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  • Twitch hates the silly girl

    Twitch hates the silly girl

    >Shondo gets very, very drunk on stream
    >Makes her admit she’s sad and depressed every day because of her mental illness and her family getting sicker, and especially says she’s constantly terrified of losing what she has
    >She wakes up the morning after and finds she’s banned without even getting an email at first, only gets this email after she demands answers
    >”We care about you, so we’re removing your income for a month”

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  • Despicable Me 4, The Bikeriders, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Despicable Me 4, The Bikeriders, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Each week on Polygon, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, Despicable Me 4, the latest Minions movie starring Steve Carell, comes to VOD following its theatrical premiere earlier this year. That’s not all, though, as we’ve got several exciting streaming premieres this weekend as well like The Bikeriders on Peacock, La Chimera on Hulu, The Instigators on Apple TV Plus, and more.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Mission: Cross

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Genre: Action comedy
    Run time: 1h 40m
    Director: Lee Myung-hoon
    Cast: Hwang Jung-min, Yum Jung-Ah, Jeon Hye-jin

    A retired secret agent (Hwang Jung-min) finds himself unexpectedly thrown back into the fray of international espionage when he becomes involved in a mission involving his wife (Yum Jung-ah), a detective who knows absolutely nothing about her husband’s former life.

    New on Hulu

    La Chimera

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Image: Neon

    Genre: Period comedy-drama
    Run time: 2h 13m
    Director: Alice Rohrwacher
    Cast: Josh O’Connor, Carol Duarte, Isabella Rossellini

    The latest from masterful Italian filmmaker Alice Rohrwacher (Happy as Lazzaro, Le Pupille) stars one of the Challengers boys as a British archaeologist in a story of stolen historical artifacts. La Chimera was a Palme d’Or nominee at Cannes 2023.

    New on Prime Video

    One Fast Move

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Genre: Action drama
    Run time: 1h 58m
    Director: Kelly Blatz
    Cast: K.J. Apa, Eric Dane, Maia Reficco

    K.J. Apa (Riverdale) stars in this sports drama as Wes, a troubled young man who attempts to convince his estranged father Dean (Eric Dane) to teach him how to become a professional motorcycle racer. Taking him under his wing, Dean and Wes are forced to work through their troubled relationship as they attempt to create a new future for themselves.

    New on Apple TV Plus

    The Instigators

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Apple TV Plus

    Two men wearing jackets over hoodies with their hands in their pockets looking quizzically at something offscreen in The Instigators.

    Image: Apple

    Genre: Heist comedy
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: Doug Liman
    Cast: Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau

    Matt Damon and director Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity) reunite for this irreverent crime comedy co-starring Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea) and Hong Chau (The Whale). Damon stars as Rory, an ex-Marine who agrees to work alongside an ex-con (Affleck) to rob a mayoral fundraiser. When the botched robbery incites a city-wide manhunt by the police and the vengeful crime boss behind the plot, the pair “consensually kidnap” Rory’s therapist (Chau) in their desperate bid to escape and survive.

    New on Peacock

    The Bikeriders

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Peacock

    Austin Butler looks amazingly cool as he rides a motorbike one-handed, surrounded by his clubmates, in The Bikeriders

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Crime drama
    Run time: 1h 56m
    Director: Jeff Nichols
    Cast: Jodie Comer, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy

    The Bikeriders follows a motorcycle club over the course of a decade, as they go from a simple gathering of enthusiasts to a hardened gang. Jodie Comer plays Kathy, a young woman who gets swept up in the biker gang world after meeting hotheaded Benny (Austin Butler).

    From our review:

    The Bikeriders is a film of old-fashioned, simple pleasures: great tunes, perfect costumes, myth-making shots, and a cast of great character actors really going for it. (Including, but not limited to, Michael Shannon, West Side Story’s Mike Faist, Justified’s Damon Herriman, and a completely unrecognizable Norman Reedus as a shaggy Californian wildman biker.) It’s a film about looking at the gorgeous, unknowable people on the screen — and that one gorgeous, unknowable person in particular — just as Hardy’s character does at one point with Marlon Brando in The Wild One, and thinking: What would it be like to be them?

    New to rent

    Despicable Me 4

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Gru and family standing outside a car, looking up at their new safe house

    Image: Illumination

    Genre: Comedy
    Run time: 1h 34m
    Directors: Chris Renaud
    Cast: Steve Carell, Kristen Wiig, Pierre Coffin

    Formed supervillain-turned-secret agent Gru is back with an all-new adventure! Despicable Me 4 sees Gru relocate his family when his former rival Maxime Le Mal (Will Ferrell) re-emerges seeking revenge. As Gru’s family attempt to adjust to their new home, Gru’s teenage neighbor attempts to follow in his villainous footsteps, while Gru’s minions decide to become superheroes. That’s a lot, I know!

    From our review:

    Despicable Me 4 is full of good ideas, with lots of them specifically appealing to what people like about these movies: Minion antics, Gru’s villain-ness versus his normal family life, and over-the-top Big Bad Guy theatrics among them. But all these bits and pieces are jumbled together and not cohesive enough to make sense as a story. The movie is discordant, like a bunch of musicians playing unfamiliar instruments (or a bunch of — dare I say — Minions given instruments) and trying to make a coherent song. But amid that chaos, sometimes the music starts sounding good — a cool jazzy saxophone solo soars briefly above the cacophony. You just have to grit your teeth and ignore the clanging drums and out-of-tune oboes around it.

    Dandelion

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A close-up shot of a woman playing guitar in Dandelion.

    Image: IFC Films

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 1h 53m
    Director: Nicole Riegel
    Cast: KiKi Layne, Thomas Doherty, Melanie Nicholls-King

    KiKi Layne (If Beale Street Could Talk) stars in this musical drama as Dandelion, a struggling singer-songwriter who travels the country performing gigs, all the while yearning for a career breakthrough she fears will never happen. After striking up a romance with Casey (Thomas Doherty), a fellow disgruntled musician, their love proves to be the inadvertent catalyst for Dandelion’s discovery of an authentic artistic voice all her own.

    Widow Clicquot

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A woman in a black dress and hat standing next to a basket of grapes in front of a field of corn in Widow Clicquot.

    Image: Vertical Entertainment

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 1h 30m
    Director: Thomas Napper
    Cast: Haley Bennett, Leo Suter, Natasha O’Keeffe

    This period drama stars Haley Bennett (Swallow) as Barbe-Nicole Clicquot, the widow of an 18th century vigneron who becomes the head of their fledgling vineyard after his untimely passing. Weathering financial difficulty and political turmoil, Barbe-Nicole must struggle to make a name for herself and nurture the company to fruition.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • Netflix’s Rebel Moon director’s cut, A Quiet Place: Day One, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Netflix’s Rebel Moon director’s cut, A Quiet Place: Day One, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Each week on Polygon, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, A Quiet Place: Day One, starring Lupita Nyong’o and Joseph Quinn, arrives on VOD along with Maxxxine, the third installment in Ti West’s horror series starring Mia Goth. That’s not all there is to watch this weekend. The long-awaited director’s cut of Zack Snyder’s sci-fi epic Rebel Moon finally come to Netflix alongside the “Minus Color” version of Godzilla Minus One, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes struts onto Hulu, and Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers makes its streaming debut on MGM Plus.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Rebel Moon director’s cut

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Netflix

    Genre: Sci-fi epic
    Run time: 3h 21m (Chapter 1); 2h 53m (Chapter 2)
    Director: Zack Snyder
    Cast: Sofia Boutella, Djimon Hounsou, Ed Skrein

    Zack Snyder is back, this time with the “true” version of his critically-panned sci-fi epic Rebel Moon. Set in a galaxy ruled by a tyrannical empire known as the Motherworld Imperium, the film follows Kora (Sofia Boutella), a former Imperium soldier who recruits a band of warriors to defend a small lunar farming colony from an oncoming invasion.

    The question is: Will these versions be it any better than the ones released last year? Only one way to find out!

    Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    A black-and-white shot of Godzilla roaring in the ruins of a destroyed city in Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color.

    Image: Toho

    Genre: Kaiju drama
    Run time: 2h 4m
    Director: Takashi Yamazaki
    Cast: Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada

    Godzilla Minus One, the Oscar-winning kaiju drama from director Takashi Yamazaki, was surprise added to Netflix back in June. Now, the “Minus Color” version of the film, which screened for a limited time in theaters early this year, is now available to stream on Netflix starting this weekend. Having seen both in theaters, I can confidently say that no matter which version you happen to choose, the film itself is phenomenal.

    Tarot

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    A woman with long dark hair sits at a table with tarot cards and a lit candle in front of her in Tarot.

    Image: Screen Gems/Sony Pictures Releasing

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 32m
    Directors: Spenser Cohen, Anna Halberg
    Cast: Harriet Slater, Adain Bradley, Avantika, Jacob Batalon

    From the screenwriter of Moonfall, Tarot follows a group of friends who find a mysterious cursed tarot deck… and after using it, the figures from the cards that they drew all start to manifest and brutally murder them. They must race to figure out the secret of the tarot deck before they all get picked off one by one. All to say — maybe don’t use creepy tarot decks while in a strange mansion.

    Saving Bikini Bottom: The Sandy Cheeks Movie

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    (Left to Right) a cartoon squirrel in a diving suit with a bubble helmet standing next to a sponge in square pants holding a jellyfish net in Saving Bikini Bottom: The Sandy Cheeks Movie.

    Image: Netflix

    Genre: Adventure comedy
    Run time: 1h 22m
    Director: Liza Johnson
    Cast: Carolyn Lawrence, Tom Kenny, Clancy Brown

    Sandy, the Texan squirrel, takes the lead in the new SpongeBob movie. And this time, the underwater denizens venture to the surface — Sandy finally gets to visit home and see her whole family! But they all have to join forces to save Bikini Bottom from an evil CEO.

    New on Hulu

    Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A gorilla from Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes snarls at the camera

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Post-apocalyptic sci-fi
    Run time: 2h 25m
    Director: Wes Ball
    Cast: Owen Teague, Freya Allan, Kevin Durand

    Picking up 300 years after the events of Matt Reeves’ War of the Planet of the Apes, this new installment in the franchise follows Noa (Owen Teague), a young ape who embarks on a journey to rescue his tribe from Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand), a maniacal ape who has twisted Caesar’s legacy to create an empire built on conquest and slavery.

    From our review:

    As a story, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes rarely reaches above narrative competence. But because of its almost single-minded focus on the apes, its technical prowess in their rendering is always front and center. It is frankly incredible what the team at Wētā FX has done in conjunction with all of the film’s other effects artists to bring the apes to life, to give them all distinct body language, and to faithfully transpose actors’ every tic and subtle expression onto their faces. These are some of the most soulful digital creations ever seen in a blockbuster action movie, and it’s incredible to see them in a film that is so pedestrian.

    New on MGM Plus

    Challengers

    Where to watch: Available to stream on MGM Plus

    Teenage tennis champion Tashi (Zendaya) leans back on a hotel bed and stares lustily up at the camera in Challengers

    Image: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures/YouTube

    Genre: Sports drama
    Run time: 2h 11m
    Director: Luca Guadagnino
    Cast: Zendaya, Josh O’Connor, Mike Faist

    Luca Guadagnino’s sensual sports drama, about a love triangle in professional tennis, has set certain circles of the world on fire since its release in late April and is one of the best movies of the year. Now, you can enjoy it at home.

    From our review:

    That script is a terrific three-course meal for Faist and O’Connor. They get to trade off face and heel roles from scene to scene and era to era, as Art and Patrick help and hurt each other in equal measure. But it’s an absolute smorgasbord for Zendaya, who even in starring roles has never been given this much room to stretch. Tashi is a gratifyingly rich character, both righteously angry over the thwarting of her ambitions and cruelly angry at all the men who have the nerve to keep on playing the game that was taken away from her. She’s hungry for affection and withholding it at the same time, by turns sensually curious and coldly dispassionate, ambitious and exhausted, conflicted and confident. She’s the kind of character that media master’s theses are made of, and unpicking Tashi’s conflicting motives and how she integrates them is likely to become a pop culture obsession in the months to come.

    New on Metrograph

    New Strains

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Metrograph

    A man with glasses and a moustache stares into a camera lense with a woman in a red robe standing in the background in front of a wall with painted flowers in New Strains.

    Image: Parori Productions/Film Emporium Insurance Services

    Genre: Romcom
    Run time: 1h 18m
    Directors: Prashanth Kamalakanthan, Artemis Shaw
    Cast: Artemis Shaw, Prashanth Kamalakanthan

    This quirky independent romcom follows a bickering couple as they attempt to navigate their relationship, and retain their sanity, in the midst of a global pandemic. Shot on a Hi8 camcorder, New Strains is an authentic slice-of-life story from the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    New to rent

    Maxxxine

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Maxine (Mia Goth), a mask airbrushed across her face and her hair teased out into a big blonde cloud, dances in a group of strangers at a nightclub in Ti West’s Maxxxine

    Photo: Justin Lubin/A24

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: Ti West
    Cast: Mia Goth, Elizabeth Debicki, Moses Sumney

    The third installment in Ti West’s trilogy of period-specific horror films stars Mia Goth, this time reprising her role as Maxine Minx from 2022’s X. Set six years after surviving the terrifying ordeal that transpired in rural Texas, Maxine now lives and works in Los Angeles as an adult film star and erotic performer on the verge of her first big break in an upcoming horror film. But when a mysterious stalker and an unscrupulous private investigator begin to hound her around town, and harm those closest to her, Maxine will have to summon every ounce of her cunning in order to come out on top.

    From our review:

    Maxxxine is sharper, slicker, faster-paced, and more direct than the other two films in the series, and it’s certainly entertaining, for those who can stomach its purposefully challenging, envelope-pushing gore. But this time around, it feels like West has, as Kurt Vonnegut would put it, become what he was formerly just pretending to be. That isn’t just a matter of taxonomy, irrelevant to everyone but nitpickers and librarians trying to figure out which shelf Maxxxine goes on. It winds up affecting the story in some frustrating ways.

    A Quiet Place: Day One

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Lupita Nyong’o, covered in white dust, gasps and looks up while being held by another man in shadows in A Quiet Place: Day One

    Image: Paramount Pictures

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 39m
    Director: Michael Sarnoski
    Cast: Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Alex Wolff

    Lupita Nyong’o stars in the prequel to 2018’s A Quiet Place as Samira, a cancer patient living in New York who witnesses first-hand the arrival of the blind extraterrestrial creatures who overtake the planet. With the help of Eric (Joseph Quinn), a law student, and Henri (Djimon Hounsou), a fellow survivor, Samira must find a way to escape the city alive.

    From our review:

    A Quiet Place: Day One isn’t so much a spinoff and prequel of John Krasinski’s 2018 horror movie as it is a riveting drama that plays in the series’ sandbox. You can spot the odd bit of new world-building here or there, about just how and why there are so many damn echolocating aliens, but these tidbits are just background noise (shh, not so loud!) to a much more interesting human story. A Quiet Place and A Quiet Place Part II are rural sci-fi horror, but Day One — from Pig director Michael Sarnoski — moves the setting to New York City and crafts its story in the vein of large-scale disaster cinema. It’s likely the best Manhattan mayhem film since Cloverfield, and it’s also a downright excellent Hollywood blockbuster, if an entirely unexpected one.

    The People’s Joker

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Vera Drew as a version of Todd Phillips’ Joker in The People’s Joker

    Image: TIFF

    Genre: Parody comedy
    Run time: 1h 32m
    Director: Vera Drew
    Cast: Vera Drew, Nathan Faustyn, Kane Distler

    This DC Comics parody follows the story of Vera, a trans woman from Smallville who moves to Gotham City to break into stand-up comedy under the name “Joker the Harlequin.” Together with her friend The Penguin (Nathan Faustyn), Vera forms an anti-comedy troupe and goes head to head with her abusive partner Mr. J (Kane Distler) and a tyrannical vigilante known as the Batman (Phil Braun).

    From our review:

    The film isn’t entirely a comedy in-joke, however — which is good, because the story of Vera/Joker’s “anti-comedy” career is the most straightforward and least memorable aspect of the film. Lengthy discussions about the role of comedians as truth-tellers between Joker and the Penguin are standard stuff for podcasts and documentaries about the art form. Comedic first-person trans coming-of-age narratives, particularly ones where the transition is accomplished by falling into a vat of feminizing hormones, are more rare. Dedicated “to mom and Joel Schumacher,” The People’s Joker is also a sincere exploration of Vera’s journey toward self-realization, beginning with her childhood as a “miserable little girl” trapped in a boy’s body in Smallville.

    Daddio

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A male cab driver look at a female passenger with platinum blonde hair in the backseat of his cab in Daddio.

    Image: Phedon Papamichael/Sony Pictures Classics

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 1h 40m
    Director: Christy Hall
    Cast: Sean Penn, Dakota Johnson

    Remember Locke, that 2013 chamber piece starring Tom Hardy as a construction foreman who talks to himself and several off-screen characters while driving on the freeway? Well, Daddio is kinda like that, but there’s a crucial difference: Instead of one, there are two on-screen characters talking to each other! Dakota Johnson stars as a woman who has a frank conversation with Clark (Sean Pean), a cab driver who gives her a ride to her apartment in Manhattan from JFK International Airport. What do they talk about? Oh y’know, life and love and vulnerability and stuff like that.

    The Vourdalak

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    An emaciated, ghoulish figure bites into the neck of a child in a nightdress in The Vourdalak.

    Image: Oscilloscope

    Genre: Horror fantasy
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Adrien Beau
    Cast: Kacey Mottet Klein, Ariane Labed, Grégoire Colin

    If you, like me, are chomping at the bit to see Robert Eggers’ Nosferatu when it premieres later this year, you might consider sinking your teeth into this new supernatural horror movie from director Adrien Beau.

    Kacey Mottet Klein stars as the Marquis Jacques Antoine Saturnin d’Urfe, an emissary of the King of France in 18th-century Europe, who is welcomed to stay at the home of a man named Gorcha, who has left to fight against the Turks. When Gorcha fails to return after six days, his family fears that he has been transformed into a Vourdalak — a breed of vampire that feeds on the blood of their family members.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • Bad Boys: Ride or Die, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire on Netflix, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Bad Boys: Ride or Die, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire on Netflix, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Each week on Polygon, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, Bad Boys: Ride or Die, the new buddy cop movie starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, comes to VOD this week along with the Hindi action thriller Kill. There’s plenty of other exciting releases to choose from that are new to streaming this week too, like Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire on Netflix, the Michael Keaton-directed crime thriller Knox Goes Away on Max, the sci-fi drama The Beast on Criterion Channel, and more.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Photo: Sony Pictures

    Genre: Supernatural comedy
    Run time: 1h 56m
    Director: Gil Kenan
    Cast: Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard

    The Ghostbusters have returned with an all-new movie, and this time Bill Murray is here! Three years after the events of Ghostbusters: Afterlife, the Spengler family must join forces with the veteran Ghostbusters to stop a wrathful demonic entity from freezing all of New York City. Oh, and Slimer is here too, because of course.

    From our review:

    The Ghostbusters franchise doesn’t really seem to be aimed at anyone anymore. It isn’t funny. It isn’t scary. It’s mostly abandoned its new younger characters, and its older actors barely seem to care. Frozen Empire’s unintentional answer to the question seems to be that Ghostbusters is now corporate nostalgia-farming given cinematic form. Sure, it’s missing all the charm and goofiness that earned the original Ghostbusters so many fans — but if you stick around long enough, they filmmakers will show off the proton packs again, and there’s always a new person to slime. It’s a franchise reduced to nothing more than a parade of hollow, familiar images, lightly repackaged in hopes that we’ll buy another ticket and try to revisit the emotions we felt when we encountered this world for the first time.

    New on Hulu

    Femme

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A man with prominent neck tattoos pressed against a wall by another person in Femme.

    Image: Anton/Utopia

    Genre: Thriller
    Run time: 1h 39m
    Directors: Sam H. Freeman, Ng Choon Ping
    Cast: Nathan Stewart-Jarrett, George MacKay, Aaron Heffernan

    After being viciously attacked by an unknown man and their group of friends, a drag queen named Jules (Nathan Stewart-Jarrett) confronts their assaulter — a closeted young man named Preston (George MacKay) in a gay sauna. Striking up an affair, Jules plots his revenge against Preston, who is oblivious to Jules’ true identity and intentions.

    Sleeping Dogs

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A man wearing a hairnet holding a puzzle piece while staring at a glass table of puzzle pieces.

    Image: Nickel City Productions/The Avenue

    Genre: Crime thriller
    Run time: 1h 50m
    Director: Adam Cooper
    Cast: Russell Crowe, Karen Gillan, Marton Csokas

    After being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, retired homicide detective Roy Freeman (Russell Crowe) is motivated to reopen an investigation into the murder of a college professor when a mysterious new witness comes forward with a compelling piece of evidence. As he works to track down the true culprit, he’ll have to fight to convince those around him to trust his intuition and theories.

    New on Max

    Knox Goes Away

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max

    A man wearing sunglasses stands in a darkened doorway.

    Image: FilmNation Entertainment/Saban Films

    Genre: Crime thriller
    Run time: 1h 54m
    Director: Michael Keaton
    Cast: Michael Keaton, Al Pacino, James Marsden

    Sixteen years ago, Michael Keaton made his directorial debut with The Merry Gentleman, about a hitman going through some hard times. Now he’s back with his second directed feature, also about a hitman going through some hard times. This time, the hitman is John Knox, a contract killer separated from his family who takes on one last job after he’s diagnosed with dementia.

    New on Criterion Channel

    The Beast

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Criterion Channel on July 28

    Gabrielle (Léa Seydoux) and Louis (George MacKay), a pale man and woman in pale blue-grey sweaters, stand opposite each other and look into each others’ eyes in an abstract neon-blue space in a scene from The Beast

    Image: Kinology

    Genre: Sci-fi romance
    Run time: 2h 26m
    Director: Bertrand Bonello
    Cast: Léa Seydoux, George MacKay, Guslagie Malanda

    Imagine Cloud Atlas meets The Age of Innocence meets Mulholland Drive. That’s about the simplest way of describing The Beast, Bertrand Bonello’s sci-fi romance drama. Léa Seydoux (Spectre) stars as Gabrielle, a woman living in the near-future who undergoes a process to “purify” her DNA of strong emotions by reliving her past lives. Her procedure becomes more complicated after crossing paths with Louis (George MacKay), a man whom — in a past life — she may or may not have loved.

    From our review:

    The Beast’s three timelines play with seemingly unmixable genres: a classic period romance, a gripping horror-thriller, and dystopian sci-fi. That places them at a logistical disconnect, but Bonello binds them aesthetically and emotionally. Through his lengthy, thought-provoking close-ups of Gabrielle and Louis in each section, he creates a sense of longing and isolation across time, binding together human experiences of the past, present, and future, and putting them into sharp and chilling context.

    New on Shudder

    Humane

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder

    A group of concerned-looking men and women seated at the far end of a kitchen island.

    Image: IFC Films

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 33m
    Director: Caitlin Cronenberg
    Cast: Jay Baruchel, Emily Hampshire, Peter Gallagher

    The feature debut from Caitlin Cronenberg is a horror thriller worthy of the family name. Set during a worldwide ecological collapse, Humane follows estranged siblings who learn that their father and mother have chosen to take part in a nationwide euthanasia program as a form of public service. When things go awry, the family will have to choose one of their own to offer up as a substitute participant. Naturally, things get personal.

    New to rent

    Bad Boys: Ride or Die

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Will Smith sits in the passenger seat as Martin Lawrence drives as the two laugh in a scene from Bad Boys: Ride or Die.

    Photo: Frank Masi/Columbia Pictures

    Genre: Buddy cop action
    Run time: 1h 55m
    Directors: Adil El Arbi & Bilall Fallah
    Cast: Will Smith, Martin Lawrence, Vanessa Hudgens

    The Bad Boys are back for another spin around the block! Bad Boys for Life directors Adil & Bilall return for the latest entry in the franchise, this time following partners and best friends Mike Lowrey (Will Smith) and Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) as they work to clear the name of their late boss Captain Howard (Joe Pantoliano) when he’s posthumously implicated in a criminal conspiracy.

    From our review:

    El Arbi and Fallah’s direction is the brightest aspect of Ride or Die. The pair has leveled up since Bad Boys for Life, showing themselves as eager students of Bayhem, happy to deploy camera work as exciting as the shootouts it captures. Frenetic drone shots zoom through gunfire, cameras pivot over the barrel of a gun, and nothing ever, ever stays still. It’s a bit overwhelming: Restrained compared to Bay in their previous effort, they overreach a bit here. Their action shines brightest when it features someone capable of believably kicking ass on screen, like Jacob Scipio, returning as Mike Lowrey’s long-lost son from Bad Boys for Life.

    Kill

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    In the movie Kill, Lakshya has a knife held to his throat by an unseen person wearing camo

    Image: Lionsgate

    Genre: Action thriller
    Run time: 1h 45m
    Director: Nikhil Nagesh Bhat
    Cast: Lakshya, Raghav Juyal, Ashish Vidyarthi

    In this thriller, an army commando leads a mission to rescue his girlfriend from an arranged marriage — and then ends up also rescuing a train from a gang of bandits. Kill premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, where it was the first runner-up for the People’s Choice Award: Midnight Madness.

    Here’s what Polygon’s curation editor Pete Volk had to say about it:

    Kill makes the most of the close-quarters setting and the many different weapons on display — knives, limbs, fire extinguishers, and the architecture/layout of the train itself all play into the combat. It’s a real treat for action fans, especially when things take a turn 45 minutes in and the violence amps up significantly. Kill doesn’t go from 0 to 60; it starts at 60 and goes to 200. The movie’s action design is basically broken into two halves, allowing the team (and Lakshya as a lead) to show a variety of approaches to the fight scenes. I won’t say too much, to avoid spoilers, but the action design becomes much more lethal in response to the events of the story, which allows Kill to start with a more classic nonlethal martial arts approach to action before transitioning into something closer to what you might find in a horror movie.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • The Bikeriders, The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, and every movie new to streaming this week

    The Bikeriders, The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Each week on Polygon, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, The Bikeriders, the new crime drama starring Jodie Comer (The Last Duel) and Austin Butler (Dune: Part Two), comes to VOD alongside The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes and several other exciting new releases. That’s not all — there’s tons of other movies new to streaming to watch this weekend, like the hybrid animated period drama The Peasants on Netflix, the sci-fi drama The Animal Kingdom on Hulu, a documentary on the life and career of actress Faye Dunaway on Max, and much more.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    The Peasants

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Breakthru Films/Sony Pictures Classics

    Genre: Animated historical drama
    Run time: 1h 54m
    Directors: DK Welchman, Hugh Welchman
    Cast: Kamila Urzędowska, Robert Gulaczyk, Mirosław Baka

    Loving Vincent directing duo DK Welchman and Hugh Welchman return with yet another period drama composed of thousands of hand-painted images. Set in a 19th-century Polish village rife with feuding and gossip, a young woman named Jagna strives desperately to forge a life for herself beyond the expectations of those around her.

    New on Hulu

    The Animal Kingdom

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A bearded man with his arm around the shoulders of a teenage boy in The Animal Kingdom.

    Image: Magnet Releasing

    Genre: Sci-fi
    Run time: 2h 10m
    Director: Thomas Cailley
    Cast: Romain Duris, Paul Kircher, Adèle Exarchopoulos

    In a world where humans have been stricken with a genetic mutation that transforms them into animal hybrids, a desperate father (Romain Duris) takes his son (Paul Kircher) to search for his wife, who has disappeared into a nearby forest along with other similarly affected hybrids. Think Sweet Tooth meets The Lobster. Polygon had the opportunity to speak with Cailey about the origins and creature design of the film.

    New on Max

    Faye

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Laurent Bouzereau

    This documentary looks back on the life and career of Faye Dunaway, the Academy Award-winning actress known for her iconic performances in such films as Bonnie and Clyde, Network, and Chinatown. Bouzereau’s film collects testimonies from Dunaway’s peers and admirers, as well as extensive interviews with Dunaway herself.

    New on Prime Video

    Divorce in the Black

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Two people sit at a tense dinner

    Image: Prime Video

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 2h 23m
    Director: Tyler Perry
    Cast: Meagan Good, Cory Hardrict, Joseph Lee Anderson

    Tyler Perry’s newest movie follows a young bank professional whose husband leaves her. At first she’s determined to fight for their marriage, but she soon realizes that her husband once sabotaged her chance at true love.

    New on Shudder

    Arcadian

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder

    A man and two boys seated behind the wheel of a dilapidated vehicle in Arcadia.

    Photo: Patrick Redmond/RLJE Films

    Genre: Action horror
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Benjamin Brewer
    Cast: Nicolas Cage, Jaeden Martell, Maxwell Jenkins

    If you already caught Nicolas Cage in Longlegs, here’s another Cageian drama for you. The actor stars as a father of two sons desperate to protect and raise his family in a near future Earth decimated by the arrival of a ferocious nocturnal creatures. When their father is wounded by one of these creatures, his sons must band together and call upon every lesson of their training in order to survive.

    From our review:

    Once the action really gets underway, though, Cage is largely absent, and muddy spatial relationships and confusing, hard-to-see action take a significant percentage of the power out of what should be an explosive final act. And once the film settles into a fairly standard chase-and-fight movie, its lack of more character depth or nuance, or more compelling relationships between the protagonists, limits what the filmmakers can do to make this story stand out from all the past projects it echoes. Arcadian does a few things remarkably well for a sci-fi/horror movie, but it needed a lot more to really spark: more commitment to its vaguely realized setting, more energy between the two very different brothers at its center, and above all, more Nicolas Cage — either version of him.

    New to rent

    Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A gorilla from Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes snarls at the camera

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Post-apocalyptic sci-fi
    Run time: 2h 25m
    Director: Wes Ball
    Cast: Owen Teague, Freya Allan, Kevin Durand

    Picking up 300 years after the events of Matt Reeves’ War of the Planet of the Apes, this new installment in the franchise follows Noa (Owen Teague), a young ape who embarks on a journey to rescue his tribe from Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand), a maniacal ape who has twisted Caesar’s legacy to create an empire built on conquest and slavery.

    From our review:

    As a story, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes rarely reaches above narrative competence. But because of its almost single-minded focus on the apes, its technical prowess in their rendering is always front and center. It is frankly incredible what the team at Wētā FX has done in conjunction with all of the film’s other effects artists to bring the apes to life, to give them all distinct body language, and to faithfully transpose actors’ every tic and subtle expression onto their faces. These are some of the most soulful digital creations ever seen in a blockbuster action movie, and it’s incredible to see them in a film that is so pedestrian.

    The Bikeriders

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Austin Butler, with mussed-up hair, wearing a black sleeveless top, leans forward in a moody way in The Bikeriders

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Crime drama
    Run time: 1h 56m
    Director: Jeff Nichols
    Cast: Jodie Comer, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy

    The Bikeriders follows a motorcycle club over the course of a decade, as they go from a simple gathering of enthusiasts to a hardened gang. Jodie Comer plays Kathy, a young woman who gets swept up in the biker gang world after meeting hotheaded Benny (Austin Butler).

    From our review:

    The Bikeriders is a film of old-fashioned, simple pleasures: great tunes, perfect costumes, myth-making shots, and a cast of great character actors really going for it. (Including, but not limited to, Michael Shannon, West Side Story’s Mike Faist, Justified’s Damon Herriman, and a completely unrecognizable Norman Reedus as a shaggy Californian wildman biker.) It’s a film about looking at the gorgeous, unknowable people on the screen — and that one gorgeous, unknowable person in particular — just as Hardy’s character does at one point with Marlon Brando in The Wild One, and thinking: What would it be like to be them?

    The Exorcism

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Russell Crowe dressed as a priest with dried bile and blood covering his beard in The Exorcism.

    Image: Vertical Entertainment

    Genre: Horror thriller
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Director: Joshua John Miller
    Cast: Russell Crowe, Ryan Simpkins, Sam Worthington

    Russell Crowe plays an actor on the set of a supernatural horror film that resembles the original Exorcist movie. His mental state is in slow decline, and as his behavior becomes more erratic, his daughter begins to suspect that there might be a more sinister cause behind it than his previous substance addictions.

    The Garfield Movie

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Jon Arbuckle shaves parmesan cheese over Garfield’s lasagna while Odie watches in a still from The Garfield Movie

    Image: Sony Pictures

    Genre: Adventure comedy
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: Mark Dindal
    Cast: Chris Pratt, Samuel L. Jackson, Hannah Waddingham

    It’s Chris Pratt! As Garfield! The lazy orange cat reunites with his long lost father Vic (voiced by Samuel L. Jackson, of all people). Along with Odie, Vic and Garfield plan a heist to a farm so that they can steal a lot of milk in order to appease the Persian cat crime boss that Vic works for. The movie comes by way of director Mark Dindal, best known for The Emperor’s New Groove.

    The Convert

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A stern looking beared man with bruises on his face staring off at something in the distance with a large wooden totem behind him in The Convert.

    Image: MBK Productions/Magnolia Pictures

    Genre: Historical drama
    Run time: 1h 59m
    Director: Lee Tamahori
    Cast: Guy Pearce, Tioreore Ngatai-Melbourne, Antonio Te Maioha

    In this historical drama, a preacher comes to a remote outpost in New Zealand — only to get caught in the middle of a war between Māori tribes. It’s based on the 2011 novel Wulf by New Zealand author Hamish Clayton.

    Wildcat

    Maya Hawke as Flannery O’Connor reading a letter while standing next to her open mailbox in Wildcat.

    Image: Renovo Media Group/Oscilloscope Laboratories

    Genre: Biographical drama
    Run time: 1h 43m
    Director: Ethan Hawke
    Cast: Maya Hawke, Rafael Casal, Philip Ettinger

    Maya Hawke (Stranger Things) stars in her father Ethan Hawke’s latest film: a biographical drama centering on the life and struggles of the inimitable Southern Gothic author Flannery O’Connor. Wildcat follows O’Connor’s efforts to publish her first novel, interspersed with episodes reenacting characters and scenes inspired by the author’s own short stories.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • cut pumped pure

    cut pumped pure

    Decimation (from Latin decimatio ‘removal of a tenth) was a form of military discipline in which every tenth man in a group was executed by members of his cohort. The discipline was used by senior commanders in the Roman army to punish units or large groups guilty of capital offences, such as cowardice, mutiny, desertion, and insubordination, and for pacification of rebellious legions. The procedure was an attempt to balance the need to punish serious offences with the realities of managing a large group of offenders.

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  • Abigail, The Book of Clarence on Netflix, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Abigail, The Book of Clarence on Netflix, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Greetings, Polygon readers! Each week, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, Abigail, the horror comedy from Scream directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, gnaws its way onto VOD. There’s plenty more than that to choose from, as a plethora of exciting releases make their way onto streaming this weekend. Jeymes Samuel’s The Book of Clarence is now streaming on Netflix, the psychological thriller Eileen is available to watch on Hulu, and The Iron Claw is on Max, not to mention all the other new releases available to rent and purchase on VOD.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    The Book of Clarence

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Legendary Entertainment/Moris Puccio

    Genre: Historical comedy
    Run time: 2h 9m
    Director: Jeymes Samuel
    Cast: LaKeith Stanfield, Omar Sy, RJ Cyler, Anna Diop

    Jeymes Samuel (The Harder They Fall) returns with a new film, this time a biblical comedy drama starring LaKeith Stanfield. The Book of Clarence follows the story of a down-on-his-luck man living in A.D. 33 Jerusalem who aspires to free himself from debt.

    His plan? Take a page out of the book of a local preacher claiming to be the son of God and proclaim himself as the Messiah, performing “miracles” in a bid for fame and glory. When Clarence’s schemes run afoul of the Romans, he’ll be faced with not only the consequences of his deception, but a choice that will shape his life and the course of history.

    Mother of the Bride

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    A young woman staring at a man in front of a picturesque view of a tropical landscape in Mother of the Bride.

    Photo: Sasidis Sasisakulporn/Netflix

    Genre: Rom-com
    Run time: 1h 28m
    Director: Mark Waters
    Cast: Brooke Shields, Benjamin Bratt, Miranda Cosgrove

    Brooke Shields stars in this new rom-com as Lan, the mother of a woman who is about to marry the man of her dreams. After traveling to Thailand for the wedding, Lana learns that her college ex Will (Benjamin Bratt) is in fact the father of her daughter’s husband-to-be. Can these two figure out how to make it through the wedding without being painfully awkward, and is there still a chance for them to fall in love again?

    New on Hulu

    Eileen

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Anne Hathaway, in a blond wig and shearling coat, smokes leaning against a neon-drenched wall as Rebecca while Thomasin McKenzie looks on in the movie Eileen.

    Photo: Jeong Park/Neon

    Genre: Psychological thriller
    Run time: 1h 38m
    Director: William Oldroyd
    Cast: Thomasin McKenzie, Anne Hathaway, Shea Whigham

    Based on Ottessa Moshfegh’s 2015 novel, this psychological thriller stars Thomasin McKenzie (Last Night in Soho) as a young secretary who becomes infatuated with Rebecca (Anne Hathaway), the charismatic new psychologist at the juvenile detention facility where she works. As their friendship grows, Eileen finds herself exploring new aspects of her personality — to equally sinister and deadly effect.

    From our review:

    In making Eileen’s character flesh, Thomasin McKenzie walks a dramatic tightrope: effortlessly showing how much effort her character puts into performing for others, while also not tipping her hand about what, if anything, resides in Eileen’s soul. Both Eileen’s script and McKenzie’s choices depict her character as someone who wants to be human, even a certain kind of human, but doesn’t know how, or even to what end. So she settles on voyeurism — the film’s opening scene depicts her sitting in her car on a lovers’ lane, surreptitiously watching a couple of strangers make out in a second car. She flirts with the idea of masturbation, only to abruptly stop and stuff filthy snow down her skirt instead.

    New on Max

    The Iron Claw

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max

    A wrestler diving at another wrestler in a ring.

    Photo: Brian Roedel/A24

    Genre: Biographical sports drama
    Run time: 2h 12m
    Director: Sean Durkin
    Cast: Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson

    Zac Efron (Hairspray), Jeremy Allen White (The Bear), and Harris Dickinson (Triangle of Sadness) star in this thrilling dramatization of the lives of the Von Erich brothers, a trio of professional wrestlers whose larger-than-life careers and success during the 1980s were marred by tragedy and struggle.

    From our review:

    The biopicification of such a horrendous, personal series of tragedies will sound crass to some. But Durkin doesn’t dilute the Von Erich story into direct-to-cable fluff. He’s performing a balancing act, aware that a sad story is only useful if people have the desire (and fortitude) to stay until the credits.

    New on AMC Plus

    The Taste of Things

    Where to watch: Available to stream on AMC Plus

    Benoît Magimel as “Dodin”, taste testing something

    Photo: Carole Bethuel/IFC Films

    Genre: Romance drama
    Run time: 2h 16m
    Director: Tran Anh Hung
    Cast: Juliette Binoche, Benoît Magimel, Emmanuel Salinger

    This historical romance follows the story of Eugenie (Juliette Binoche) and Dodin (Benoît Magimel), a cook and a gourmand who live in a French country estate in 1889. Though the two are in love, Eugenie refuses to marry Dodin, and wishes to keep their relationship as it is. Desperate to woo her, Dodin takes up cooking in order to prepare a meal that will sweep her off her feet. The film is as terrific as the food looks scrumptious.

    New to rent

    Abigail

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Alisha Weir in a blood-stained tutu with sharpened teeth in Abigail

    Image: Universal Pictures

    Genre: Horror comedy
    Run time: 1h 49m
    Directors: Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, Tyler Gillett
    Cast: Melissa Barrera, Dan Stevens, Kathryn Newton

    The directors behind 2019’s Ready or Not and 2022’s Scream are back with another horror comedy, this time centered around a group of kidnappers who are tasked with abducting the daughter of a wealthy businessman in exchange for ransom money. Unfortunately, the kidnappers have bit off more than they can chew, as this the little girl in question harbors a deadly secret of her own.

    From our review:

    Once Abigail reveals herself as a deadly supernatural creature, the movie transforms into more of an action slasher, rather than going for scares. In that way, Abigail feels more like Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett’s earlier movie Ready or Not than like any other vampire movie. Both movies are mostly set in heavily locked-down mansions where someone is viciously, comedically hunted down. And both feature a deep love for explosions of blood and guts. After Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett’s brief detour for two messy, chaotic, clumsy entries in the Scream franchise, Abigail proves they’re still excellent at creating tension in the hallways of massive houses, and flipping their horror into action at a moment’s notice.

    Founders Day

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A masked figure in a black cloak and white wig holding a gavel in a dark gymnasium in Founders Day.

    Photo: David Apuzzo/Mainframe Pictures

    Genre: Slasher horror
    Run time: 1h 46m
    Director: Erik Bloomquist
    Cast: Naomi Grace, Devin Druid, William Russ

    If you enjoyed Eli Roth’s Thanksgiving and are looking for more holiday-themed slashers, director-screenwriter duo Erik and Carson Bloomquist are here to oblige. Set in a small town on the eve of a major mayoral election, Founders Day follows a group of teens who are stalked by a vicious masked killer. It’s supposed to be a political satire, but even if you’re not in for that element, it sure to be a gorey good time.

    Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Finn Wolfhard in a Ghostbusters uniform looking at slime coming from the ceiling while Kamail Nanjiani, Logan Kim, Paul Rudd, and Celeste O’Connor stand behind him in Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Image: Sony Pictures

    Genre: Supernatural comedy
    Run time: 1h 56m
    Director: Gil Kenan
    Cast: Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard

    The Ghostbusters have returned with an all-new movie, and this time Bill Murray is here! Three years after the events of Ghostbusters: Afterlife, the Spengler family must join forces with the veteran Ghostbusters to stop a wrathful demonic entity from freezing all of New York City. Oh, and Slimer is here too, because of course.

    From our review:

    The Ghostbusters franchise doesn’t really seem to be aimed at anyone anymore. It isn’t funny. It isn’t scary. It’s mostly abandoned its new younger characters, and its older actors barely seem to care. Frozen Empire’s unintentional answer to the question seems to be that Ghostbusters is now corporate nostalgia-farming given cinematic form. Sure, it’s missing all the charm and goofiness that earned the original Ghostbusters so many fans — but if you stick around long enough, they filmmakers will show off the proton packs again, and there’s always a new person to slime. It’s a franchise reduced to nothing more than a parade of hollow, familiar images, lightly repackaged in hopes that we’ll buy another ticket and try to revisit the emotions we felt when we encountered this world for the first time.

    La Chimera

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A man in a white, wrinkled suit with an open collar button shirt surrounded by a group of people looking at something off-screen with fascination.

    Image: Neon

    Genre: Period comedy-drama
    Run time: 2h 13m
    Director: Alice Rohrwacher
    Cast: Josh O’Connor, Carol Duarte, Vincenzo Nemolato

    The latest from masterful Italian filmmaker Alice Rohrwacher (Happy as Lazzaro, Le Pupille) stars one of the Challengers boys as a British archaeologist in a story of stolen historical artifacts. La Chimera was a Palme d’Or nominee at Cannes 2023.

    Kim’s Video

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 25m
    Directors: David Redmon, Ashley Sabin
    Cast: Isabel Gillies Robert Greene, Eric Hynes

    Fans of unconventional mystery documentaries like 2018’s Shirkers will likely dig this new film chronicling the rise, fall, and legacy of one of New York City’s most infamous video stores. Featuring interviews with notable former employees like Alex Ross Perrry, Ashley Sabin and David Redmon’s documentary is filled with surprises and revelations aplenty.

    The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Two bearded men holding WWI-era machine guns in The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.

    Image: Black Bear Pictures/Jerry Bruckheimer Films

    Genre: Spy action-comedy
    Run time: 2h
    Director: Guy Ritchie
    Cast: Henry Cavill, Eiza González, Alan Ritchson

    Guy Ritchie’s been on a hot run as of late, with some of the best work of his career in Wrath of Man and The Covenant. This time, he turns his eye to historical action, with this larger-than-life true story about a British special ops team in World War II. The movie features a big cast and lots of big guns.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • Star Wars’ Expanded Universe helped rescue Phantom Menace and the prequel trilogy

    Star Wars’ Expanded Universe helped rescue Phantom Menace and the prequel trilogy

    Star Wars: The Phantom Menace is 25 years old and back in theaters for Star Wars Day (“May the 4th be with you”), inevitably setting off a new round of debate about the movie, the prequel trilogy as a whole, and the current, sometimes frustrating, state of Star Wars media. Though The Phantom Menace has been heavily criticized, it’s also been re-examined and even embraced over the past few decades. There are memes that celebrate the highly dramatic dialogue and direct references in tentpoles like Solo. The kids who grew up with the prequels as their main Star Wars movies have spoken up to defend them.

    But arguably, what really vindicated the prequel trilogy was the spin-off culture. The animated series, books, comics, and everything else tying into the expanded canon made good on the promises delivered in the prequels’ seven hours of CG-filled adventure. The Phantom Menace, and later Attack of the Clones, introduced a political conspiracy that spanned every corner of the Star Wars universe, a corrupt government meshing with a somewhat clueless Jedi Order. In an attempt at reasonable runtimes, the movies don’t go that deep with the Jedi’s request for a clone army, or interesting characters like Darth Maul, Mace Windu, and Count Dooku, who all meet early demises. But the genius of Lucas’ plans — anticipated or accidental — is that the movies sparked creativity in other creators.

    Del Rey

    In 2014, shortly after the acquisition of Lucasfilm, Disney rebranded most “Expanded Universe” media as “Legends” content, with only a handful of stories and lore from outside of the movies surviving the purge. Still, both departed and surviving EU enhance the prequels.

    One notable book that didn’t survive the new post-Disney canon is James Luceno’s Darth Plagueis, which took one of the most important yet unknown figures of the prequels and gave us a complete story that fills plenty of the blanks. The novel dealt with the Sith lord Darth Plagueis, hinted in Revenge of the Sith to be Darth Sidious’ master, and a being who could manipulate midichlorians to create life. The novel tells the story of Plagueis’ training of a teenage Palpatine, his arc to become a politician, and how the duo planned the creation of a clone army, and with that the Clone Wars itself.

    Though the novel is no longer canon, the idea that Palpatine and his master planned everything about the Clone Wars in order to gain power has been explored in other comics and novels, like Luceno’s own Tarkin from 2014. Palpatine in the movies was meant to be this mastermind who was ten steps ahead of everyone, but we didn’t really see him do that much until Revenge of the Sith. Likewise, we are told vague statements about corruption and the “bureaucrats” in charge of the Senate, but in books we finally started to see how much the senator from Naboo changed the course of history in the galaxy. Tarkin illustrated the damaged political system, and how easy it was for Palpatine to manipulate it to his favor, something that fleshed out the hooded figure formerly known just as “The Emperor” into a cunning man everyone underestimated until it was too late.

    The expanded canon also shines a new light on the Jedi Order better than the movies ever could. We knew from the original trilogy that the Jedi had all but disappeared; the prequels showed them to be a naïve, strict organization that was unable to prevent its downfall.

    The novels Master & Apprentice by Claudia Gray and the audiobook Dooku: Jedi Lost by Cavan Scott focus on why some Jedi in the galaxy became disillusioned by the Order, and its close ties to the Republic. Master & Apprentice follows Qui-Gon Jinn as he welcomes Obi-Wan Kenobi as his apprentice, fleshing out some themes from the movies, like slavery in the galaxy and the Jedi Order’s role in galactic politics. The novel shows that Qui-Gon was constantly questioning whether the Jedi were more than the chancellor’s police force, and the nature of “balance” in the Force.

    The Phantom Menace introduced the idea of Jedi as something akin to the United Nations’ Peacekeeping Forces, unable to intervene without full authority from the Republic, and expected to always be neutral. But how are they supposed to protect the light side of the Force, which lives inside all living creatures, if they can’t intervene in wars or end slavery? The current EU books confront the contradictions that pushed away members like Count Dooku and, eventually, Anakin.

    qui-gon age of republic comic book

    Marvel Comics

    When it comes to the comic books, the anthology run Age of Republic shines new light on the characters we know from the prequels. The Qui-Gon issue expands on the story from Master & Apprentice where the Jedi master was becoming obsessed with prophecies and finding true balance in the force, which he thinks the Jedi Order can’t achieve if they stay so rigid.

    There’s also Obi-Wan and Anakin, written by Charles Soule, which explores the relationship between Obi-Wan and Anakin and the 10 years between Episodes I and II, carving out the brotherly bond that formed between the two Jedi. The Darth Maul miniseries focuses on Maul’s insatiable hunger to kill of Jedi, and his frustration over being forbidden to engage in combat before the events of The Phantom Menace, something that further sends him to the dark side of the Force, even if he wonders what the light has to offer.

    Then there’s The Clone Wars, one of the few bits of media that wasn’t de-canonized before The Force Awakens was released. What made the animated series special from the get-go is that it seemed like everyone involved knew that viewers were pretty negative about most of the characters in the prequels, so they took it to heart to flesh them out and give them enough depth to make us love them just as much as Luke, Leia, and Han.

    From the first season, The Clone Wars showed us the impact the conflict had on the entire Star Wars universe. We meet kids who were orphaned by the war, see how the criminal underworld thrived in a war setting, and note why most planetary populations hesitated to join the war effort — which kicked off rebellions in some regions. While the series was primarily aimed at kids, there was some dark and mature material at display that showed the horrors of war and the human cost of it.

    the clone wars umbara arc

    Cartoon Network

    One of the best parts of the series was getting to know the faceless clone army that was introduced in the movies. We first meet Domino Squad in training, then follow them through their trials and tribulations in the field of battle. The Umbara arc best exemplifies what made The Clone Wars so good. The four-episode story follows the Domino Squad and the larger 501st Legion as they embark on a deadly mission to take the capital of Umbara, and watches as tension rises between the clones and their new and reckless commander, Jedi Pong Krell. Gritty and frank about the casualties of war, the series still found room to give the clones personalities, despite all looking the same.

    The animated series also did a better job of tying up loose ends. Remember that deleted scene from Revenge of the Sith where Padmé basically founds the Rebel Alliance? The Clone Wars shows there was resistance in several worlds that opposed the war, and what the Republic was doing. This included the introduction of Saw Gerrera, who played a key part in the live-action Rogue One. There was also the re-introduction of Darth Maul, who came back to life in the series, with much more than three lines of dialogue.

    When it came to filling in the gaps from the prequels, The Clone Wars also gave fans their first canonical look at the infamous Sifo-Dyas in the episode “The Lost One,” which dealt with the conspiracy surrounding the creation of the clone army. In that same last season, the series showed how the Emperor was able to control the clones with Order 66, giving us a backstory for the devastating order.

    In the end, for many fans, The Clone Wars succeeded where the prequels did not by making the audience care about Anakin Skywalker’s journey. The arrogant, bratty Jedi was given more dimension, and his story became that of a man caught between the light and dark sides of the Force. We witnessed his constant struggles with the dark side, his fear of loss, his anger and resentment toward the world, the pressures of being a Jedi, and how it all made him the perfect target for Palpatine’s manipulation. The series provided a deeper, more complex look at the character and made his shift into Darth Vader logical, with much more impact.

    The Phantom Menace is 25 years old, but the prequel era feels fresher than ever. The gripes mounted over two decades have been challenged, inverted, and matured by the ever-expanding EU. Fear over the prequels leads to anger, anger leads to hate, and hate leads to suffering — but most of that could be alleviated by picking up the right book.

    Rafael Motamayor

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  • Kung Fu Panda 4, Argylle, Netflix’s The Bricklayer, and every new movie to watch this weekend

    Kung Fu Panda 4, Argylle, Netflix’s The Bricklayer, and every new movie to watch this weekend

    Greetings, Polygon readers! Each week, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, Kung Fu Panda 4, the new animated action comedy starring Jack Black, arrives on VOD following its theatrical run last month. There’s tons of other exciting releases this week, too, like the satirical spy thriller Argylle on Apple TV Plus, a new action thriller starring Aaron Eckhart as a former CIA agent landing on Netflix, the new romantic fantasy film The Greatest Hits on Hulu, and much more. And then there’s Mayhem!, one of the best action movies of the year so far, now streaming on AMC Plus.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Strange Way of Life

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: El Deseo/Saint Laurent Productions

    Genre: Western drama
    Run time: 31m
    Director: Pedro Almodóvar
    Cast: Ethan Hawke, Pedro Pascal

    This Western short from legendary Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar (Volver, Pain and Glory) follows the story of two gunslingers (and former lovers) who reunite after 25 years apart.

    The Bricklayer

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Millennium Media/Vertical Entertainment

    Genre: Action thriller
    Run time: 1h 50m
    Director: Renny Harlin
    Cast: Aaron Eckhart, Nina Dobrev, Tim Blake Nelson

    The latest in a long tradition of “action movies with odd profession titles,” The Bricklayer follows a former CIA agent (Aaron Eckhart) needed by his former agency when journalists start dying. The movie has a bit of pedigree behind it, as Renny Harlin (Cliffhanger, Die Hard 2) directs.

    New on Hulu

    The Greatest Hits

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A man staring across at a woman in front of a shelf of vinyl records.

    Image: Groundswell Productions/Searchlight Pictures

    Genre: Musical romance
    Run time: 1h 34m
    Director: Ned Benson
    Cast: Lucy Boynton, Justin H. Min, David Corenswet

    After suffering the loss of her boyfriend in a car accident, a young woman named Harriet (Lucy Boynton) inadvertently discovers that she has the power to go back in time to various points in their relationship by listening to his old record collection. When Harriet meets a new love interest named David (Justin H. Min), she struggles between her desire to correct the past to resurrect her boyfriend or pursue the possibility of newfound love in the present.

    New on Prime Video

    The Exorcist: Believer

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Two possessed, scarred and bruised children sit back to back on the floor and glare at the camera above them in The Exorcist: Believer

    Image: Universal Studios

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 51m
    Director: David Gordon Green
    Cast: Leslie Odom Jr., Ellen Burstyn, Ann Dowd

    David Gordon Green’s new entry in the Exorcist franchise arrives this week on streaming. It’s a bizarre twist on the franchise, per our review:

    Up until this most recent movie, the title The Exorcist carried some weight. While its role as a representation of quality was up for debate, its mark as a sign of ambition was not. Since the original Exorcist, the series has provided some of American cinema’s best and most interesting artists with space to ruminate on faith and evil. Believer lacks the ambition that’s meant to define an Exorcist movie. This is the most profound statement the movie has to offer, seemingly by accident: If the result of moving past God is that everything in the world will feel as empty and pointless as The Exorcist: Believer, we should cling to faith forever.

    New on Apple TV Plus

    Argylle

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Apple TV Plus

    A man with a buzzcut dressed in a emerald suit lifts a woman with short blonde hair in a gold dress and heels on a dance floor.

    Photo: Peter Mountain/Universal Pictures/Apple Original Films/Marv

    Genre: Action comedy
    Run time: 2h 19m
    Director: Matthew Vaughn
    Cast: Henry Cavill, Bryce Dallas Howard, Sam Rockwell

    What happens when you take the meta-fictional irreverence of Stranger than Fiction and smash it together with a premise similar to Matthew Vaughn’s 2014 movie Kingsman: The Secret Service?

    You get Argylle, an action satire of spy novels à la 1984’s Romancing the Stone that follows Elly Conway (Bryce Dallas Howard), an introverted novelist who is dragged kicking and screaming into a world of international espionage when it turns out that her popular spy novels are predicting the future. Who is the real agent Argylle? You’ll have to watch in order to find out.

    From our review:

    Argylle is too winking, too keen to show that it’s in on its own joke, to admit any real romantic feeling or any excitement that runs deeper than the surface level of its flashy choreography. Vaughn, the impish ringmaster, delights in challenging the audience to figure out what’s real and what’s fictional within his stylized, nested worlds. It’s just that he never really answers the question: Why should we care? With Argylle, he mounts a playful, rollicking thriller with an all-star cast and some dazzling action — but then holds the audience at arm’s length from it, just to show how clever he’s been in putting it together. The truly clever thing would have been to let the dumb film be joyously dumb, and invite the audience to lose themselves in it instead.

    New on Peacock

    Drive-Away Dolls

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Peacock

    Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan looking into a trunk in Drive-Away Dolls

    Image: Focus Features

    Genre: Road comedy
    Run time: 1h 24m
    Director: Ethan Coen
    Cast: Margaret Qualley, Geraldine Viswanathan, Beanie Feldstein

    Ethan Coen’s first narrative feature without his brother Joel is an offbeat crime comedy about a pair of young women who embark on an impromptu road trip. Things get dicey after the two cross paths with a group of incompetent criminals sent to retrieve a mysterious briefcase on behalf of their shady employer.

    From our review:

    Drive-Away Dolls’ well-worn beats are buttressed by tremendous style, a deep care taken with the film’s production and costume design. All that attention to the era that isn’t fully present in the script comes out in the visuals instead. There isn’t much narrative texture to Marian and Jamie’s various stopovers — in particular, there isn’t much for Jamie or Marian to connect with. While the pair have frequent and funny interactions on their trip, the people they meet are more or less cartoon characters setting up a gag.

    New on Paramount Plus

    Bob Marley: One Love

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus, MGM Plus

    A smiling man with dreadlocks standing next to a band of musicians playing.

    Image: Paramount Pictures

    Genre: Biographical musical
    Run time: 1h 47m
    Director: Reinaldo Marcus Green
    Cast: Kingsley Ben-Adir, Lashana Lynch, James Norton

    This biopic follows the story of cultural icon Bob Marley, portrayed by Kingsley Ben-Adir (One Night in Miami…). The film follows Marley from his rise to fame in the ’70s up until his death in 1981.

    New on AMC Plus

    Mayhem!

    Where to watch: Available to stream on AMC Plus

    Nassim Lyes as Sam, an ex-con and former martial artist, fighting against two men in Mayhem.

    Image: IFC Films

    Genre: Action thriller
    Run time: 1h 49m
    Director: Xavier Gens
    Cast: Nassim Lyes, Loryn Nounay, Olivier Gourmet

    An early contender for one of this year’s best action films, Mayhem follows Samir (Nassim Lyes), an ex-con and martial artist, who flees from France to Thailand to escape his former gang. Struggling to build a new life, Samir finds himself once again dragged into a world of deceit and violence when a powerful real estate tycoon kidnaps a member of his family.

    From our review:

    Mayhem’s action is brutal and kinetic, with inventive kills, strong location work, and realistic choreography that makes the most of Lyes’ kickboxing pedigree. It’s a true star-making performance for him, as he juggles the role’s demanding physical requirements with a deep well of sorrow that permeates the entire affair, even as he dispatches foe after foe.

    New to rent

    Ennio

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Ennio Morricone standing in his office surrounded by notes.

    Image: Music Box Films

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 2h 36m
    Director: Giuseppe Tornatore

    Cinema Paradiso director Giuseppe Tornatore made a documentary on renowned film composer Ennio Morricone, one of the most accomplished people in that stacked field. The documentary includes Quentin Tarantino, Clint Eastwood, Bruce Springsteen, and many more luminaries from the entertainment world.

    Glitter & Doom

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Two men embracing on a stage surrounded by dancers.

    Image: SPEAK Productions/Music Box Films

    Genre: Musical romance
    Run time: 1h 55m
    Director: Tom Gustafson
    Cast: Alex Diaz, Alan Cammish, Ming-Na Wen

    A musical set to the songs of the Indigo Girls, Glitter & Doom follows a summer romance between a musician committed to this craft (Alan Cammish) and a “free-spirited circus kid” (Alex Diaz).

    Io Capitano

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Apple and Vudu

    A boy in a soccer jersey holding the hand of a floating woman dressed in an emerald shroud through the desert.

    Image: Archimede/Cohen Media Group

    Genre: Fantasy
    Run time: 2h 1m
    Director: Matteo Garrone
    Cast: Seydou Sarr, Moustapha Fall, Issaka Sawadogo

    Desperate for an escape out of poverty, two cousins leave their hometown of Dakar, Senegal, to journey to Italy in search of a better life. Trekking across the hazards of the Sahara Desert and Mediterranean Ocean, the pair are met with sights and wonders beyond their wildest imaginations.

    Kung Fu Panda 4

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Po the panda watches in awe as a svelte silver fox leaps over him, holding some stolen treasures

    Image: DreamWorks Animation

    Genre: Martial arts comedy
    Run time: 1h 34m
    Director: Mike Mitchell
    Cast: Jack Black, Awkwafina, Bryan Cranston

    The fourth entry in the Kung Fu Panda saga sees Po taking on a new apprentice to succeed him as the Dragon Warrior. When a mysterious sorceress plots to resurrect Po’s past adversaries, he’ll need to call upon all his strength and allies to save the day.

    From our review:

    While the individual scenes and moments in Kung Fu Panda 4 are entertaining (and sometimes even great), it never quite gels as an enjoyable movie on its own. The message of change tying it together is flimsy, and the plot feels strung along, trying to get the characters in the right place to launch a few seconds of cool action. After four movies, it isn’t really a surprise that the Kung Fu Panda machine is running out of steam — thankfully, though, it has just enough power left to churn out some genuine laughs at the end.

    One Life

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Photo: Peter Mountain/Bleecker Street

    Genre: Biographical drama
    Run time: 1h 50m
    Director: James Hawes
    Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Helena Bonham Carter, Johnny Flynn

    Anthony Hopkins stars in a dramatization of the life of Sir Nicholas “Nicky” Winton, a London broker and humanitarian who rescued the lives of 669 Jewish children in the months leading up to World War II. Hopkins portrays Winton in his late ’70s, while actor-musician Johnny Flynn portrays him during his youth in the late 1930s.

    Sleeping Dogs

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A man wearing a hairnet holding a puzzle piece while staring at a glass table of puzzle pieces.

    Image: Nickel City Productions/The Avenue

    Genre: Crime thriller
    Run time: 1h 50m
    Director: Adam Cooper
    Cast: Russell Crowe, Karen Gillan, Marton Csokas

    After being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, retired homicide detective Roy Freeman (Russell Crowe) is motivated to reopen an investigation into the murder of a college professor when a mysterious new witness comes forward with a compelling piece of evidence. As he works to track down the true culprit, he’ll have to fight to convince those around him to trust his intuition and theories.

    Toussaint Egan

    Source link

  • Wish, Netflix’s Scoop, The Zone of Interest, and every new movie to watch this weekend

    Wish, Netflix’s Scoop, The Zone of Interest, and every new movie to watch this weekend

    Greetings, Polygon readers! Each week, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, Wish, the latest musical fantasy from Walt Disney Animation Studios and starring Ariana DeBose and Chris Pine, finally comes to Disney Plus. There’s a lot of other exciting new releases on streaming, including the biographical drama Scoop on Netflix, Jonathan Glazer’s Oscar-winning film The Zone of Interest on Max, the supernatural horror film Talk to Me on Paramount Plus, and more. There’s also plenty of other new movies available on VOD, like Baby Assassins 2 and The American Society of Magical Negroes.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Scoop

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Peter Mountain/Netflix

    Genre: Biographical drama
    Run time: 1h 43m
    Director: Philip Martin
    Cast: Gillian Anderson, Rufus Sewell, Billie Piper

    The latest film from director Philip Martin (The Crown) dramatizes the downfall of Prince Andrew in the wake of the infamous Newsnight interview following allegations of sexual assault. Things go from bad to worse when the prince’s connections to convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein are brought to light.

    New on Disney Plus

    Wish

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Disney Plus

    Asha giggles as she looks at the bright golden star

    Image: Disney

    Genre: Musical fantasy
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Directors: Chris Buck, Fawn Veerasunthorn
    Cast: Chris Pine, Ariana DeBose, Alan Tudyk

    This fantasy adventure film created to celebrate the Walt Disney Company’s 100th anniversary follows Asha (Ariana DeBose), a young girl living in an island kingdom ruled by a powerful sorcerer named Magnifico (Chris Pine). After making a wish one night, Asha befriends a living magical star that falls from the sky and agrees to help her achieve her heart’s greatest desire.

    From our review:

    The main problem with Wish is that the filmmakers lean so hard on Disney’s legacy and the nostalgic elements that they fail to actually add much new. Every single detail in Wish is a deliberate reminder of another movie that came before it — usually something better and more unique. That’s particularly true for all the characters, some of whom are literally just walking nods to previous Disney movies. They’re all vague ideas of what a Disney Character™ should be, from snarky talking goat Valentino (voiced by Wreck-It Ralph’s Alan Tudyk) to the heroine herself, without much to make them memorable.

    New on Hulu

    Lord of Misrule

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A man in a clown mask stands in front of a group of actors in elaborate costumes.

    Image: Riverstone Pictures/Bankside Films

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 44m
    Director: William Brent Ball
    Cast: Ralph Ineson, Tuppence Middleton, Alexa Goodall

    The director of the delightfully fun Orphan: First Kill is back with another movie, this time starring the inimitable Ralph Ineson (The Witch, The Green Knight). After a minister (Tuppence Middleton) moves to a village in the English countryside, her daughter goes missing ahead of the annual harvest festival. I have a feeling those villagers are up to something sinister!

    New on Max

    The Zone of Interest

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max

    Several people stand in a walled garden with the towers of Auschwitz behind them in The Zone of Interest

    Image: A24

    Genre: Historical drama
    Run time: 1h 46m
    Director: Jonathan Glazer
    Cast: Christian Friedel, Sandra Hüller, Johann Karthaus

    Based on the novel by Martin Amis, Jonathan Glazer’s latest film follows the story of Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel), the commandant of the Auschwitz concentration camp who chose to build his family home just outside the camp’s walls.

    From our review:

    The Zone of Interest may be the most powerful movie about complicity that’s ever been made, particularly about the Holocaust. The movie’s true warning isn’t that regular life can go on even amid atrocity, it’s that people are capable of pretending that atrocity isn’t happening. Glazer seems to suggest that people aren’t unaware of destructive historical events going on around them, but rather that they actively close their ears to it. The Höss family doesn’t drown out the camp, or begrudgingly ignore the roar of its furnaces or the gunshots from over the wall. They just keep going like it isn’t there at all. The effect of all their silence is one of the loudest and most unique views a film has ever taken on one of history’s most horrific atrocities.

    Metalocalypse: Army of the Doomstar

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max on April 6

    (L-R) Nathan Explosion, Skwisgaar Skwigelf, Toki Wartooth, Pickles, and William Murderface in Metalocalypse: Army of the Doomstar.

    Image: Warner Bros. Discovery/Adult Swim

    Genre: Apocalyptic musical comedy
    Run time: 1h 23m
    Director: Brendon Small
    Cast: Brendon Small, Tommy Blacha, Malcolm McDowell

    Metalocalypse creator Brendon Small returns with a feature-length finale to his satirical Adult Swim original series. With the evil Tribunal preparing to instigate the Metalocalypse, the members of Dethklok must work together to compose the song of salvation and save the day.

    From our review:

    “Epic” as a descriptor is thrown around too often as a hyperbolic compliment, but Metalocalypse: Army of the Doomstar rightfully warrants that description and then some. It’s a fitting final chapter in the long and outrageous saga of one of Adult Swim’s most surprising cult classics, and a rapturous encore dedicated to a passionate fan base who refused to let the series go quietly. The Metalocalypse may be over, but the music never dies.

    New on Prime Video

    Música

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    A man sit next to a woman, point his finger at something off-screen.

    Image: Amazon MGM Studios

    Genre: Coming-of-age rom-com
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Rudy Mancuso
    Cast: Rudy Mancuso, Camila Mendes, J.B. Smoove

    Internet personality turned writer-director Rudy Mancuso stars in his directorial debut as a fictionalized version of himself. Plagued by constant music in his head, Rudy struggles to navigate the challenges of life and love as he attempts to pursue a future marching to the beat of his own drum.

    New on Paramount Plus

    Talk to Me

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus w/ Showtime

    A teenage boy in a grey T-shirt and open flannel button-down shirt, his eyes entirely black and his face turned up to the ceiling sits at a table in front of a lit candle, gripping a plaster cast of a hand in A24’s Talk to Me

    Image: A24

    Genre: Supernatural horror
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Directors: Danny Philippou, Michael Philippou
    Cast: Sophie Wilde, Alexandra Jensen, Joe Bird

    Talk to Me follows a group of Australian teenagers who discover how to conjure the spirits of the dead using an embalmed hand. Naturally, they start filming themselves messing around with it, but when one of them holds on to the hand for too long in order to communicate with a lost loved one, they open a door to a world of horrors. Praised as one of the scariest movies of 2023, Talk to Me is the directorial debut of YouTubers Danny Philippou and Michael Philippou and already has a sequel in production.

    New on Peacock

    Night Swim

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Peacock

    A kid looks toward a pool skimmer, which we see from the skimmer’s perspective in Night Swim

    Image: Blumhouse/Universal

    Genre: Horror thriller
    Run time: 1h 38m
    Director: Bryce McGuire
    Cast: Wyatt Russell, Kerry Condon, Amélie Hoeferle

    Wyatt Russell (Monarch: Legacy of Monsters) stars in this supernatural horror film as a professional baseball player who, after being forced into retirement, moves into a luxurious new home with his wife and children. When a malevolent force emerges from the waters of the house’s backyard pool, the family is forced to face a horror beyond their deepest fears.

    From our review:

    All the strengths of its family story aside, it’s probably fair to want a little more horror out of a movie about a killer swimming pool. There are a few fun bits of pool horror in Night Swim, like seeing another world behind the flap of the skimmer or the spring of an empty diving board playing like a warning sign to run. Outside of its opening scene, though, Night Swim isn’t the scariest movie about hungry spirits and ancient gods. But hey, it’s January. Horror fans will take what we can get. Sometimes that just means a few good scares in an otherwise fascinating family movie about magic pools and baseball — which is more than enough to make Night Swim a worthy addition to the list of interesting, watchable January horror.

    New on Apple TV Plus

    Girls State

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Apple TV Plus

    Two girls seated on a couch and smiling.

    Image: Apple TV Plus

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Director: Jesse Moss

    Who runs the world? That was a rhetorical question, but what if the answer was girls? This documentary follows 500 adolescent girls from Missouri who come together to take part in an immersive weeklong experiment: creating a Supreme Court designed to take on the nation’s most contentious issues.

    New on Mubi

    How to Have Sex

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Mubi

    Mia McKenna-Bruce and Shaun Thomas, wearing skimpy white clothes, stand close and clink drinks in plastic tumblers in How to Have Sex

    Image: Mubi

    Genre: Coming-of-age drama
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Molly Manning Walker
    Cast: Mia McKenna-Bruce, Lara Peake, Samuel Bottomley

    One of the best movies of 2024 so far, How to Have Sex isn’t quite what its title suggests. Rather than a rowdy teen comedy, it’s a tender coming-of-age story. As Oli Welsh puts it in his write-up in our list of the best 2024 movies, “It’s a quietly devastating movie about bad formative experiences, but also beautiful in its empathy and kindness, and funny, too.”

    New to rent

    Baby Assassins 2

    Where to watch: Available to rent on YouTube, Apple, and Vudu

    Akari Takaishi and Saori Izawa hold pistols and take cover behind a pile of trashed car parts in Baby Assassins 2

    Image: Well Go USA Entertainment

    Genre: Action comedy
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: Yugo Sakamoto
    Cast: Akari Takaishi, Saori Izawa, Oto Abe

    The sequel to one of 2022’s most delightful movies, Baby Assassins 2 sees the two teenage assassin protagonists return with a new problem: They’re overdue on their gym payments, and there are two contractors gunning for their jobs and their lives.

    From our review:

    That action is designed by Kensuke Sonomura, one of the best action directors and fight choreographers working today. He also happens to have a long history designing action for video games, like Devil May Cry 4, Vanquish, 2020’s Resident Evil 3, and multiple Metal Gear Solid games. His style of choreography nimbly shifts to meet the needs of each project, but it always excels in its fluidity of motion, use of environments, and legibility of action. You will never be lost watching a Kensuke Sonomura fight scene.

    The American Society of Magical Negroes

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A man holding a pocket watch surrounded by men and women clapping and smiling.

    Photo: Tobin Yelland/Focus Features

    Genre: Fantasy rom-com
    Run time: 1h 45m
    Director: Kobi Libii
    Cast: Justice Smith, David Alan Grier, An-Li Bogan

    Kobi Libii’s directorial debut stars Justice Smith (Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves) as Aren, a young biracial artist who is recruited to join a clandestine group of magical Black people who secretly help white people in their mission to solve racism. You can probably guess about how well that goes.

    Snack Shack

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Two young men seated at a table eating a meal.

    Image: MRC Film/Republic Pictures

    Genre: Coming-of-age comedy
    Run time: 1h 52m
    Director: Adam Carter Rehmeier
    Cast: Conor Sherry, Gabriel LaBelle, Mika Abdalla

    Travel back to 1991 in this comedy that follows a pair of teenage boys who work at the snack shack of a local pool in Nebraska. When a new lifeguard shows up, both boys instantly fall for her, putting their friendship in question.

    Knox Goes Away

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A man wearing sunglasses stands in a darkened doorway.

    Image: FilmNation Entertainment/Saban Films

    Genre: Crime thriller
    Run time: 1h 54m
    Director: Michael Keaton
    Cast: Michael Keaton, Al Pacino, James Marsden

    Sixteen years ago, Michael Keaton made his directorial debut with The Merry Gentleman, about a hitman going through some hard times. Now he’s back with his second directed feature, also about a hitman going through some hard times. This time, the hitman is John Knox, a contract killer separated from his family who takes on one last job after a dementia diagnosis.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • Joys of retrogaming

    Joys of retrogaming

    My atari’s av-cable was beyond ******

    Joys of retrogaming. My atari's av-cable was beyond Bought a cheap multimeter and a new scart Went through every cable and pin to figure out which is which Same

    Bought a cheap multimeter and a new scart

    Joys of retrogaming. My atari's av-cable was beyond Bought a cheap multimeter and a new scart Went through every cable and pin to figure out which is which Same

    Went through every cable and pin to figure out which is which

    Joys of retrogaming. My atari's av-cable was beyond Bought a cheap multimeter and a new scart Went through every cable and pin to figure out which is which Same

    Same for scart. Added connectors

    Joys of retrogaming. My atari's av-cable was beyond Bought a cheap multimeter and a new scart Went through every cable and pin to figure out which is which Same

    Prayed to OSHA that I don’t cause a fire

    Joys of retrogaming. My atari's av-cable was beyond Bought a cheap multimeter and a new scart Went through every cable and pin to figure out which is which Same

    Success! Instead of paying some chump for a new cable I managed to spend even more money and repaired the old one myself

    There’ gotta be someone who gets off to this stuff.

    Source link

  • American Fiction, The Marvels, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    American Fiction, The Marvels, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend


    Greetings, Polygon readers! Each week, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, American Fiction, the Oscar-nominated comedy drama starring Westworld’s Jeffrey Wright, is available to purchase on VOD. That’s not all, as Jeymes Samuel’s The Book of Clarence starring LaKeith Stanfield and the ecological drama The End We Start From starring Jodie Comer (The Last Duel) also arrive on VOD this week, along with a few other exciting releases. There’s plenty of streaming premieres as well, with Nia DaCosta’s The Marvels finally arriving on Disney Plus following its VOD release last month. Down Low, a new comedy starring Zachary Quinto and Lukas Gage, is now streaming on Netflix, while the supernatural “Dracula on a boat” horror thriller The Last Voyage of the Demeter finally docks on Paramount Plus.


    New on Netflix

    Down Low

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: FilmNation Entertainment

    Genre: Comedy
    Run time: 1h 30m
    Director: Rightor Doyle
    Cast: Zachary Quinto, Lukas Gage, Judith Light

    In this dark comedy, Zachary Quinto (Star Trek) stars as Gary, a recently divorced and deeply closeted father who forms an unlikely friendship with young masseur (Lukas Gage). Determined to help him come out of his shell and embrace his sexuality openly, the masseur sets Gary up with a date on a hookup app, but things quickly take a turn when the two must work together to avoid going to jail for murder.

    New on Disney Plus

    The Marvels

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Disney Plus

    Iman Vellani as Ms. Marvel/Kamala Khan, Brie Larson as Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers, and Teyonah Parris as Captain Monica Rambeau stand together in costume, all looking up, in the Marvel Cinematic Universe movie The Marvels

    Photo: Laura Radford/Marvel Studios

    Genre: Superhero action
    Run time: 1h 45m
    Director: Nia DaCosta
    Cast: Brie Larson, Teyonah Parris, Iman Vellani

    The 33rd film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe sees the return of Carol Danvers (Brie Larson), also known as Captain Marvel. This time around, she’s teaming up with the superpowered Kamala Khan (Iman Vellani) and Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) to save the universe from the threat of a vengeful Kree leader bent on restoring her home world.

    From our review:

    In its best moments, The Marvels just throws wonderful ideas at the screen. There’s a planet of people who only sing, a space station full of cats that blithely devour furniture and humans alike, an animated depiction of Kamala’s internal monologue — the movie can feel like a mood board assembled by an overcaffeinated Star Trek fan, with a sense of imagination suitable for reminding the audience that comic books can be cool in the moment that you’re reading them, as opposed to for what they promise in the future.

    New on Hulu

    Cat Person

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Cat Person actors Nicholas Braun and Emilia Jones gazing into each others eyes under the yellow glow of a streetlight

    Image: Sundance Institute

    Genre: Psychological thriller
    Run time: 1h 58m
    Director: Susanna Fogel
    Cast: Emilia Jones, Nicholas Braun, Geraldine Viswanathan

    Based on Kristen Roupenian’s viral 2017 short story for The New Yorker, Cat Person follows the story of Margot, a college sophomore who enters into a brief relationship with an older man named Robert (Nicholas Braun). Things seem okay at first, until Margot begins to question whether or not Robert is telling the whole truth about his life.

    From our review,

    Cat Person gets it wrong so consistently, makes its points so inelegantly, and pads out the short story in such an ill-conceived way that it ends up invalidating the same concerns on which it’s built. When a cop tells the protagonist that she should stop watching murder shows, it’s not institutional indifference toward violence against women. It’s a voice of reason, as the protagonist’s own actions later prove. This is a film that includes both a therapist who appears to state the subtext as text, then vanishes, and a one-dimensional best friend of color who exists solely to drop feminist buzzwords from five years ago (Geraldine Viswanathan, who deserves better). It’s confident in its cluelessness, and not in a way that underlines that same quality in its 20-year-old heroine.

    Suncoast

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Genre: Coming-of-age drama
    Run time: 1h 49m
    Director: Laura Chinn
    Cast: Laura Linney, Nico Parker, Woody Harrelson

    This semi-autobiographical drama follows Doris (Nico Parker), a self-conscious teenager who strikes up an unlikely friendship with an older activist (Woody Harrelson) while caring for her dying brother and navigating the pitfalls of high school.

    New on Prime Video

    Upgraded

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Genre: Romantic comedy
    Run time: 1h 44m
    Director: Carlson Young
    Cast: Camila Mendes, Archie Renaux, Lena Olin

    I know what you’re thinking and no, this is not the sequel to Leigh Whannell’s cyberpunk action thriller starring Logan Marshall-Green. This is a romantic comedy starring Camila Mendes (Riverdale) and Archie Renaux (Shadow and Bone) as Ana and Will; two strangers who meet during a first class flight to London who strike up a romance after Will mistakes Ana for his new boss. I think these wacky kids are gonna make it!

    New on Paramount Plus

    The Last Voyage of the Demeter

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus w/ Showtime

    Dracula, looking like a hairless humanoid bat, stands atop a ship’s crows nest in a dark rainstorm, hoisting a poor man up above him.

    Image: Universal Pictures

    Genre: Period horror
    Run time: 1h 58m
    Director: André Øvredal
    Cast: Corey Hawkins, Aisling Franciosi, David Dastmalchian

    Dracula’s on a boat, and guess what? He’s PISSED. This supernatural horror thriller adapts a chapter from Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel and centers on the unfortunate crew of a transatlantic merchant ship who discover an unearthly threat among their cargo. As time dwindles away, and with it their chances of survival, the crew must make a last-ditch effort to kill the creature before they reach England.

    From our review,

    The Last Voyage of the Demeter makes very little of most of its potential assets. It’s a film with no vision, a puzzling adaptation that’s so straightforward, viewers might believe every beat comes from Stoker’s novel and not a screenplay imagining what happened between the pages. Maybe the two decades the film spent in development, being rewritten and recast, are to blame; every colorful choice seems to have been wrung out of the script. At every moment, there’s potential for Demeter to become something distinct and interesting, but the screenplay and Øvredal’s direction choose otherwise, embracing straightforward competence over any style or flair. It’s dry historical fiction, Horatio Hornblower’s Dracula.

    New to rent

    American Fiction

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Jeffrey Wright in a blue shirt sits in his library giggling in the movie American Fiction

    Image: MGM/Amazon Studios

    Genre: Comedy-drama
    Run time: 1h 57m
    Director: Cord Jefferson
    Cast: Jeffrey Wright, Tracee Ellis Ross, Sterling K. Brown

    The Oscar-nominated debut from Cord Jefferson stars Jeffrey Wright (The Batman) as Thelonious “Monk” Ellison, a frustrated novelist living in Los Angeles who writes a scathing satire of stereotypical “Black” books, only for it to be sky-rocketed to the prestigious heights of literary acclaim. Feels like a shoe-in for fans of such movies as Putney Swope and Bamboozled.

    The Book of Clarence

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Image: Legendary Entertainment/Moris Puccio

    Genre: Historical comedy
    Run time: 2h 9m
    Director: Jeymes Samuel
    Cast: LaKeith Stanfield, Omar Sy, RJ Cyler, Anna Diop

    Jeymes Samuel (The Harder They Fall) returns with a new film, this time a biblical comedy drama starring LaKeith Stanfield. The Book of Clarence follows the story of a down-on-his-luck man living in A.D. 33 Jerusalem who aspires to free himself from debt. His plan? Take a page out of the book of a local preacher claiming to be the son of God and proclaim himself as the Messiah, performing “miracles” in a bid for fame and glory. When Clarence’s schemes run afoul of the Romans, he’ll be faced with not only the consequences of his deception, but a choice that will shape his life and the course of history.

    The End We Start From

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A woman holding a child in a bear-themed hoodie in her arms.

    Image: Sunny/March Hera Pictures

    Genre: Post-apocalyptic thriller
    Run time: 1h 42m
    Director: Mahalia Belo
    Cast: Ramanique Ahluwalia, Elena Bielova, Shiona Brown

    Jodie Comer (The Last Duel) stars in this new thriller as a woman attempting to protect her infant child after London is submerged by flood waters. With nowhere else to turn, she will have to embark on a search for a way to raise her child and build a new home.

    Cobweb

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A man wearing glasses in a trench coat gestures with his hands and stands next to a young man holding a camera

    Image: Anthology Studios/Samuel Goldwyn Films

    Genre: Black comedy drama
    Run time: 2h 15m
    Director: Kim Jee-woon
    Cast: Song Kang-ho, Im Soo-jung, Oh Jung-se

    Song Kang-ho (Parasite) stars in this period black comedy as Kim Ki-yeol, an obsessive director in the 1970s on the verge of completing his latest film, Cobweb. There’s just one problem: Kim’s suddenly has a change of heart and wants to completely reshoot the ending of his film in two days. He’ll have to get his confused and uncooperative cast and crew to cooperate, as well as escape the ire of Seoul’s censorship authorities.

    I.S.S.

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A group of astronauts gaze at the earth from a cockpit in the international space station.

    Image: LD Entertainment

    Genre: Sci-fi thriller
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Director: Gabriela Cowperthwaite
    Cast: Ariana DeBose, Chris Messina, John Gallagher Jr.

    Imagine if you were an astronaut aboard the International Space Station during an apocalyptic event where the world is consumed in nuclear hellfire — what would you do? That’s what the characters in this bracing sci-fi thriller have to figure out, as a crew of American and Russian astronauts must decide whether to cooperate in the face of extinction or surrender to their nationalistic anxieties and resentment.



    Toussaint Egan

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  • Wonka, The Beekeeper, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Wonka, The Beekeeper, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend


    Greetings, Polygon readers! Each week, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home. So quiet up and listen down; no, scratch that, reverse it!

    This week, Wonka, the musical fantasy starring Timothée Chalamet as the irrepressibly whimsical chocolatier, is finally available to stream on VOD. There’s other exciting new releases available to rent as well, like David Ayer’s latest action thriller The Beekeeper starring Jason Statham and Makoto Shinkai’s fantasy romance anime Suzume. There are a ton of other new movies on streaming to watch as well, like Orion and the Dark on Netflix, Freelance on Hulu, Past Lives on Paramount Plus with Showtime, and more!

    Here’s everything new to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Orion and the Dark

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: DreamWorks Animation

    Genre: Fantasy comedy
    Run time: 1h 30m
    Director: Sean Charmatz
    Cast: Jacob Tremblay, Paul Walter Hauser, Angela Bassett

    Written by cerebral screenwriter-director Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich) and based on the children’s book by Emma Yarlett, this animated fantasy adventure follows the story of a child with an overactive imagination and a constant fear of the future who is befriended by the anthropomorphic personification of darkness. Together, the pair embark on an adventure to conquer Orion’s fear of the unknown and embrace the many wonders the world has to offer.

    From our review,

    By the end, Orion and the Dark has boldly transformed into a delightfully eccentric story, taking on even more metatextual layers. But it never loses its heart: It’s still a bedtime story, a parent and child working together to assemble an ending that satisfies the both of them. Their voices combine in a convincing way, with zany, kid-fueled ideas on one hand, and the careful guiding hand of an adult on the other. But child and parent both learn something from the other, and that turns Orion and the Dark from a simple fairy tale into a beautifully bizarre ride, and finally into a movie with a message that hits deeply for both adults and kids.

    The Greatest Night in Pop

    Lionel Richie and Quincy Jones looking at sheet for music for “We Are the World” in The Greatest Night in Pop documentary

    Image: Netflix

    Genre: Music documentary
    Run time: 1h 36m
    Director: Bao Nguyen
    Cast: The biggest music stars of the 1980s

    A behind-the-scenes doc of the making of one of the most popular singles of all-time, The Greatest Night in Pop takes you behind the scenes of the star-studded lineup that recorded “We Are the World.”

    From our review out of Sundance:

    It doesn’t quite reach the heights of documentary classics, falling short of the insight into the tortured circumstances and frustrated production of Original Cast Album: Company, or the pure musical excellence of Monterey Pop. But there’s something special about seeing these stars mingle that makes this movie a fascinating document on fame and the people behind it.

    Shortcomings

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    A man and a woman with glasses lean against a railing opposite a sidewalk with a visible look of concern on their faces.

    Image: Sony Picture Classics

    Genre: Romance comedy
    Run time: 1h 32m
    Director: Randall Park
    Cast: Justin H. Min, Sherry Cola, Ally Maki

    Justin H. Min (The Umbrella Academy) stars in this new comedy from actor-director Randall Park (WandaVision). Shortcomings follows the misadventures of Ben, a struggling filmmaker living in Los Angeles. When his girlfriend, Miko, moves to New York for an internship, Ben is forced to assess his lifestyle choices up to this point in order to learn to grow as both a romantic partner and a person.

    New on Prime Video

    Fist of the Condor

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Marko Zaror looks cool as hell on a motorcycle, wearing a leather jacket and with goggles on top of his head, in Fist of the Condor, with the ocean behind him.

    Image: Well Go USA Entertainment

    Genre: Martial arts drama
    Run time: 1h 20m
    Director: Ernesto Díaz Espinoza
    Cast: Marko Zaror, Eyal Meyer, Gina Aguad

    One of my (Ed. note: PV) very favorite action movies of a stacked 2023, Fist of the Condor is at once a throwback to the Shaw Brothers era of old school Hong Kong martial arts filmmaking, and a new exciting step for Chilean martial arts cinema.

    From our review:

    At the end of the day, Fist of the Condor is the Marko Zaror show. And boy, does he deliver. The movie is at its best when it is a series of jaw-dropping fights, one after another, leaning on his incredible star power. As an actor, Zaror brings life and deep pain to the star-crossed brothers, and as a fighter and acrobat, he is unmatched. He seems to be able to alternate from raw animalistic movements to robotic, hypnotic defense (he calls it an “electrical impulse” in the movie) and balletic, gravity-defying spinning kicks that are simply poetry in motion.

    New on Hulu

    Freelance

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    (L-R) John Cena, Juan Pablo Raba, and Alison Brie in Freelance.

    Image: Relativity Media

    Genre: Action comedy
    Run time: 1h 48m
    Director: Pierre Morel
    Cast: John Cena, Alison Brie, Juan Pablo Raba

    Taken director Pierre Morel moves to a more comedic mode in this movie about a former Special Forces officer (John Cena) and a journalist (Alison Brie) who travel to a fictional country together to interview the nation’s dictator.

    New on Max

    Dicks: The Musical

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max

    (L-R) Josh Sharp, Bowen Yang, and Aaron Jackson in Dicks: The Musical.

    Image: A24

    Genre: Musical comedy
    Run time: 1h 26m
    Director: Larry Charles
    Cast: Josh Sharp, Aaron Jackson, Nathan Lane

    This musical comedy follows two longtime business rivals who inadvertently discover they are identical twin brothers separated at birth. Concocting a scheme to get their divorced parents back together, they switch places in order to orchestrate a reunion. Think The Parent Trap, but with more musical numbers, dick jokes, and Megan Thee Stallion.

    From our review:

    Dicks takes shots at different kinds of modern movies early on, starting with other A24 movies. A24’s logo is accompanied by grandiose music, and its signature elevated horror threatens to become a tongue-in-cheek thematic inspiration when Trevor and Craig wonder whether their predicament meets the qualifications for abuse and trauma. The film’s New York-set, American Psycho-esque corporate saga is clearly filmed in Los Angeles, with the seams of several sets and stages showing in the margins, while the stock footage it uses of NYC is all distinctly anachronistic.

    New on Paramount Plus

    Past Lives

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus w/ Showtime

    Nora and Hae Sung sit on a ferry, going to the Statue of Liberty.

    Photo: Jon Pack/A24

    Genre: Romantic drama
    Run time: 1h 46m
    Director: Celine Song
    Cast: Greta Lee, Teo Yoo, John Magaro

    Greta Lee (Sisters) and Teo Yoo (Decision to Leave) star in director Celine Song’s romantic drama debut as Nora and Hae-sung, two childhood friends who are seperated when the former emigrates from South Korea to Toronto with her family.

    Reunited 12 years later, the pair find themselves unmistakably drawn together. As their respective lives and obligations pull them further and farther apart, Nora and Hae-sung must confront their feelings about the life they might have shared together had their past choices been different, and what to do with those feelings now in the present.

    Song spoke with Polygon about how the film is all about “the way that life reflects upon itself,” as well as her brief foray into The Sims 4 theater production.

    Kokomo City

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus w/ Showtime

    A woman dressed in a headwrap and t-shirt with long nails stares up at a camera in Kokomo City.

    Image: Magnolia Pictures

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 13m
    Director: D. Smith
    Cast: Daniella Carter, Koko Da Doll, Liyah Mitchell

    The first film from Grammy-nominated producer D. Smith follows the stories of four transgender sex workers living in New York and Georgia. Shot in black and white, the film offers insight into the embattled nature of not only their profession, but the cultural fault lines of gender and identity that intersect with their daily lives.

    The Tiger’s Apprentice

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus

    An animated black-striped tiger, a monkey sitting on the head of a serpent-like dragon, and a young boy in a yellow hoodie talking to one another.

    Image: Paramount Pictures/Paramount Plus

    Genre: Action adventure
    Run time: 1h 24m
    Directors: Raman Hui, Yong Duk Jhun, Paul Watling
    Cast: Henry Golding, Brandon Soo Hoo, Lucy Liu

    Based on Laurence Yep’s 2003 novel, this action fantasy movie follows the story of Tom (Brandon Soo Hoo), a Chinese American boy living in Los Angeles who inherits the responsibility of acting as the guardian of an ancient phoenix after the passing of his grandmother. Aided by a talking tiger named Mr. Hu (Henry Golding), Tom must learn to harness his new powers in order to prevent the phoenix from falling into the wrong hands.

    New on Shudder

    Dario Argento: Panico

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder

    Dario Argento standing in a hallway with his hands pressed against the walls in Dario Argento: Panico

    Image: Shudder

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 38m
    Director: Simone Scafidi
    Cast: Dario Argento, Fiore Argento, Vittorio Cecchi Gori

    This documentary unpacks the storied 58-plus-year career of Dario Argento, one of the most prolific directors behind Italian “giallo” horror and the acclaimed mind behind such films as Suspiria and Tenebrae. Featuring guest appearances from the likes of Guillermo del Toro, Nicolas Winding Refn, and Gaspar Noé, Panico also follows Argento as he writes the script for a new horror film.

    New on Tubi

    Sri Asih

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Tubi

    Sri Asih, a young woman in a superhero outfit, raises her fists up to fight in Sri Asih

    Image: Premiere Entertainment Group

    Genre: Superhero action
    Run time: 2h 15m
    Director: Upi Avianto
    Cast: Pevita Pearce, Ario Bayu, Christine Hakim

    The second entry in Indonesia’s Bumilangit Cinematic Universe, adapting comic book stories, is finally more widely available to watch in the US. The first, Gundala, was a very fun time, and director Joko Anwar returns as co-writer on this entry, which follows a young woman who learns she is the reincarnation of a goddess.

    New to rent

    The Beekeeper

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Jason Statham furrows his brow in The Beekeeper

    Image: Amazon MGM Studios

    Genre: Action thriller
    Run time: 1h 45m
    Director: David Ayer
    Cast: Jason Statham, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Bobby Naderi

    Jason Statham stars in David Ayer’s latest action film as Adam Clay, a retired “Beekeeper” (see: black ops secret agent) working as an actual beekeeper in Massachusetts. When Adam’s kindly employer loses her entire life savings to a nefarious phishing operation, he embarks on a one-man mission to avenge her and bring justice to those who wronged her.

    From our review:

    Statham is his reliable self, mixing his effortless gruff charm with his comedy chops to help sell the ridiculous lines he has to deliver. And the movie looks great — Ayer and cinematographer Gabriel Beristain cleverly infuse the visuals with a yellow/amber color palette to match the title and the vibe, often making you feel like you’re watching the movie from inside a honeycomb.

    Suzume

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Suzume, in a school uniform, eating fruit on the side of a rural road with Chika, in a gym uniform.

    Image: CoMix Wave Films/Crunchyroll

    Genre: Coming-of-age fantasy adventure
    Run time: 2h 2m
    Director: Makoto Shinkai
    Cast: Nanoka Hara, Hokuto Matsumura, Eri Fukatsu

    Makoto Shinkai (Your Name, Weathering with You) is back with another animated fantasy romance adventure about young people struggling with supernatural forces and the general ennui of youth. When high school student Suzume crosses paths with Souta Munakata, a mysterious wanderer on a quest to seal a series of magical doors around Japan to avert disaster, she joins him on his quest in an effort to save her home.

    Also, Souta is transformed into a sentient chair by a malevolent cat. It’s complicated.

    From our review:

    Suzume is about processing trauma and finally learning to live. Even after the movie’s turning point, Suzume is still recklessly throwing herself into danger to save others. Like Your Name and Weathering With You, Shinkai’s latest sees its young heroes racing against time to stop an impending disaster. But some key differences in Suzume make the final act cinch together in a way that soars above the previous two movies. Suzume has a personal connection to the looming catastrophe, one that snugly wraps around her entire character journey. The event itself feels vast and all-encompassing, but because the movie focuses on her instead of on the action, it gives the payoff more emotional impact. And when Suzume steps up to fight her battles, it’s less about making a dramatic choice or defying all odds. She simply reframes what she’s trying to do in a way that feels more personal than most action heroes’ journeys. She doesn’t want to give her life to save the world; she just wants to stay in it.

    Wonka

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Three evil candymakers regard Wonka’s chocolates with disdain in the movie Wonka.

    Image: Warner Bros. Pictures

    Genre: Musical fantasy
    Run time: 1h 56m
    Director: Paul King
    Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Calah Lane, Keegan-Michael Key

    Timothée Chalamet (Dune: Part One) stars in this new musical prequel to Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory as everyone’s soon-to-be-favorite chocolatier, now simply an aspiring magician looking to break into the candy business. He’ll have to find a way to overcome the nefarious chocolate cartel and build a factory of his own if he’ll any hope of achieving his dream, though.

    From our review:

    Normally, I consider it unfair to compare two movies like this, but as I said, I’m a huge fan. Yet more importantly, Wonka directly invokes the previous film in ways big and small, going so far as to have Chalamet’s version of the character speak in the same diction as Wilder’s, complete with a “Scratch that, reverse it” line. As this is a story about a young Willy Wonka, the film must leave a little room to get from here to there, so Chalamet is granted the space to make the character his own. But this is a version of Willy that’s too sanded-down, too approachable to be truly memorable.



    Toussaint Egan

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  • Netflix’s The Kitchen, The Marvels, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Netflix’s The Kitchen, The Marvels, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Greetings, Polygon readers! Each week, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, The Marvels, the latest movie installment in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, is finally available to purchase on VOD. That’s not all, though, as Taika Waititi’s sports comedy Next Goal Wins is also available to purchase, along with several other new releases available to rent. The Kitchen, Daniel Kaluuya’s directorial debut set in a dystopian London, is streaming on Netflix along with Dumb Money, the comedy-drama based on the GameStop short squeeze of 2021. That’s not even mentioning all the other streaming releases on Hulu, Mubi, and AMC Plus this week!

    Here’s everything new to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Dumb Money

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Photo: Claire Folger/Sony Pictures

    Genre: Biographical comedy-drama
    Run time: 1h 45m
    Director: Craig Gillespie
    Cast: Paul Dano, Pete Davidson, Vincent D’Onofrio

    Remember the GameStop short squeeze of 2021? No? That’s OK — admittedly, it was a very hectic and wild time, what with the whole… everything going on. In case you’re looking for a refresher, this movie about a middle-class financial analyst who struck big during the squeeze might be just what you’re looking for.

    From our review:

    Where The Big Short was patronizing but still hugely entertaining and legitimately informative, Dumb Money’s creators seem uninterested in explaining what the hell happened with the GameStop scenario, or how the hell it happened. The script assumes that the audience is either already familiar with the story, or doesn’t much care about the financial specifics and just wants to see the news reenacted by people they know. Most of the jargon goes unexplained, and the series of events that facilitated the saga is just shrugged off in favor of a simplistic “isn’t this crazy?!” tone.

    The Kitchen

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    (L-R) A man in a black tracksuit (Kane Robinson) atop a futuristic motorcycle stands in front of a young boy in a white hoodie (Jedaiah Bannerman) and black pants in The Kitchen.

    Photo: Chris Harris/Netflix

    Genre: Sci-fi drama
    Run time: 1h 47m
    Directors: Daniel Kaluuya, Kibwe Tavares
    Cast: Kano, Jedaiah Bannerman, Hope Ikpoku Jr

    Daniel Kaluuya (Get Out, Black Panther) teams up with filmmaker Kibwe Tavares for his directorial debut: a sci-fi drama set in a dystopian London where social housing has been eliminated. The film follows the story of Izi and Benji, a father and son who fight to survive as an impoverished community is besieged by state-sponsored violence.

    New on Hulu

    Invisible Beauty

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Bethann Hardison in an archival photo featured in Invisible Beauty.

    Photo: Magnolia Pictures

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 55m
    Directors: Bethann Hardison, Frédéric Tcheng
    Cast: Tyson Beckford, Stephen Burrows, Naomi Campbell

    This documentary chronicles the life and impact of Bethann Hardison, a pioneering model and activist who fought for racial diversity in the fashion industry.

    New on AMC Plus

    The Origin of Evil

    Where to watch: Available to stream on AMC Plus

    (L-R, Top to Bottom) Laure Calamy, center, with, clockwise from left, Céleste Brunnquell, Dominique Blanc, Jacques Weber, Doria Tillier and Véronique Ruggia Saura in “The Origin of Evil.”Credit... Laurent Champoussin/IFC Films

    Photo: Laurent Champoussin/IFC Films

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 2h 3m
    Director: Sébastien Marnier
    Cast: Laure Calamy, Doria Tillier, Dominique Blanc

    A twisty French thriller about a woman trying to reconnect with a rich family she claims she’s a part of, The Origin of Evil was a late addition to our list of the best movies of 2023.

    As my colleague Tasha Robinson put it in her write-up there:

    Unpacking every lie and scheme in this movie takes every minute of its run time, and it’s guaranteed that audience sympathies will shift half a dozen times in the process. As a crime story, it’s a gem; as a character story, it’s even better.

    New on Mubi

    Fallen Leaves

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Mubi

     Alma Pöysti and Jussi Vatanen sitting in a theater in Fallen Leaves.

    Image: MUBI

    Genre: Romantic comedy-drama
    Run time: 1h 21m
    Director: Aki Kaurismäki
    Cast: Alma Pöysti, Jussi Vatanen, Janne Hyytiäinen

    This romantic drama follows the story of Ansa (Alma Pöysti) and Holappa (Jussi Vatanen), two lonely single people who meet by chance in a karaoke bar in Helsinki. Overcoming multiple mishaps and their own insular idiosyncrasies, the two strike up an awkward yet endearing courtship.

    New to rent or purchase

    The Marvels

    Where to watch: Available to purchase on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Iman Vellani as Ms. Marvel/Kamala Khan, Brie Larson as Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers, and Teyonah Parris as Captain Monica Rambeau stand together in costume, all looking up, in the Marvel Cinematic Universe movie The Marvels

    Photo: Laura Radford/Marvel Studios

    Genre: Superhero action
    Run time: 1h 45m
    Director: Nia DaCosta
    Cast: Brie Larson, Teyonah Parris, Iman Vellani

    The 33rd film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe sees the return of Carol Danvers (Brie Larson), also known as Captain Marvel. This time around, she’s teaming up with the superpowered Kamala Khan (Iman Vellani) and Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) to save the universe from the threat of a vengeful Kree leader bent on restoring her home world.

    From our review:

    In its best moments, The Marvels just throws wonderful ideas at the screen. There’s a planet of people who only sing, a space station full of cats that blithely devour furniture and humans alike, an animated depiction of Kamala’s internal monologue — the movie can feel like a mood board assembled by an overcaffeinated Star Trek fan, with a sense of imagination suitable for reminding the audience that comic books can be cool in the moment that you’re reading them, as opposed to for what they promise in the future.

    The Boys in the Boat

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Genre: Sports biopic
    Run time: 2h 3m
    Director: George Clooney
    Cast: Joel Edgerton, Callum Turner, Jack Mulhern

    When I think of the 1936 Summer Olympics, I think of Jesse Owens and the incredible things he accomplished in the sprint and long jump events in front of a German crowd passionately rooting against him. But another group of Americans also made history while vying for Olympic glory — the University of Washington rowing team, a group of working-class athletes whose story is told in George Clooney’s latest directorial effort.

    The Color Purple

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    (L-R) Taraji P. Henson, Fantasia Barrino, and Danielle Brooks, in “The Color Purple.”

    Image: Warner Bros Pictures

    Genre: Coming-of-age musical
    Run time: 2h 21m
    Director: Blitz Bazawule
    Cast: Taraji P. Henson, Danielle Brooks, Colman Domingo

    Based on Alice Walker’s 1982 novel, this musical adaptation follows the story of Celie (Fantasia Barrino), a woman in an abusive marriage torn from her sister and children, who finds strength through her friendship with Shug Avery (Taraji P. Henson), a singer with an indomitable spirit.

    Next Goal Wins

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Ace (David Fane) holding a whiteboard while coach Thomas Rongen (Michael Fassbender) lectures his team off-screen in Next Goal Wins.

    Image: Searchlight Pictures

    Genre: Sports comedy-drama
    Run time: 1h 44m
    Director: Taika Waititi
    Cast: Michael Fassbender, Oscar Kightley, Kaimana

    Michael Fassbender (The Killer) stars in Taika Waititi’s sports movie based on the real-life American Samoa national football team and their qualification attempt for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. Fassbender portrays Thomas Rongen, the Dutch American coach who agrees to help shape the once notoriously bad team into a competitive qualifier.

    From our review:

    Next Goal Wins fails to properly capture what made the story of the American Samoa national football team so compelling, by attempting to make a film so universal that it discards the sport itself as unimportant. Which it might be in terms of letting the audience relate to the team as individuals. But it’s such a cookie-cutter underdog story that it rarely moves past the most superficial “Care because this movie says you need to care” level.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • The Legend of Zelda games, ranked

    The Legend of Zelda games, ranked

    Throughout 2023, in honor of the magnificent Tears of the Kingdom, Polygon has been celebrating Nintendo’s Legend of Zelda series. It’s been fascinating. Perhaps no other video game series is so rewarding to revisit, or presents such wildly different, refracted visions of its core idea — which nevertheless remains consistent throughout.

    Created by the great Shigeru Miyamoto in the 1980s as an expression of his childhood love of exploring without a map, Zelda has always held a revered position in gaming culture, although it never quite enjoyed popular success to match — not, that is, until its unlikely rebirth in 2017, thanks to the runaway success of the Nintendo Switch and the revolutionary design of Breath of the Wild.

    The series’ strong traditions are balanced by an ingrained habit of hitting the reset button. Across 16 mainline entries, only a small handful (Majora’s Mask, Phantom Hourglass, Tears of the Kingdom) are true sequels, and even these delight in reinvention. The Zelda timeline is more a tangle of rumor and myth than an established canon, and its lore is constantly rewritten.

    Ranking these brilliant, shapeshifting games is, in some ways, an absurd task. They’re all great (well, perhaps all but one); the top seven or so are masterpieces that could be arranged in just about any order. But it’s an interesting exercise in exploring a series of games that exist in a unique, echoing conversation with each other. In putting this ranking together, we paid at least as much attention to how fun the games are to play now as to their historical import.

    A few points of order: Though they’re technically part of the main Zelda canon, we have excluded the multiplayer games Four Swords, Four Swords Adventures, and Tri Force Heroes. They’re difficult to play as their makers intended now, and honestly feel more like spinoffs (though Four Swords Adventures, in particular, absolutely rules). Oracle of Seasons and Oracle of Ages, which were released as a pair, Pokémon-style, are counted as a single entry. And actual spinoffs like Link’s Crossbow Training or Freshly-Picked Tingle’s Rosy Rupeeland are also excluded. The Zelda series is gloriously weird — but maybe not that weird.


    16. Zelda 2: The Adventure of Link

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 1987, on NES
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch Online

    If the original The Legend of Zelda is the series at its most youthful, exuberant, and promising, Zelda 2: The Adventure of Link represents the games’ awkward teen years. Fittingly, the Link we play in Zelda 2 is 16 years old, fumbling his way through new gameplay territory, as Nintendo explores the lite role-playing mechanics from a side-scrolling perspective. Spread across overworld segments of dangerous exploration and equally harrowing side-scrolling dungeon crawling, Zelda 2 is a more challenging, more obtuse style of adventure.

    Long considered the black sheep of the Legend of Zelda games, The Adventure of Link was a harder, clumsier experiment for Nintendo. It was envisioned as an action game infused with role-playing game stats, and the end result feels like Nintendo’s designers copying others’ work (e.g., Dragon Quest, Kung-Fu Master) instead of flexing the company’s trademark originality. Zelda 2 is not a failed experiment, however. Nintendo clearly learned the right lessons from it, as well as influencing other games, including Castlevania 2: Simon’s Quest, Faxanadu, and Shovel Knight. Even the worst Zelda games have their importance. —Michael McWhertor

    15. Phantom Hourglass

    A young, cartoony Link and a suspicious looking pirate guy, holding a map, stand in front of artwork depicting a spooky ship

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2007, on Nintendo DS
    Where to play now: Unavailable — track down a used copy

    The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass represents a somewhat awkward era of Zelda. As a direct sequel to The Wind Waker, it had big shoes to fill, and wore them a little clumsily. Phantom Hourglass was the first mainline Zelda game to be released on the Nintendo DS family of handhelds and the first Zelda game to take advantage of the console’s touch controls. Overall, the controls fit in nicely with the Zelda formula and allow players to scribble on dungeon maps and tap to fight. However, the game suffers from uneven pacing while traveling on your customizable steamboat ship, or revisiting the Temple of the Ocean King, a dungeon that requires you to come back to it multiple times. Still, I’ll remember it for its willingness to try new gameplay and test the Zelda waters. —Ana Diaz

    14. Twilight Princess

    Artwork showing Link’s head and that of a fierce wolf divided by a diagonal line with a Triforce logo in the center

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2006, on GameCube and Wii
    Where to play now: Unavailable — track down a used copy of Twilight Princess HD for Wii U

    Link spends a pretty big chunk of time in wolf form in Twilight Princess, which you’d think would be a selling point (because he looks so darn cute), but it’s actually pretty weird. After all, Link can’t do all of the best parts of being Link when he’s a wolf: throwing a boomerang, say, or twirling his sword around in a circle while shouting “Hiyah!” Twilight Princess also introduces Midna, a helper character in the vein of Navi, but a lot more condescending. I find Midna’s snarky comments to be deeply satisfying, and the conclusion of her arc at the game’s end feels more fulfilling than most of Princess Zelda’s arcs. The Legend of Zelda series does not always allow its female side characters to have much to do, but by the end of Twilight Princess, it’s actually more Midna’s story than anyone else’s. —Maddy Myers

    13. Oracle of Ages / Oracle of Seasons

    A pixelated image of Link looking determined on horseback in Zelda: Oracle of Seasons

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2001, on Game Boy Color
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch Online

    In 2001, Nintendo lent the proverbial Zelda keys to Capcom. As it turns out, Capcom didn’t need them: It kicked down the door to one of gaming’s most hallowed series and made itself right at home. Billed as a double feature focused on time- and season-based puzzles, respectively, Oracle of Ages and Oracle of Seasons are tight and sophisticated enough to have emerged from the offices of Nintendo itself. (Series creator Shigeru Miyamoto had big-picture production input, to be fair.)

    Ages’ time-traveling puzzles are among the finest in the 2D Zelda pantheon, and Seasons’ more action-oriented approach makes it a fresh entry in the otherwise “left-brained” franchise. Director Hidemaro Fujibayashi would go on to direct a handful of later Zelda games (The Minish Cap, Skyward Sword, and — checks notes — Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom among them), but as far as “classic” Zelda goes, few entries capture the series on a grand scale like Capcom’s dark horse two-parter. —Mike Mahardy

    12. Spirit Tracks

    A young looking Link and Zelda ride a steam train through a grassy landscape with a tower in the background in Zelda: Spirit Tracks

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2009, on Nintendo DS
    Where to play now: Unavailable — track down a used copy

    As follow-ups in this endlessly changeable series go, Spirit Tracks has one of the most straightforward, cut-and-paste premises: it’s Phantom Hourglass but with a train instead of a boat. Like its immediate predecessor, it leans hard on stylus control, course-plotting map traversal, and a style of adventure that’s breezily approachable until it suddenly isn’t, in the grim, stealthy, piecemeal ascent of its central tower dungeon.

    If Spirit Tracks ultimately surpasses Phantom Hourglass, it’s because of its sheer, ebullient charm. The appeal of its steam-train playset is irresistable, and this is also the only game in the series in which Link and Zelda — the latter admittedly in ghost form — get to hang out for the whole thing. Zelda even gets to be semi-playable, by possessing clanking suits of armor, while the pair have an adorable, innocent chemistry. Choo choo! —Oli Welsh

    11. The Legend of Zelda

    A hand drawing of Link kneeling and looking down on a wild landscape with the sun setting behind mountains

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 1986, on NES
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch Online

    It’s the rare game that impresses me more with each passing year. But as trends come and go, genres flourish and stagnate, and open worlds continue to distance themselves from their late-2010s growing pains, The Legend of Zelda continually grows in my estimation. It’s opaque by today’s standards, replete as it is with hidden doorways and labyrinthine shifts from one screen to another. And given the choice, it’s fairly far down the list of “fun” Zelda games. But it stands as a progenitor of most of today’s best games, open-world or otherwise, and it took Nintendo 31 years to circle back to its elegant conceit of a sprawling, mysterious world worth exploring in Breath of the Wild. —M. Mahardy

    10. Skyward Sword

    Artwork of Link holding the Master Sword aloft in Zelda: Skyward Sword

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2011, on Nintendo Wii
    Where to play now: Skyward Sword HD on Nintendo Switch

    It’s time to reclaim perhaps the most consistently underrated game in the Legend of Zelda series. There are reasons Skyward Sword’s reputation has suffered. First, its original motion controls, while well implemented, are just not how anyone wants to play an epic adventure like this. Second, it has a ridiculously overwrought climax worthy of a Hideo Kojima game. Third, it arrived at just the point when the Zelda games’ Ocarina of Time-inspired design was starting to show its age.

    Skyward Sword ended up being a swan song for that era of Zelda — but what a swan song. It’s a dense and satisfying game, expertly designed, with intricate, cleverly conceived dungeons that rank alongside the very best in the series’ history. And it also has a soaring, romantic spirit. Skyward Sword is perhaps the purest expression of Zelda’s high-fantasy aesthetic — and the only time the series fully owned up to being a love story. —OW

    9. A Link Between Worlds

    Link faces Hyrule castle across a lake. Reflected in the lake surfaces is a dark version of the castle

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2013, on Nintendo 3DS
    Where to play now: Boxed 3DS edition is still in print

    I always found A Link Between Worlds to be a special game because of the way it iterates on the classic Zelda theme of traversing parallel worlds. Instead of using a mirror to flip between worlds, this game allows Link to transform into a 2D painting, in which form he can walk along walls and into the glittering crevices of Hyrule and its counterpart, Lorule.

    For me, Lorule is one of the more interesting versions of Zelda’s classic Dark World. It isn’t just a barren wasteland filled with monsters; it’s also the home of kind and heroic people who want a better way of life. The game plays well, with perhaps the best-integrated touch controls in a Zelda game. On top of all that, it features an unconventional weapon rental system that allows you to explore wherever you want early on. The game’s title nods to the revered A Link to the Past, and it certainly doesn’t fail to live up to its namesake. —AD

    8. The Minish Cap

    Link, wearing a hat that is also a bird, and holding a sword, turns to face a threat. Behind him are tiny flower people between huge blades of grass

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2004, on Game Boy Advance
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack

    The Minish Cap is a hidden gem of the Zelda series. Developed by Capcom, this Zelda game follows Link after he meets a talking hat named Ezlo that grants him the power to shrink to the size of a pea. Exploring as a tiny hero literally changes our perspective on Hyrule and allows the developers to conjure up a sensorial and vivid world where you’ll fight Vaati and dodge the deathly plop of raindrops.

    Similarly to The Wind Waker, The Minish Cap leans into a cartoony charm; you’ll meet zany sword instructors and talk to cows chewing cud. This game also contains one of the Legend of Zelda’s goofiest items, a magical cane that turns objects upside down. Combine these charms with some great dungeon design, and you have the makings of a fantastic Zelda game. It might not usually be counted among the Zelda greats, but The Minish Cap finds its brilliance in the tiny details. —AD

    7. Link’s Awakening

    The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening (2019) - mountain island artwork

    Image: Grezzo/Nintendo

    Original release: 1993, on Game Boy
    Where to play now: Choose between its 1998 DX form for Game Boy Color on Nintendo Switch Online or the modernized 2019 Nintendo Switch remake

    This was the first-ever Zelda game I played, so all of the references to other games flew over my head, as well as the very obvious signposting about how the story would end. I felt confused, as so many players do, about why the name “Zelda” was in the title (I did think maybe the owl was named Zelda). And yet — although I experienced the classic Zelda tropes and mechanics in the dreamlike setting of Koholint Island, rather than in the larger and more defined kingdom of Hyrule — their magic captivated me completely. Like many others on this list, Link’s Awakening is a weird Zelda game, and it’s proof that being weird and silly is just as much a part of the patchwork of “being a Zelda game” as environmental puzzles or a magic sword wielded by an eternally reincarnating hero. —M. Myers

    6. The Wind Waker

    Link and a cast of characters stand on a globe, with Ganondorf looming behind. Link directs the wind with his baton in The Wind Waker

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2002, on GameCube
    Where to play now: Unavailable — track down a used copy of The Wind Waker HD for Wii U

    The Wind Waker oozes a charm and sense of character that distinguishes it from other Zelda games and makes it a series great. It dared to take the Legend of Zelda in a bold new visual direction with its wonderfully expressive, cartoony graphics, and introduced one of my favorite Zelda casts. Tetra is an inspired take on the role of Zelda: an adventurous and capable pirate captain who helps Link along his journey. This Link, too, is one of my favorite Links, with his comic book expressions and bumbling antics.

    The game moved me emotionally in ways that no other Zelda game has, and I still think about Link’s big send-off, as he waves his tiny arms goodbye to his granny. All this, and it’s thoroughly enjoyable to play. Flourishes like the adaptive soundtrack that plays stringed instruments as Link hits his enemies only add to its zippy combat. This game — from its snot-nosed kids to its timeless art style — is endlessly endearing. To me, its ingredients make for the perfect elixir of a Zelda game. —AD

    5. Ocarina of Time

    The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time artwork

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 1998, on Nintendo 64
    Where to play now: Choose between the original version on Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack, or the Ocarina of Time 3D remaster on 3DS (boxed edition still in print)

    Just as Twilight Princess is secretly Midna’s game, Ocarina of Time is secretly Zelda’s game — or perhaps it belongs to Sheik. It may not be the best Zelda game by modern standards, but Ocarina of Time set a benchmark by which all subsequent entries have been measured, particularly when it comes to storytelling and world-building. It offers up the illusion of an open-world Hyrule, planting the seeds for a garden that would bloom in Breath of the Wild. And it’s the game with a time-travel story that splintered the entire series into disparate arcs — perhaps the most important linchpin in the greater Ganondorf saga. And it still holds up after all these years. Too bad its best version is relegated to the Nintendo 3DS — at least, for now. —M. Myers

    4. Breath of the Wild

    Link climbs a cliff in the foreground, while the landscape of Zelda: Breath of the Wild’s Hyrule stretches out panoramically below

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2017, on Nintendo Switch and Wii U
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch

    Breath of the Wild represents the most consequential overhaul the Zelda series has had since it moved into 3D with Ocarina of Time; in fact, it might be the most consequential ever, bravely scrapping most of the design hallmarks of a revered game series. Nintendo was seeking to modernize Zelda, but also to cut through 30 years of accumulated tradition, all the way back to the untamed adventure of the very first game.

    It hardly needs to be said what a success it was: Breath of the Wild catapulted the Zelda series to a new level of popularity and challenged the assumptions of a lot of open-world and role-playing game design in a way that the rest of the industry is still digesting. It’s a dynamic, organic, thrillingly pure adventure, and the only reason it doesn’t top this list is because of what followed. —OW

    3. A Link to the Past

    Link stands on a cliff, hand resting on his sword, and looks toward a huge temple in the distance

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 1991, on SNES
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch Online

    Writing entries for this ranked list has me thinking about just what it is that makes a Zelda game great, and I think it’s the moment of realization. A Link to the Past serves up delicious moments of realization over and over and over again. You figure out that a cracked wall can be blown open to reveal a hidden passageway — oooh! You get a brand-new tool and you realize exactly how you need to use it — aha! You suddenly figure out the trick to a boss fight — take that! And then you realize that you have not even come close — not even close — to seeing all of the discoveries on offer here. A Link to the Past delivers on the pure dopamine rush of discovery, forcing a grin onto your face at every new revelation. It just feels good. —M. Myers

    2. Majora’s Mask

    majora’s mask 3ds review header

    Image: Nintendo via Polygon

    Original release: 2000, on Nintendo 64
    Where to play now: Choose between the original version on Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack, or the Majora’s Mask 3D remaster on 3DS (boxed edition still in print)

    As we’re talking about a series so centered on music, allow me a metaphor: Whereas Ocarina of Time’s time travel was classical in its approach (elegant, balletic, and nimble), Majora’s Mask’s time loop was more reminiscent of jazz: fractured, messy, and challenging, but revelatory all the same. Arriving two decades before the time-loop craze comprising Outer Wilds, Deathloop, and 12 Minutes, Majora’s Mask puts Link in a three-day cycle that unwinds and respools in a strange dream world replete with characters contemplating the impending apocalypse. Compared to most games in the series, Majora largely revolves around side quests, which are largely predicated on the collection of masks. Said quests reset themselves every time Link travels back to the dawn of the first day, (hopefully) armed with the necessary knowledge to bolster his collection and save a life or two in the process.

    Majora was the feverish answer to a confounding question: “How do we follow the resounding success of Ocarina of Time and also bridge the gap between the Nintendo 64 and the GameCube?” No one could have predicted the answer: a melancholy, tick-tock ballet of thwarted dreams and desperate lives in the face of the apocalypse, the most intimate and personal Zelda has ever been. It remains the strangest and darkest entry in the series, and I doubt we’ll ever see anything like it again. —M. Mahardy

    1. Tears of the Kingdom

    Link squats at the edge of a Sky Island and looks out over Hyrule in Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom

    Image: Nintendo

    Original release: 2023, on Nintendo Switch
    Where to play now: Nintendo Switch

    Every Zelda game has built upon the foundations of the games before it, with even the characters in its world acknowledging the myths of yore. No one believes more in the concept of predicting the future based on the past than the developers of Zelda — as well as Princess Zelda herself, who opens Tears of the Kingdom by guiding Link through a series of historical underground murals.

    And yet even Princess Zelda in her wisdom couldn’t possibly have predicted how incredible and miraculous her story would become. Tears of the Kingdom is a reflection of this continued promise: You may imagine you understand — based on the history of Zelda games — how ambitious and creative and world-warping a Zelda game could be. And yet that very world will still surprise you. Tears of the Kingdom still surprises me. It’s a gift that I can’t believe we all got. —M. Myers

    Oli Welsh

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  • The Holdovers, It Lives Inside, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    The Holdovers, It Lives Inside, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Season’s greetings, Polygon readers. We’re smack-dab in the sleepy, liminal interzone between the Christmas holiday and New Year’s Eve. Be that as it may, that doesn’t mean there aren’t a couple new movies on streaming to watch this weekend as we barrell into 2024.

    This week, The Holdovers, the new Christmas comedy-drama starring Paul Giamatti, is finally available to stream on Peacock. That’s not all: The supernatural horror-thriller It Lives Inside arrives on Hulu this week alongside the new Ray Romano-directed comedy Somewhere in Queens. Finally, a controversial crime thriller starring Jim Caviezel is now streaming on Prime Video. And… that’s it for this week!

    Here’s everything new to watch this weekend.


    New on Hulu

    It Lives Inside

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Genre: Supernatural horror
    Run time: 1h 39m
    Director: Bishal Dutta
    Cast: Megan Suri, Neeru Bajwa, Mohana Krishnan

    This horror movie follows two young girls at an American high school who each relate to their Indian heritage in a different way: One embraces it, and one rejects it. When a Pishach, a vengeful spirit imprisoned in a strange glass jar, latches onto one of them, the other must reconnect with her past in order to stop it. It Lives Inside is the feature debut from Bishal Dutta, known previously for his work as a writer on the 2017 drama series Triads.

    Somewhere in Queens

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Image: Roadside Attractions/ICM Partners

    Genre: Comedy
    Run time: 1h 46m
    Director: Ray Romano
    Cast: Ray Romano, Laurie Metcalf, Jacob Ward

    Ray Romano directs and stars in this new coming-of-age comedy about Leo, a father trying desperately to help his son apply for college and win a basketball scholarship. After going to extreme lengths, from alienating the rest of his family to cajoling his son’s ex (Sadie Stanley) to get back together with him, Leo must learn to allow his son to make his own decisions. From the trailer, it comes across as an earnest comedy about learning to embrace the peculiarities of one’s own family and accepting the uncertainty of what life has to offer.

    New on Prime Video

    Sound of Freedom

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Jim Caviezel as Tim Ballard comforting a child in Sound of Freedom.

    Image: Angel Studios/VidAngel Studios

    Genre: Crime thriller
    Run time: 2h 11m
    Director: Alejandro Gómez Monteverde
    Cast: Jim Caviezel, Mira Sorvino, Bill Camp

    One of the most surprising box-office hits of the year, Sound of Freedom purports to be a true story about a mission to stopping child trafficking. The truth is much more complicated than that.

    New on Peacock

    The Holdovers

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Peacock

    Dominic Sessa, Paul Giamatti, and Da’Vine Joy Randolph gather around a table with a Christmas tree in the background in The Holdovers.

    Image: Focus Features

    Genre: Comedy drama
    Run time: 2h 13m
    Director: Alexander Payne
    Cast: Paul Giamatti, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Dominic Sessa

    A strong late awards-season contender, The Holdovers is a holiday-themed comedy about three people left at a New England boarding school for Christmas in 1970, all pushing through their own personal drama to survive the holiday. It’s also one half of this season’s best double feature.

    From our list of the best movies of the year:

    The Holdovers is full of sudden twists, mostly backstory reveals suitable for a particularly startling stage play. But the real surprise is how personal and specific it becomes, and excellent writing and acting help it dodge the expected parameters for this kind of story. Eventually, it settles into a three-hander between Professor Hunham (Giamatti), his troubled adolescent student Angus (Dominic Sessa, in an intense star-making performance), and Mary (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), the school’s head cook, an older Black woman mourning her son’s recent death in the military.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • Netflix’s Rebel Moon, the Hunger Games prequel, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Netflix’s Rebel Moon, the Hunger Games prequel, and every new movie to watch at home this weekend

    Happy December, Polygon readers! It’s the last weekend before the Christmas holiday, and we’ve got a whole sack full of exciting new releases on streaming and VOD for you!

    This week, Rebel Moon — Part One: A Child of Fire, the first installment of Zack Snyder’s epic space opera starring Sofia Boutella (Kingsman: The Secret Service) finally comes to Netflix along with Bradley Cooper’s Leonard Bernstein biopic Maestro. Gareth Edwards’ sci-fi action thriller The Creator finally comes to Hulu, and the black comedy thriller Saltburn arrives on Prime Video. There’s plenty of new movies available to rent this week as well, including The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, Eli Roth’s Thanksgiving, and much more.

    Here’s everything new to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    Rebel Moon — Part One: A Child of Fire

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Netflix

    Genre: Epic space opera
    Run time: 2h 15m
    Director: Zack Snyder
    Cast: Sofia Boutella, Charlie Hunnam, Michiel Huisman

    Zack Snyder returns to Netflix with an all-new, Star Wars- and Seven Samurai-inspired space opera in the form of Rebel Moon — Part One: A Child of Fire. Set in a far-off galaxy besieged by a brutal interplanetary empire, the film follows the story of a soldier-turned-farmer who must recruit a band of warriors to fight alongside her against the regime she once served. Also, Anthony Hopkins shows up as a robot and Doona Bae (Cloud Atlas) has cool definitely-not-lightsaber butcher swords. Neat!

    From our review,

    The best that can be said about Snyder is that he’s at least capable of a kind of manic brouhaha that’s not unbecoming in this kind of genre filmmaking. Despite the lack of character or emotion in his films, he certainly can be one of the best filmmakers at capturing the pure excess of a piece of lurid fantasy art, or the distinct flair of a Frank Miller drawing. But in Child of Fire, the results couldn’t even be called stylish. The CGI seems to degenerate as the running time goes on. The production and costume design had this Dune agnostic bumping that film up half a star on Letterboxd. And Tom Holkenborg’s score sounds like Space Enya.

    Maestro

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Bradley Cooper conducting an orchestra seen from the middle row in a black-and-white scene from Netflix’s Maestro

    Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix

    Genre: Biographical drama
    Run time: 2h 9m
    Director: Bradley Cooper
    Cast: Carey Mulligan, Bradley Cooper

    Bradley Cooper directs and stars in this biographical drama about the life of the acclaimed American composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein and his complicated relationship with his wife, Felicia Montealegre.

    From our review,

    Maestro takes on new shades when compared with Cooper’s directorial debut, that Star Is Born remake. It’s the inverse of Maestro in a lot of ways. In A Star Is Born, singer Jackson Maine (Cooper) sees something magical in Ally (Lady Gaga), and struggles to cope as they fall in love and her career eclipses his. Conversely, Maestro is built around Leonard Bernstein’s marriage to Felicia Montealegre (Carey Mulligan), who Bernstein is captivated by and devoted to — at least, part of him is. Felicia, who first appears on camera in a black-and-white sequence, illuminates the screen with her talents and ambitions, then is ironically suffocated as Cooper widens Maestro’s aspect ratio and fills it with color. Leonard’s ambition, his dueling appetites, and his affairs with men like David Oppenheim (Matt Bomer) edge her out and dim her world.

    Operation Napoleon

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    A man in a blue snowsuit shovels the wreckage of a Nazi biplane out of the snow with two figures riding snowmobiles in the distance in Operation Napoleon.

    Image: Magnet Releasing/Magnolia

    Genre: Historical thriller
    Run time: 1h 42m
    Director: Óskar Þór Axelsson
    Cast: Vivian Ólafsdóttir, Jack Fox, Iain Glen

    An Icelandic lawyer (Vivian Ólafsdóttir) finds herself drawn into a deadly international conspiracy after her brother accidentally stumbles upon a German World War II plane buried beneath the snow. Hunted by ruthless criminals and a unrelenting CIA director (Iain Glen), she’ll have to get to the heart of the mystery if she has any hope of surviving.

    New on Hulu

    The Creator

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Joshua, the protagonist of The Creator, rides a bus with his Sim companion, the child Alphie

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Sci-fi action
    Run time: 2h 15m
    Director: Gareth Edwards
    Cast: John David Washington, Gemma Chan, Ken Watanabe

    John David Washington (Tenet) stars in Rogue One director Gareth Edwards’ latest sci-fi adventure as an undercover operative in the far-future searching for the mysterious creator of a rogue-artificial intelligence. After being entrusted with the care of a human-like robot named “Alphie” (Madeleine Yuna Voyles), the pair embark on a journey in search of answers and salvation.

    From our review,

    The Creator would be a wonderful video game. I mean that earnestly — video games are terrific for interacting with lore, with the bits and bobs of world-building that all storytellers spend years developing, but leave as subtext in the story proper. That can also be true of video games, but games of larger scope often flesh out their virtual worlds with said lore, which players are often free to roam and engage with. There are all sorts of ways that lore can become text — optional conversations with characters, diary and book excerpts to read, video or audio ephemera, all ambient and non-compulsory, a substrate where the player can find meaning whether the main narrative is fulfilling or not. The Creator is a fully realized future in the service of a rote story and flat characters that only gesture in compelling directions; I’d rather not bother with that story at all.

    New on Prime Video

    Saltburn

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Oliver (Barry Keoghan), in black tie dress, sits at what appears to be an fancy table covered in candles of all descriptions, reflecting his face back at him — except the more you look, the more it’s clear that the reflection is in a different position, standing with its eyes lowered. From the movie Saltburn

    Image: Prime Video

    Genre: Psychological thriller
    Run time: 2h 11m
    Director: Emerald Fennell
    Cast: Barry Keoghan, Jacob Elordi, Archie Madekwe

    ‘What if The Talented Mr. Ripley, but set in a palatial Oxford-family estate with young adults in the mid-2000s?”

    That’s essentially the premise of this black comedy about class and privilege starring Barry Keoghan (The Banshees of Inisherin) and Jacob Elordi (Euphoria), from Promising Young Woman filmmaker Emerald Fennell.

    New on Paramount Plus

    Beau is Afraid

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus

    Joaquin Phoenix as Beau Wasserman in Beau Is Afraid.

    Image: A24

    Genre: Surrealist tragicomedy horror
    Run time: 2h 59m
    Director: Ari Aster
    Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Patti LuPone, Amy Ryan

    A24 horror maestro Ari Aster returns with a different kind of project in this horror-comedy about a man confronting his fears after the death of his mother.

    Golda

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus

    Helen Mirren as Golda Meir, sitting at a table and speaking into a red corded telephone with the flag of Israel in the background in Golda.

    Image: Bleecker Street Media

    Genre: Biographical drama
    Run time: 1h 40m
    Director: Guy Nattiv
    Cast: Helen Mirren, Camille Cottin, Liev Schreiber

    Helen Mirren stars in this biographical drama about Golda Meir, the 4th Prime Minister of Israel, and her role during the Yom Kippur War of 1973.

    New to rent

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Coriolanus Snow (Tom Blyth) leers over Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler) in The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes.

    Photo: Murray Close/Lionsgate

    Genre: Dystopian action
    Run time: 2h 37m
    Director: Francis Lawrence
    Cast: Tom Blyth, Rachel Zegler, Peter Dinklage

    Francis Lawrence returns to the world of The Hunger Games to tell the story of the early years of Coriolanus Snow (Tom Blyth), who would go on to become the president of Panem and the nemesis of Katniss Everdeen.

    Set 60 years before the events of the first film, The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes recalls the fateful meeting between Coriolanus and Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler), a tribute from District 12 who would leave a profound impact on his life and worldview.

    From our review,

    Collins’ book and Lawrence’s movie don’t redo the action of the Hunger Games events; they dissect them, then force us to sit on the Capitol side of the equation. They demand to know why we were even drawn to the love triangle, the pretty dresses, and the themed arenas in the first place. We’ve always been the spectators, after all, watching Katniss’ story from a safe distance. The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes shows us what happens if we get too carried away by propaganda, luxury, and the promise of safety. In that way, it’s a fitting end to the franchise — and a fitting end to the way the genre evolved into a beast of its own.

    Trolls: Band Together

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    (L-R) Ablaze (voiced by Joey Fatone), Hype (JC Chasez), Branch (Justin Timberlake), Trickee (Chris Kirkpatrick) and Boom (Lance Bass) in Trolls Band Together

    Image: DreamWorks/Universal

    Genre: Adventure comedy
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Directors: Walt Dohrn, Tim Heitz
    Cast: Anna Kendrick, Justin Timberlake, Kenan Thompson

    The Trolls have returned, and they’re getting the band back together! After Branch’s brother Floyd is kidnapped, he’ll have to team up with Poppy to reunite with his other brothers in order to find the culprit and save the day.

    Thanksgiving

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A man in a John Carver mask holds a pitchfork from the movie Thanksgiving

    Photo: Pief Weyman/Sony Pictures

    Genre: Slasher horror
    Run time: 1h 46m
    Director: Eli Roth
    Cast: Patrick Dempsey, Addison Rae, Gina Gershon

    Just in time for Christmas, Eli Roth is back with a brand new holiday-themed slasher! After a tragic Black Friday riot, the quiet town of Plymouth, Massachusetts is terrorized by a Thanksgiving-inspired killer wearing a ghoulish John Carver mask.

    From our review,

    Comedic slashers where both halves complement each other are rare, even among the genre’s most entertaining offerings. Movies like Totally Killer or Happy Death Day are too funny and lighthearted to ever really earn a genuine scare, while a movie like House of 1000 Corpses is so dark and gross that the humor isn’t likely to land on a first viewing. Few movies have ever struck that balance quite as well as Craven’s four Scream movies. Thanksgiving doesn’t quite reach that series’ meteoric heights, but it comes far closer than anything else in recent years — including the Scream franchise itself.

    Silent Night

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Joel Kinnaman, wearing body armor and wielding a shotgun, prepares to climb a staircase in Silent Night.

    Photo: Carlos Latapi/Lionsgate

    Genre: Action thriller
    Run time: 1h 44m
    Director: John Woo
    Cast: Joel Kinnaman, Scott Mescudi, Harold Torres

    After nearly 20 years, action movie legend John Woo has returned with a Christmas-themed revenge thriller starring Joel Kinnaman as a vigilante who embarks on a mission to exact vengeance on the gang who murdered his son in a Christmas Eve drive-by. Polygon spoke to Woo about the process that went into this film and why he was first attracted to the unique project.

    Anatomy of a Fall

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A dead, bloody body in the snow in Anatomy of a Fall, as someone near talks on the phone

    Image: Neon

    Genre: Crime thriller
    Run time: 2h 31m
    Director: Justine Triet
    Cast: Sandra Hüller, Swann Arlaud, Milo Machado Graner

    This Palme d’Or-winning French courtroom drama follows the story of a writer trying to prove her innocence following the mysterious death of her husband outside of their home. Was it murder or was it suicide? Beyond a simple interrogation of guilt, the film is a psychological thriller that delves deep into the complicated circumstances behind the couple’s relationship.

    Dream Scenario

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A schlubby-looking Nicolas Cage holds a backpack and stands in front of a car with “LOSER” painted on it in bright pink letters in Dream Scenario.

    Image: A24

    Genre: Horror comedy
    Run time: 1h 42m
    Director: Kristoffer Borgli
    Cast: Nicolas Cage, Julianne Nicholson, Michael Cera

    Nicolas Cage (The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent) continues his streak of meta self-referential projects in this horror-comedy about a mild-mannered biology professor who inexplicably becomes famous overnight after appearing in the dreams of people around the world.

    From our review,

    Dream Scenario’s vague, nebulous type of fame gives Borgli an avenue to comment on celebrity and its price without taking a specific stand. He’s just exploring the cost of being highly visible, being up for endless interpretation by total strangers, and being disconnected in the public eye from any actual real-world intentions or actions. Once Paul starts deliberately taking a more active role in people’s dreams, the script takes a Charlie Kaufman-esque approach, playing with the ideas around so-called cancel culture as part of the world of instant fame. He also keeps the visuals refreshing and interesting, fully veering into dream-sequence horror, with enjoyably weird results.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • The best ship for every Starfield player

    The best ship for every Starfield player

    Choosing the best ship in Starfield is one of the most important decisions you’ll make. It’s not just your means of fast travel through the Milky Way. It’s everything from your storage locker to your crew’s quarters to the thing that protects you from space pirates. Your ship, in other words, is your home.

    It’s nigh impossible to get the single best ship in Starfield early on, thanks to prohibitively expensive sticker prices. Bear in mind, too, that to pilot ships higher than class A, you’ll need to invest points in the Piloting skill (which requires destroying enemy ships, which itself requires a better ship).

    Still, in short order, you’ll get plenty of money and skill points in Starfield, which should soon open up your options. Without further ado, these are the best ships in Starfield, including the best class C ship, the best free ship, and the best ship to buy.

    And if you want to modify them to make them even better, our guide on how to use the Ship Builder can help, and learn where to buy ship modules for even broader customization.


    Best ship for beginners: Razorleaf

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Complete the “Mantis” side quest
    Cost: Free

    Fairly early into your playthrough, you will likely pick up a note titled “Secret Outpost!” from a dead Spacer. I found it during the mission “The Old Neighborhood,” while searching for the whereabouts of Vanguard Moara. Head to the Secret Outpost on Denebola I-b, and you’ll begin a quest titled “Mantis.”

    Spoilers aside, as it is one of the best side quests in Starfield, you’re rewarded with some immensely powerful armor, along with the Razorleaf — one of the best class A ships in the game for anyone who is a fairly low level. It has a cargo hold with room for 420kg of stuff, so a slight downgrade on the 495 offered by the Frontier, but with almost triple the fuel and 100 higher hull protection, along with more powerful weapons, it’s a no-brainer. Especially since it has a shielded cargo hold with a capacity of 160, essential for smuggling contraband.


    Best free ship: Kepler R

    How to get it: Complete the “Overdesigned” side quest
    Cost: Free

    After the “Starborn” main mission, linger around Constellation headquarters and talk to Walter. You’ll get the “Overdesigned” side quest, which sends you to the Stroud-Eklund offices to consult the company’s staffers on designing its new spaceship. Instinct would suggest you pick and choose ideas based on what you think would be best in a ship. Don’t do that. Instead, affirm literally everyone’s ideas. That will reward you with the best free ship in the game. (Consult our video walkthrough above for the detailed quest steps to “Overdesigned.”)

    If you do it right, you’ll get the Kepler R — a class C ship with truly bonkers stats: six crew, 28 LY jump range, 805 shield power, 3,500 cargo capacity, and some pretty solid weapons to boot. Yes, the Kepler R is ridiculous-looking and, no, it would never in a million years sell on a legitimate spaceship market. But with stats like these and a price point of 0 credits, who cares about aesthetics?


    Best class A ship: Wanderwell

    A menu shows the stats and design for the Wanderwell, one of the best ships in Starfield.

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Select the Kid Stuff trait
    Cost: Free

    If you chose the Kid Stuff trait, your parents will be alive in the game and you can visit them, in exchange for 2% of your credits every week to support them (though that is capped at 500 each time). Give it enough time and, eventually, your dad will gift you the class A Wanderwell ship that he won while… gambling. Guess that’s what the cash you send home to help the family is going toward!

    On the plus side, while it doesn’t have any Shielded Cargo like the Razorleaf, the Wanderwell does have a cargo capacity of 880, making it perfect for carrying all the resources you need to complete side missions. It only comes with two weapons by default rather than the standard three, so you’ll need to fork out a little to get it fully equipped, but with a jump range of 27 LY, it’s the next best upgrade after the Razorleaf.


    Best class B ship: Shieldbreaker

    A menu shows the design and stats for the Shieldbreaker, one of the best ships in Starfield.

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Buy from New Atlantis Ship Services Technician
    Cost: 265,443 credits

    This class B bad boy costs a fair whack, but if you’ve prioritized both main story and faction affiliation missions (both of which pay more than most side quests) and sold literally everything you’ve seen, you probably have enough credits in the bank for the Shieldbreaker. Once you turn your attention to side activities, such as destroying the Crimson Fleet and hauling thousands of resources across the galaxy, this ship can do it all.

    With a crew size of five and a cargo capacity of 2,280 (none of it shielded though, unfortunately), there’s a lot of room here. Living up to its name, it also has relatively powerful weapons, and comes with laser that automatically target enemy ships.


    Best class C ship: Silent Runner

    A menu shows the stats and design for the Silent Runner, one of the best ships in Starfield.

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Buy from HopeTech HQ
    Cost: 390,150 credits

    Want to become a full time hauler? Look no further than the Silent Runner, a class C ship that’s essentially the Shieldbreaker’s older brother. While the Shieldbreaker is pretty good in combat, the Silent Runner is all about the cargo, with a whopping 6,060 cargo space. You can upgrade it further with weaponry of course, but this is the one to go for if you want to become a space trucker.

    On top of the cargo space, it can grav jump up to 29 LY and has 1,164 hull, which is more than enough to hold off any Crimson Fleet or House Va’ruun members that come a-knocking. It’s also got 300 fuel capacity, which will get you almost anywhere in the charted galaxy.


    Best ship for carrying cargo: Vanquisher

    A menu shows the stats and design for the Vanquisher, one of the best ships in Starfield.

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Buy from Stroud-Eklund Showroom in Neon
    Cost: 335,655 credits

    The Vanquisher is a solid class C all-rounder, with 4,120 cargo capacity, 1,100 fuel, and 908 hull. Where it especially shines is its missiles, which do 149 damage, along with its 730 shield. It leaves room to be desired (read: upgraded) in the other weapon categories, but when your missiles are dealing that much damage, it doesn’t matter too much. It also may not be the most aesthetically pleasing ship, but at the end of the day, you’ll mainly be looking at the interior anyway.


    Best ship for combat: Abyss Trekker

    A menu shows the design and stats for the Abyss Trekker, one of the best ships in Starfield.

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Buy from Ship Services Technician in Paradiso
    Cost: 347,230 credits

    The Abyss Trekker is another class C ship that is by far your best bet if you plan on getting into plenty of dogfights in space. You won’t be carrying much loot with this as it only has 340 cargo capacity, but you will be able to take down any opponents you encounter thanks to the 100 missiles and 170 ballistics stats.

    With a shield of 850 and hull of 1,031, it’ll take a lot to get this cyan-white ship out of the skies, but if you do need to get away, it has 950 fuel and can grav jump up to 25 LY.


    Best ship to buy: Narwhal

    A menu shows the stats and design for the Narwhal, one of the best ships in Starfield.

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Buy from Taiyo Astroneering in Neon
    Cost: 432,620 credits

    The Narwhal is arguably the best — and certainly one of the most expensive — ship in the entire game. Setting you back more than 400,000 credits, this class C blue beast is incredibly well-rounded and can jump up to 30 LY, so you can go wherever you like. It can have up to seven crew members aboard, has 560 fuel, 2,118 hull, and 1,760 cargo capacity.

    As a result, it does the job for hauling lots of materials (though isn’t the best for that), but if you want one ship to do as much as possible rather than switching between ships depending on what the current task is, the Narwhal is for you. Special shout out to its 114 ballistics and 82 missiles too, as they pack a serious punch.

    [Ed. note: Spoilers follow for the ending of Starfield.]


    Best New Game Plus ship: Starborn Guardian

    Starfield Starborn Guardian ship in orbit around a planet

    Image: Bethesda Game Studios/Bethesda Softworks via Polygon

    How to get it: Start New Game Plus
    Cost: Free

    Minor spoiler warning for New Game Plus here, so if you want to go in without any knowledge at all, you’re safe to stop reading and go for one of the other ships in this guide. However, once you do finish the game, New Game Plus will reward you with the Starborn Guardian, a class A ship that cannot be bought or stolen during your first playthrough.

    The Starborn Guardian is one of the fastest pre-made ships in the game, can grav jump up to 30 LY away, and has two unique weapons in the Solar Flare Beam and Gravity Torpedo. With a cargo capacity of 950 and a hull of 649, it’s one of the best ships in the entire game, especially since you earn an upgraded one each time you start new game plus again. Plus it looks incredible — you can’t create anything like this in the ship builder.

    Ford James

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  • Candy Cane Lane, Netflix’s May December, and every new movie to watch this weekend

    Candy Cane Lane, Netflix’s May December, and every new movie to watch this weekend

    Happy December, Polygon readers. Christmas movie season is here, and there are tons of new Christmas movies slated to come out over the next month.

    This week, there are four in that category: the critically acclaimed The Holdovers, Eddie Murphy’s Candy Cane Lane, Netflix’s Family Switch, and the horror movie It’s a Wonderful Knife. But that’s not all that’s new this week: Carol director Todd Haynes has a buzzy new movie out on Netflix, there’s a second movie with musical numbers named Leo dropping on Netflix in as many weeks, and big franchise reboots Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny and The Exorcist: Believer make their streaming platform debuts.

    That’s only touching the surface — December is usually a busy time for new movies to watch at home, and this year is no different. Let’s dig into it.


    New on Netflix

    May December

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Photo: Francois Duhamel/Netflix

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 1h 57m
    Director: Todd Haynes
    Cast: Natalie Portman, Julianne Moore, Charles Melton

    One of our great modern filmmakers is back with another thorny story — this about an actor (Natalie Portman) studying a woman (Julianne Moore) she is going to play in a film. The woman (based loosely on convicted sex offender Mary Kay Letourneau) is known for her scandalous relationship with her husband (Charles Melton), who she first met when he was a minor. Melton has already won multiple awards for his portrayal of the husband, and as it’s a Todd Haynes movie, you can expect a sumptuous, at times uncomfortable watch led by fantastic performances.

    Leo

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Vijay dances with hundreds of people in a warehouse in Leo

    Image: Seven Screen Studios

    Genre: Thriller
    Run time: 2h 39m
    Director: Lokesh Kanagaraj
    Cast: Vijay

    No, you are not seeing double. Yes, last week, Netflix premiered its “Adam Sandler as a talking lizard” animated musical Leo. This week, the Tamil box-office hit Leo, a remake of David Cronenberg’s A History of Violence, lands on the platform.

    Both Leos on Netflix prominently feature musical numbers, but they couldn’t be more different movies. In this one, a coffee shop owner and family man (Vijay) dispatches a group of killers at his business, making him an overnight sensation. This raises the interest of a gangster, who believes the man is his long-lost son.

    Leo is the third movie in director Lokesh Kanagaraj’s LCU, after Kaithi and Vikram. There are a few repeat characters in this one, but neither of the previous movies are necessary to understand it (but they are both better, so I’d say they’re worth checking out).

    Family Switch

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    (L-R) Ed Helms as Bill, Brady Noon as Wyatt, Emma Myers as CC and Jennifer Garner as Jess in Family Switch.

    Photo: Elizabeth Morris/Netflix

    Genre: Sci-fi family comedy
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: McG
    Cast: Jennifer Garner, Ed Helms, Emma Myers

    It’s Freaky Friday, squared! From McG (Charlie’s Angels), this spin on the body-swap trope adds a dash of Christmas to the formula and has all four members of the principal family swap bodies.

    American Symphony

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Jon Batiste performing on stage in American Symphony.

    Image: Netflix

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 44m
    Director: Matthew Heineman
    Cast: Jon Batiste, Suleika Jaouad

    This documentary follows two artists in love facing a difficult situation: One, award-winning musician Jon Batiste, is writing a symphony, while his partner, bestselling author Suleika Jaouad, is being treated for cancer.

    New on Disney Plus

    Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Disney Plus

    Indiana Jones looks panicked as he drives a cart with Helena and Teddy in the backseat in Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

    Image: Lucasfilm

    Genre: Action-adventure
    Run time: 2h 34m
    Director: James Mangold
    Cast: Harrison Ford, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Mads Mikkelsen

    Harrison Ford’s final outing as Indiana Jones sees the whip-wielding archaeologist adventurer embark on one last intrepid expedition with his estranged goddaughter Helena (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) as they race across the world in search of an ancient artifact before a Nazi rocket scientist (Mads Mikkelsen) gets his nefarious hands on it.

    From our review:

    Mangold is a very fine director capable of helming solid crowd-pleasers (Ford v Ferrari, Walk the Line) and even breathing new life into the dying X-Men franchise with Logan. But Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny looks anonymous. Its visual style is drab in a way that drains the film of any personality. When Indiana Jones makes his way through boobytrapped caves in torchlight in Raiders of the Lost Ark, the contrast between the outside world and this creepy tomb evokes a singular wonder. But virtually every scene in darkness here is scantily lit and hard to see. And like many a modern blockbuster, Dial of Destiny leans on rapid cuts that heighten the pace of Indiana’s brawls with the Nazis, but the choreography is barely discernible.

    New on Hulu

    A Compassionate Spy

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    Stylized graphic of Theodore Alvin Hall nametag in “A Compassionate Spy.”

    Image: Magnolia Pictures

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: Steve James
    Cast: Tom Goodwin, Mickey O’Sullivan

    Legendary documentarian Steve James (Hoop Dreams) turns his camera toward the story of Theodore Hall, a physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project and gave information to the Soviets about the development of The Bomb. The documentary uses interview footage with Hall and his wife, as well as reenactments and archival footage.

    New on Prime Video

    Candy Cane Lane

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Eddie Murphy in a cheery Christmas sweater

    Image: Prime Video

    Genre: Christmas
    Run time: 1h 57m
    Director: Reginald Hudlin
    Cast: Eddie Murphy, Tracee Ellis Ross, Jillian Bell

    It’s a very Eddie Murphy Christmas on Prime Video. He’s a man determined to win a Christmas home decoration contest, and he makes a deal with an elf (Jillian Bell) that has unforeseen consequences on his town.

    New on Paramount Plus

    The Lesson

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus

    Richard E. Grant sits at a dinner table and looks severe in The Lesson.

    Image: Bleecker Street

    Genre: Thriller
    Run time: 1h 43m
    Director: Alice Troughton
    Cast: Daryl McCormack, Richard E. Grant, Julie Delpy

    A young writer (Daryl McCormack) agrees to tutor the son of his idol (Richard E. Grant). But all is not as it seems, as dark secrets threaten to tangle the writer in this family’s web.

    Earth Mama

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Paramount Plus

    A pregnant woman (Tia Nomore) sits on the floor with two young children as they read and play in Earth Mama.

    Image: A24

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 1h 37m
    Director: Savanah Leaf
    Cast: Tia Nomore, Erika Alexander, Doechii

    A pregnant single mother in the Bay Area hopes to reclaim her two children from foster care in this moving drama from first-time feature director Savanah Leaf. It’s one of the best movies of the year.

    New on Peacock

    The Exorcist: Believer

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Peacock

    Two possessed, scarred and bruised children sit back to back on the floor and glare at the camera above them in The Exorcist: Believer

    Image: Universal Studios

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 51m
    Director: David Gordon Green
    Cast: Leslie Odom Jr., Ellen Burstyn, Ann Dowd

    After a short theatrical run, David Gordon Green’s new entry in the Exorcist franchise arrives at home. It’s a bizarre twist on the franchise, per our review:

    Up until this most recent movie, the title The Exorcist carried some weight. While its role as a representation of quality was up for debate, its mark as a sign of ambition was not. Since the original Exorcist, the series has provided some of American cinema’s best and most interesting artists with space to ruminate on faith and evil. Believer lacks the ambition that’s meant to define an Exorcist movie. This is the most profound statement the movie has to offer, seemingly by accident: If the result of moving past God is that everything in the world will feel as empty and pointless as The Exorcist: Believer, we should cling to faith forever.

    New on Shudder

    It’s a Wonderful Knife

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder

    Jane Widdop smiles with twinkly lights in the background in It’s a Wonderful Knife

    Image: RLJE Films

    Genre: Horror
    Run time: 1h 27m
    Director: Tyler MacIntyre
    Cast: Jane Widdop, Justin Long, Joel McHale

    It’s a Wonderful Life meets the slasher genre in this Christmas movie about a girl who wishes she’d never been born, only to discover how many lives that would truly cost.

    New on Starz

    Joy Ride

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Starz

    (L-R) Stephanie Hsu, Sherry Cola, Ashley Park, and Sabrina Wu in Joyride.

    Image: Araquel/Lionsgate

    Genre: Comedy
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Director: Adele Lim
    Cast: Ashley Park, Sherry Cola, Stephanie Hsu

    What if someone took the 2017 comedy Girls Trip and combined it with the soul-searching drama of Return to Seoul? You might get something like Joy Ride, the new comedy about a four Chinese American friends who bond through their shared adventure to track down their birth mothers.

    New on MGM Plus

    Bottoms

    Where to watch: Available to stream on MGM Plus

    A group of high school girls in Bottoms.

    Image: Orion Pictures

    Genre: Comedy
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Emma Seligman
    Cast: Rachel Sennott, Ayo Edebiri, Marshawn Lynch

    Teen girl comedies are back in a big way, and Bottoms is a standout of this year’s crop. A trio of comedic powerhouses star in this movie about high school girls who start a fight club to try and impress the popular girls at school they have crushes on. Chaos ensues.

    From our review:

    Bottoms is strongest when it fully indulges that satire. Part of the high school’s hype strategy for the big football game involves plastering the halls with heavily sexualized shirtless posters of the star quarterback. A classroom scene inexplicably involves one of the students standing in a cage. After a particularly climatic moment, a sad montage plays out, set to none other than Avril Lavigne’s “Complicated,” a needle drop so ridiculously 2000s that it transcends time and space.

    Marlowe

    Where to watch: Available to stream on MGM Plus

    A man (Liam Neeson) standing in a forested area in front of a dark sedan dress in a brown pinstripe suit, dark red tie, and a gray fedora.

    Image: Quim Vives/Briarcliff Entertainment

    Genre: Neo-noir crime thriller
    Run time: 1h 49m
    Director: Neil Jordan
    Cast: Liam Neeson, Diane Kruger, Jessica Lange

    Liam Neeson (Taken) plays Raymond Chandler’s iconic down-on-his-luck detective in a feature length adaptation of the 2014 Philip Marlowe novel The Black-Eyed Blonde by John Banville. Hired by a glamorous heiress (Diane Kruger) to ascertain the whereabouts of her ex-lover and bring them back, Marlowe quickly finds himself entrenched in an investigation that goes far deeper (and potentially far deadlier) than a lover’s quarrel.

    New to rent

    The Holdovers

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Paul Giamatti gesturing towards a tree in a large room in The Holdovers.

    Image: Focus Features

    Genre: Comedy drama
    Run time: 2h 13m
    Director: Alexander Payne
    Cast: Paul Giamatti, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Dominic Sessa

    A strong late awards-season contender, The Holdovers has been beloved by every single person I’ve seen watch it. It’s about three people left at a New England boarding school for Christmas in 1970 — an uptight teacher (Paul Giamatti), the school’s head cook (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), and a sulking student (Dominic Sessa).

    Freelance

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    (L-R) John Cena, Juan Pablo Raba, and Alison Brie in Freelance.

    Image: Relativity Media

    Genre: Action comedy
    Run time: 1h 48m
    Director: Pierre Morel
    Cast: John Cena, Alison Brie, Juan Pablo Raba

    Taken director Pierre Morel moves to a more comedic mode here, in this movie about a former Special Forces officer (John Cena) and a journalist (Alison Brie) who travel to a fictional country together to interview the nation’s dictator.

    Five Nights at Freddy’s

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Peacock

    Five Nights at Freddy’s signature animatronics — Foxy, Chica, Freddy Fazbear, and Bonnie — lurk in the darkness in the movie spinoff

    Photo: Patti Perret/Universal Pictures

    Genre: Supernatural horror thriller
    Run time: 1h 50m
    Director: Emma Tammi
    Cast: Josh Hutcherson, Elizabeth Lail, Piper Rubio

    The massive hit video game series finally gets a horror movie adaptation, and Universal is going with the 2021 release model of simultaneous home and theatrical releases. Will it work for them? Only time will tell, but what it means for you is that you can watch a movie about the infamous, creepy pizza restaurant and its cursed animatronic animals either at home or in theaters.

    From our review:

    The movie’s funniest line is unintentional, when Mike earnestly explains, “I’m having a hard time just processing everything that’s happened,” as if he’s working through a tough breakup rather than a series of increasingly bizarre animatronic attacks. He’s right, though. For a movie with such a simple, appealing premise, Five Nights at Freddy’s is a lot to process.

    Pete Volk

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  • Every Xbox console is at least $50 off for Black Friday

    Every Xbox console is at least $50 off for Black Friday

    If you’ve been waiting for a Black Friday price cut on the Xbox Series X or Series S, Best Buy, GameStop, and Target have knocked $50 off the standard price of either console, discounting the Series X to $449.99, and the Series S to $249.99. The Diablo 4 Xbox Series X bundle at Walmart and Microsoft is even cheaper at $439.99.

    But before you buy, take note that some retailers have better bonuses than others. At Best Buy, the discounted Series X comes with a $50 Best Buy gift card. And, if you happen to be a member of My Best Buy Plus (a $50 annual service), you can get another $50 off the total, resulting in a final cost of just $399.99 for the console.

    Target is offering a slightly sweeter deal on top of the $50 discount. If you buy any Xbox Series X that it has in stock, you’ll also get a $75 Target gift card.

    Alice Newcome-Beill

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