of cliff-hanging adventure where escaping one scrape puts you in another as opposed to something where one sees Modesty's skills as a master thief even in "here's how the heist went down" retrospect.

Vitti's not bad, really, although it feels like the filmmakers are either reluctant to let her carry the movie or didn't have a completed script at filmmaking, because there is a whole mess of narration from older men explaining to each other what's going on. Dirk Bogarde doesn't quite land as arch-nemesis Gabriel; the take seems consciously unconventional, the super-villain who's kind of a pleasant guy without being an interesting villain. There's no spark between him and Rossella Falk as his dominatrix-adjacent lieutenant, and there seems to be some sort of friction over Bogarde's wig; in the same way Gene Hackman later wouldn't want to be bald throughout Superman: The Movie, Bogarde seemingly makes a point of showing that he hasn't gone gray by ripping it off. Terence Stamp could probably have absolutely walked off with the movie if he wanted to, but he politely hovers just below stealing scenes, like he recognizes that it would be unseemly to overshadow the title character.

It never quite comes together, though; the stakes seem oddly low-key for all this effort, and there's only one really nifty heist sequence. It's a gorgeous-looking movie, at least - you can't go very far wrong putting Monica Vitti in nice outfits, and for the most part, the colorful clothing, locations, and ambiance of the late 1960s looks fashionable - a fashion firmly in the past, but nice aesthetically - rather than garish, and there's much less "oh my, she's a woman but somehow competent!" than one might fear. It's just good enough to still get watched 60 years later, when a lot of things trying to ride the combined waves of James Bond and rock & roll have faded to justified obscurity, and not entirely because the folks in the cast stayed famous.


Kwai Ching (Maybe It's Love)

* * ½ (out of four)

Seen 1 November 2025 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Kani Blu-ray)

Not currently streaming (buy the disc at Amazon)

I mention a little surprise at seeing the Shaw Brothers logo before this film in the introduction, while the credits had me raising my eyebrows because of few Hong Kong movies I've seen directed by women, especially in this period. Angie Chen On-Kei does not appear to have a particularly distinguished career as a writer-director during the 1980s, and there's a big hole in her career on IMDB and HKMDB that was apparently spent making commercials. Is she as unusual as she seems, or is this just an example of how there's good infrastructure for importing Hong Kong action, in part because there's not a whole lot else like it, but not so much romantic comedies or other pictures targeted at women? Kani's release of this film is one of the few of its ilk I've seen; is it among the best or just the most readily available?

It's a sort of screwball take on Rear Window, at least to start: 12-year-old "Marble" Shu Ker-Ying (Chui Hoh-Ying), handicapped at the hands of her ne'er-do-well father and now being raised by her grandmother (Mok Chui-Jan), keeps going to the police, claiming that she's seen a woman be murdered, although she proves to be mistaken. Not that there's not something going on, occasionally; what's a girl her age to think when she sees gwailo actor Martin (Ronnie) and his wife (Lau Siu-Pool) engaging in some kinky sex through her binoculars, for example? Up on the bluff, a rich man (Stuart Ong) has installed his mistress Rita (Cherie Chung Cho-Hung) in a nice house (which Marble's grandmother occasionally cleans), although his wife (Chan Sze-Kai) occasionally comes poking around. Postman Yau Ju (Kent Tong Chun-Yip) also takes an interest, although he's generally a playboy, also carrying on with Lin (Elaine Jin), the young wife of shopkeeper Wang (Ku Feng), who often seems frustrated and ready to return to the mainland.

There's potential in the screenplay; writer Lillian Lee Pik-Wah is a noted novelist whose name might be familiar from Farewell, My Concubine and Dumplings, and one can see that she's doing something interesting most of the time. Marble and Rita are both outsiders, the one ostracized by the other kids for her handicap and the other for trading on her body. They don't exactly become a found family with Yao Ju (who dreams of being an actor or stuntman, showing his kung fu moves off to the neighborhood kids), but the audience can see how they're in opposite ends of the same boat anyway. There's something really solid in how Marble, who grew up in an abusive household and is permanently scarred from it, has even more difficulty telling sex from violence than the average adolescent and is determined to watch out for it and sound the alarm.

It's a solid foundation to build on, but Chen's first feature is a bit rough; it's got a few very nice scenes but has a bit of trouble establishing a rhythm at times, and the eventual hard turn when it turns out Marble may have seen something after all is wobbly as heck. That's the problem with a lot of takes on Rear Window - it looks very simple in how methodical it is but that's because Hitchcock was a genius and most of the rest of the folks who try to cover the same ground aren't - and Chen doesn't quite land how the last act combines real danger and farce as the violence and willingness to kill this kid bump up against how she is right about the what but wrong about the how in screwball fashion. It's a fun mystery when it's untangled but the audience isn't quite in a place to enjoy that.

Chen doesn't necessarily have a whole lot to work with; there's something about it that seems short on resources, even beyond how it's very much not taking place in an upper-class neighborhood. Young Chui Hoh-Ying proves a very solid center to the movie, despite it being one of just two rules in the databases, but the ensemble around her is shaky, mostly folks who wouldn't have notable careers or whose acting style seems more fit to the studio's period martial arts films. The exception is obviously Cherie Chung, and both she and Chen seem to kind of know it - a scene where she silently but angrily sunbathes to the adults' consternation and adolescent boys' delight doesn't work unless she has movie-star charisma to match her figure, and the way Rita initially toys with Yau Ju or gets frustrated at the locals looking down on her is enhanced by her having that extra bit going on.

Chung and Chen make Maybe It's Love as notable as it is; it's the first Shaw Brothers film directed by a woman and Chung would become a big star who burned bright before retiring relatively young. One wonders what it could have been with just a little more going for it.


Dead heat!

Dale Evans: 20 stars
Centipede: 20 stars

Next entry hopefully coming quick, because i was rolling dice again even before writing this.