ReportWire

Tag: Polygon Lists

  • The best noir movies to watch this Noirvember

    The best noir movies to watch this Noirvember

    Noirvember isn’t on any list of official holidays, but the informal, social-media-driven movement where cinephiles watch and discuss noir movies in November is picking up steam with streaming services. Criterion Channel, Kanopy, and Tubi are all programming month-long waves of noir films this year, and plenty of local arthouse and repertory theaters are getting in on the act. And for the physical media fans, there are Noirvember sales to consider as well.

    Even for Noirvember fans, though, picking a single movie to watch out of 80 years of cinema can be difficult — the noir movement started in the 1940s and continues to this day. Polygon is happy to help narrow down the choices: Here are a few favorites we’d suggest as some of the best movies to stream in Noirvember 2024 and beyond. (And if you want more suggestions, check out last year’s list as well.)

    Image: Warner Bros. via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Apple TV

    The great Joan Crawford gives one of her finest performances in this film from Casablanca director Michael Curtiz. Mildred Pierce follows the complicated relationship between a divorcée (Crawford) and her selfish, status-driven daughter (Ann Blyth), who feels ashamed that her mother has to work as a baker to support her family.

    This noir is heavier on social drama than crime (even with the framing device of a murder), and it’s anchored by Crawford’s outstanding performance, which earned her a well-deserved Oscar — the only one she won. Many years later, the great Todd Haynes also adapted the original novel, this time into an HBO miniseries starring Kate Winslet. —Pete Volk

    In Rebecca, Joan Fontaine and Laurence Olivier embrace, scared

    Image: United Artists via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: YouTube, various free Roku channels, or (probably) at your local library

    Alfred Hitchcock’s first American movie is also one of his best, and that’s an extraordinarily high bar to clear. Adapted from Daphne du Maurier’s moody novel, which came out just two years earlier, Rebecca stars Laurence Olivier as a widower and Joan Fontaine as the new wife he’s moving into his vast estate. But the shadow of his first wife, Rebecca, looms large over the grounds, as does the mystery surrounding her death. —PV

    In Strangers on a Train, a bunch of strangers (including Farley Granger and Robert Walker) talk, eat, and read on a train

    Image: Warner Bros. via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Amazon or free with ads on Tubi

    Alfred Hitchcock’s 1951 masterpiece Strangers on a Train sits perfectly at the intersection of noir and horror, as amateur tennis star Guy Haines (Farley Granger) meets a strange man named Bruno (Robert Walker) during a train ride. Guy is struggling to divorce his promiscuous wife, so Bruno proposes a deal: Bruno will kill Guy’s wife and Guy will kill Bruno’s oppressive father, with each man establishing an airtight alibi during the other man’s murder, and taking advantage of the lack of connection between them to ensure that both murders will remain unsolved.

    The deal comes off as a dark joke, but as Guy quickly learns, Bruno is a sociopath who considers their train conversation a sacred pact, and has every intention of carrying it out, whether Guy is on board or not. —Austen Goslin

    Orson Welles stands in a sewer, with his arms stretched out and facing away from the camera, in The Third Man

    Image: British Lion Films via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: Prime Video or free with ads on Tubi

    No noir has ever been so great as The Third Man about exploiting noir’s love of consequences for characters who stick their noses where they don’t belong. The movie follows an American writer, Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten), who travels to Vienna in search of his friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles). Lime, the writer is told, was killed in a traffic accident just a few days before. But Martins smells something fishy, and he starts following the scent all the way down a vast conspiratorial rabbit hole that leads him through crimes, cops, and the underside of war-torn Vienna. —AG

    In the Asphalt Jungle, the heist is afoot — Sterling Hayden waits while Sam Jaffe and Anthony Caruso attempt to break into a safe

    Image: MGM via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Amazon or free with ads on Tubi

    The Asphalt Jungle is a spiraling story about a conspiratorial gang of crooks assembled to pull off a robbery. When things go bad — because they always do in films like this — the movie chronicles each member’s attempt at an escape. Beautifully shot by noir master John Huston (who went on to take a major role in the neo-noir masterpiece Chinatown), The Asphalt Jungle feels like a perfect cementing of the various types of criminals who exist in noir.

    It’s like Huston has stripped the noir genre down to better examine each part: There are heart-of-gold thugs who can’t let themselves catch a break, hotheads who are destined to go out guns blazing, and criminal masterminds who always keep their hands clean. And somehow it all adds up to one of the most beautiful and tragic of the classic noirs. —AG

    Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, and a crowd look over a fence in Out of the Past

    Image: RKO Pictures via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Amazon, YouTube, Apple TV

    One of the classic ür-noirs, Out of the Past touches on practically every noir staple you can think of: the weary PI who falls for the dame he’s supposed to investigate, the double-dealing femme fatale who plays him for a chump, the complex storyline where everyone gets a chance to betray everyone else, and the twists that come fast and furious. But it’s also the kind of movie where everyone talks with a smirk, delivering a series of memorable one-liners as they keep revealing more motivations and deeper layers.

    Robert Mitchum stars as the detective dispatched to chase the runaway thief girlfriend (Jane Greer) of a disgruntled mobster (Kirk Douglas): Their story plays out in two timelines over two jobs, as the past and present collide. The sheer number of switchups can be dizzying, but director Jacques Tourneur (Cat People) pulls it off with style. —TR

    Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, both looking beautiful and dressed for Florida weather, sit at a table in Key Largo

    Image: Warner Bros. via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Amazon, Apple TV, Fandango

    Humphrey Bogart had a reputation as one of the noir era’s signature weary, cynical tough guys, but this mesmerizing crime thriller is a reminder that he wasn’t a big man, or even necessarily a physically commanding one: He usually dominated the screen with calm and charisma. Here, Bogart plays an Army vet trapped in a hotel with a group of mobsters who’ve taken the residents hostage while waiting to lock down a deal. Locked into a situation that compromises both his safety and his dignity, he keeps his cool and finds ways to help other people. It’s another John Huston classic built around fantastic tension and slow-burn suspense that pays off in satisfying ways that look nothing like the way this story would play out in the post-Die Hard era. —TR

    In Cause for Alarm!, Loretta Young stands between two men wearing military uniforms, as one has his arms on her shoulders. She looks deeply into his eyes

    Image: MGM via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: Free on Tubi, Plex, or Xumo, with a subscription on MGM Plus or Fandor

    Tay Garnett’s 1951 noir melodrama, based on an earlier radio play, lays out a nightmare scenario on a small, personal scale: After World War II, young wartime bride Ellen (Loretta Young) finds her husband’s physical and mental health disintegrating, to the point where he decides she’s poisoning him and that he’s justified in killing her. When he writes a letter accusing her of plotting his death, and she unwittingly mails it, she has to figure out both how to recover the letter and how to deal with his dangerous paranoia and the fallout from his attempt on her life.

    There’s a Hitchcockian edge to the way writers Mel Dinelli and Tom Lewis contrast Ellen’s desperation and her high-stakes situation with the banal day-to-day of a ’50s suburb. Desperately trying to stop the letter in transit while trying to keep up a cheery all-is-well front, Ellen feels like a precursor to every dark-suburban-secrets thriller of later decades, and a wry pushback against the clichéd image of 1950s Americana. —TR

    Ida Lupino embraces Robert Ryan, with melancholy in both of their eyes, in On Dangerous Ground

    Image: RKO Pictures via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Apple TV

    The great director Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without a Cause) made many great noirs — They Live by Night, In a Lonely Place, even a “Western noir” in the fantastic Johnny Guitar — but one of my favorites is the thorny 1951 drama On Dangerous Ground. Starring Ida Lupino (herself a great director, and the first woman to direct a mainstream film noir, The Hitch-Hiker) and Robert Ryan, it follows a violent police officer (Ryan) sent away from his district due to his behavior, and a blind woman (Lupino) he meets during an investigation. It is, essentially, a movie about trust, pairing a bitter man unable to trust anyone with a woman forced to trust everyone. The movie is one of Martin Scorsese’s favorites, and was a big influence for Taxi Driver. —PV

    Barbara Stanwyck looks shocked with a phone to her ear in Sorry, Wrong Number

    Image: Paramount Pictures via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Apple TV

    Barbara Stanwyck was a singular Hollywood star, transitioning from Broadway to the movies when sound was introduced to the form. One of my favorites of hers is this paranoid noir thriller about a woman who accidentally overhears a murder plot on her phone. A predecessor to similar movies like The Conversation and Blow-Up, it’s a fantastic showcase for Stanwyck’s unique star power, and it earned her a fourth Best Actress nomination at the Academy Awards. —PV

    Elliott Gould and Sterling Hayden drink out of mugs while sitting by the beach in The Long Goodbye

    Image: United Artists via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: Prime Video or free with ads on Freevee

    Robert Altman’s beloved 1973 neo-noir The Long Goodbye feels like one of the genre’s first small steps into revisionism, with all the familiar tropes twisted into creative new forms for a changed era. The film follows Raymond Chandler’s classic private detective Philip Marlowe (Elliott Gould). Here, he’s every bit as smooth-talking as the noir heroes that came before him, but sleepier and a little lazier, without an ounce of their ambition. It’s a perfect ’70s evolution of the version of the character Humphrey Bogart played in The Big Sleep.

    There’s no chip on Marlowe’s shoulder in this iteration of the character, and he isn’t pursuing the femme fatale (Nina van Pallandt) who involves him in the movie’s messy case. He’s just trying to make a living, and everything else is unfortunate circumstance. All these changes let The Long Goodbye feel like a classic noir that simply got the wrong protagonist, which makes the whole thing fun, even when Marlowe stumbles too far into the deep end of a criminal venture, a fate not even a neo-noir PI can avoid. —AG

    Jack Nicholson, wearing a fedora, in a car in Chinatown

    Image: Paramount Pictures via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: Fubo TV or for digital rental/purchase on Amazon

    Chinatown might be the most perfect, prototypical neo-noir. It stars Jack Nicholson as the kind of slick-talking, smarmy private eye who could have walked onto the 1974 set directly from the ’50s: The world seems to have quietly passed him by. Instead of personal conspiracies and small-time scams, Nicholson’s character stumbles into private tragedy, and the realization that powers larger than he can imagine might be rigging the whole system against people like him. Chinatown is bigger, darker, and queasier than the noir movies that came before it, ushering the genre into the cynical paranoia of 1970s cinema. —AG

    Gabriel Byrne looks off-camera thoughtfully in Miller’s Crossing, with his reflection in the mirror also looking away on the other side of the frame

    Image: 20th Century Fox via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: Criterion Channel, or for digital rental/purchase on Amazon, Apple TV, YouTube

    Nobody does neo-noir like the Coen brothers: They operate in a lot of different modes, from black-and-white throwback (The Man Who Wasn’t There) to genre-redefining updates (last year’s neo-noir pick Blood Simple, or the PI-reimagined classic Fargo) to deliriously weird comedy (Raising Arizona). In each case, their knack for specificity in characters and dialogue gives their films a snap no one else can match. Miller’s Crossing is one of their all-time greats, and at the same time one of their more conventional, play-it-straight crime movies: Set in 1929, it follows a rivalry between gangster clans, with Gabriel Byrne in an all-time-best role as a flunky caught in the middle. It’s packed with memorable double-crosses and double-dealings, all leading up to one of the most memorable finales in the neo-noir canon. —TR

    Mark Rylance and Johnny Flynn, wearing fancy clothes, stand in a tailor shop in The Outfit

    Image: Focus Features via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: Starz, or available for digital rental/purchase on Fandango, Apple TV, or Google Play Movies

    Secretly one of the best neo-noirs of the past decade, Graham Moore’s criminally underseen 2022 directorial debut The Outfit gives the lie to the old saw “They just don’t make ’em like that anymore.” This crime drama is set in the 1950s, and feels like it could have been made during that era: There’s no modern flash or action, just a twist-packed, character-focused script that keeps the surprises coming, and a superlative cast pulling it all off.

    Quiet, dignified Chicago tailor Leonard (the ever-reliable Mark Rylance) operates a shop that mostly services the Irish Mob, and serves as one of their cash drops. When a mobster shows up with a bullet in him and a stolen FBI recording pointing to a rat in the organization, Leonard has to navigate the dangerous face-offs that follow, between distrustful, violent career criminals pointing fingers (and guns, naturally) at each other. It’s a classic game of “Who’s the Martian?” with Leonard and others caught in the crossfire, and enough nested reveals to keep anyone guessing. —TR

    John Travolta as Jack in Brian De Palma and John G. Fox’s Blow Out

    Image: Filmways Pictures

    Where to watch: Fubo TV or free with ads on Tubi

    Brian De Palma’s 1981 neo-noir follows a foley effects artist, Jack Terry (John Travolta), who’s capturing ambient sound outdoors when he accidentally records the sound of a politician’s fatal car crash. While he’s able to save the girl in the candidate’s car, the politician himself drowns. On top of that tragedy, the sound Jack recorded suggests the crash might not have been an accident.

    Travolta’s character is far from a real detective, but Blow Out slots him into the noir canon perfectly as one of its sharpest and most fascinating characters. Blow Out continues the trend of neo-noirs of the 1970s, moving the genre’s conspiracy and paranoia out of the personal realm and into the public one. Among noirs about the seedy, steady degradation of society, there’s never been one quite so bleak as Blow Out, a movie that starts with a political assassination conspiracy, then throws in a serial killer who’s more than willing to work for whichever political party will have him. —AG

    Denzel Washington and Don Cheadle sit next to each other at a full table in Devil in a Blue Dress

    Image: Sony Pictures

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Apple TV

    This scintillating neo-noir captures Denzel Washington during the era when he was ascending the mountain of movie stardom in a brilliant story about postwar racial tensions in Los Angeles, featuring some of the best cinematography of the 1990s.

    Denzel is Easy Rawlins, a veteran between jobs, just looking to make enough money to keep paying his mortgage. When he’s recruited by a seedy PI for what seems to be simple work, Easy gets pulled into a tangled web of lies and deception that proves phenomenally difficult to break out of. With incredible supporting performances from Don Cheadle, Tom Sizemore, and Jennifer Beals, Devil in a Blue Dress is a gem of a mystery thriller that does the excellent original novel justice. —PV

    In Night Moves, a sad-looking Gene Hackman holds a revolver in the dark

    Image: Warner Bros via Everett Collection

    Where to watch: For digital rental/purchase on Apple TV

    Gene Hackman, in one of his best performances, stars as a private detective and former football pro who gets hired to find the missing daughter of a former Hollywood star. As he digs into the case, he finds much more than he bargains for. The movie simultaneously pulls off “neo-noir mystery” and “taut character study of one really sad man,” eschewing the era’s more paranoid direction in favor of a vibe more akin to extreme depression. Sometimes, it’s good to have a bad time at the movies. Night Moves is one of those times. —PV

    Pete Volk

    Source link

  • The best movies new to streaming this November

    The best movies new to streaming this November

    Halloween is over, and you know what that means. That’s right, we only have… *checks calendar* 363 days until next Halloween! While we wait in the meantime, there’s still a bunch of exciting new releases on the horizon to look forward to, including Gladiator II and Wicked! If you’re looking for the best movies new to streaming in November, however, you’ve come to the right place.

    This month, we’ve got a smorgasbord of terrific films to watch from the comfort of your home, including a underseen Coen brothers classic, a beautiful sci-fi drama starring Brad Pitt and Tommy Lee Jones, and an Oscar-winning psychological drama starring Miles Teller and J.K. Simmons. Not to mention Gladiator — yes, it really is that good and you should watch it, even if you have already!

    Here are the movies new to streaming services you should watch this month.

    Editor’s pick: Barton Fink

    Image: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment

    Where to watch: Criterion Channel
    Genre: Black comedy
    Director: Joel Coen
    Cast: John Turturro, John Goodman, Judy Davis

    The Coen brothers have built a long successful career on irreverent tragicomedies and pseudo-period pieces rife with beleaguered protagonists and oddball characters. Barton Fink is both of those things and yet something more: a satire of the artifice of studio-era filmmaking and a scathing condemnation of artistic self-delusion.

    Playwright Barton Fink (John Turturro) travels to Los Angeles to write scripts for a film studio in Hollywood. What he experiences there shakes him to his core, forcing him to confront not only the limitations of his chosen profession, but that of his worldview and self-conception. Anchored by powerful supporting performances by John Goodman and Judy Davis, not to mention a phenomenal climax sequence that must be seen to believe, Barton Fink is one of the oddest and most extraordinary films in the Coen brothers’ entire oeuvre, and that’s really saying something. —Toussaint Egan

    J. K. Simmons conducting an orchestra in Whiplash.

    Image: Sony Pictures Classics

    Genre: Psychological drama
    Director:
    Damien Chazelle
    Cast:
    Miles Teller, J.K. Simmons, Paul Reiser

    Is Damien Chazelle’s 2014 psychological drama a movie about an abusive musical instructor molding an impressionable student into his ideal player, or a story about what it takes to be the best in your chosen field? Wherever you land by the end of the movie, what’s clear is that Whiplash is one of the most impeccably crafted films of the 2010s. Miles Teller stars as Andrew Neiman, an aspiring jazz drummer who is terrorized by Terence Fletcher (J.K. Simmons), a ruthless and highly respected instructor at a prestigious conservatory in New York City.

    The dynamic between the two is the driving force behind the film’s story and emotional arc, as Fletcher’s increasingly conniving and psychologically manipulative tactics push Andrew to his breaking point again and again, forcing him to abandon all other considerations apart from his drive to become a better drummer and finally earn his mentor’s approval. The music by Justin Hurwitz is scintillating, the cinematography is electrifying, and the performances rank as some of the best in Simmons and Teller’s respective careers to date. Whiplash is a cinematic tour de force that’ll grab you by your shirt collar and refuse to let go, right up to the exhilarating crescendo of its climactic finale. —TE

    Brad Pitt in a white shirt in a room with a woman on a screen in the background in Ad Astra.

    Image: Buena Vista Home Entertainment

    Genre: Sci-fi drama
    Director: James Gray
    Cast: Brad Pitt, Tommy Lee Jones, Ruth Negga

    Ad Astra never got the respect it deserved. This sci-fi masterpiece from director James Gray follows astronaut Roy McBride (Brad Pitt), who gets sent to a far-away solar system in search of his missing father, who made the same journey 30 years earlier and now seems to be threatening the universe.

    While it was originally billed as a cross between a sci-fi epic and Apocalypse Now in space, the truth is that Ad Astra is a much quieter, more thoughtful film than that description might suggest. It’s more about the relationships between fathers and sons in adulthood than it is about laser gunfights or the human heart of darkness, though both of those things are certainly in there too. With the correct expectations, it’s easy to appreciate just how incredible Ad Astra really is. —Austen Goslin

    Joe Pesci and Ray Liotta laughing at a table surrounded by men in suits in Goodfellas.

    Image: Warner Home Video

    Genre: Gangster drama
    Director:
    Martin Scorsese
    Cast:
    Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta, Joe Pesci

    One of Martin Scorsese’s most celebrated and memorable films, and possibly his last unimpeachable classic, Goodfellas charts the rise and fall of a wannabe gangster who works his way into the Mob in 1950s Brooklyn, then finds the organization’s focus and fortunes changing radically over the decades that follow.

    Packed with storytelling devices that Scorsese went on to repeat over and over — particularly the monologue voice-over introduction of a whole pack of colorful gangster characters who don’t much matter — Goodfellas is full of indelible dialogue and familiar comic bits (“I’m funny how? I mean funny like I’m a clown? I amuse you?”). It’s the sprawling saga of a criminal watching the world change around him until he doesn’t recognize it anymore, made before any of these tropes, lines, and devices became clichés because so many people imitated Goodfellas. —Tasha Robinson

    Russell Crowe crossing swords with another gladiator in Gladiator.

    Image: Warner Home Video

    Genre: Historical epic
    Director:
    Ridley Scott
    Cast:
    Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix, Connie Nielsen

    For more than two decades, Gladiator II has felt like a mirage; it was the far-off promise of a sequel to a turn-of-the-century classic that we’d never actually see. But then Paul Mescal happened and Ridley Scott, history’s most prolific 86-year-old director, decided the moment was finally right to give us the story of Lucius, son of Maximus. But we’ve still got about three weeks until that movie hits theaters, so it’s time for you to catch up on or revisit the original movie.

    It’s hard to contextualize the original Gladiator today, but the good news is you don’t really have to. In the nearly 25 years since its release, Gladiator has aged wonderfully into an era-defining Hollywood epic. Scott photographs the grandeur and beauty of his cinematic Rome wonderfully, and watching this it’s easy to remember why Russell Crowe was the biggest movie star in the world in the early 2000s. So whether you’ve seen it or not, the sequel is the perfect excuse to return to the arena to witness Maximus’ glory. —AG

    Toussaint Egan

    Source link

  • 9 movies like Black Myth: Wukong to continue your journey to the west

    9 movies like Black Myth: Wukong to continue your journey to the west

    Few stories in the history of the world are as famous or have been told as many times as the tale of Sun Wukong. In fact, a new adaptation of the story, Black Myth: Wukong, is currently taking the world by storm, racking up record-breaking numbers on Steam. The game is a gorgeous retelling of the Chinese legend, complete with some of the best action-RPG gameplay of the year so far. But if playing the game has left you curious about the other ways this particular legend has been told, there are plenty of movies that fit the bill.

    We’ve collected a list of some of the best retellings of the Sun Wukong legend, as well as a few other movies that make a perfect thematic match for Black Myth, so you can stay in this legendary world long after you’ve finished the game.

    For more movies with mythical fantasy vibes, check out our list of movies like Elden Ring. And for more adaptations of Chinese folklore, check out our list of donghua to watch — many are based on Chinese mythic tales.

    Monkey King: Hero is Back

    Image: United Entertainment Partners via Everett Collection

    What it is: A crowdfunded animated movie that became China’s highest-grossing animated film of 2015, Hero is Back follows Sun Wukong’s fall from power and his road trip with a child monk obsessed with the monkey king’s famous feats.

    Where to watch it: Free with a library card on Hoopla, free with ads on Tubi, or for digital rental/purchase on Amazon

    A humanoid monkey looks toward the camera wearing armor and a red handkerchief in A Chinese Odyssey Part Two: Cinderella

    Image: Choi Sing Film Company

    What it is: The great action-comedy star Stephen Chow gets his turn at Sun Wukong in this loose adaptation of Journey to the West. It’s a two-parter – Pandora’s Box and Cinderella, followed by a much delayed Part Three in 2016.

    Where to watch it: Netflix, for free with ads on Tubi or Plex, or for digital purchase on Amazon

    Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons

    A man stands with one hand raised ready to fight in Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons

    JOURNEY TO THE WEST: CONQUERING THE DEMONS, (aka XI YOU XIANG MO PIAN), Show Luo, 2013. ©Magnet Releasing/Courtesy Everett Collection
    Image: Magnet Releasing via Everett Collection

    What it is: Chow wasn’t content with just one Journey to the West adaptation – after starring in A Chinese Odyssey, he directed Conquering the Demons and it’s sequel, The Demons Strike Back. As usual for Chow’s movies, it balances slapstick humor and big set pieces for an entertaining time.

    Where to watch it: Prime Video, for free with a library card on Kanopy, free with ads on Tubi and Pluto TV, or for digital rental/purchase on Amazon and Apple

    A woman with a headdress sits in the forest in The Monkey King 3

    THE MONKEY KING 3, (aka THE MONKEY KING 3: KINGDOM OF WOMEN, aka XIYOUJI ZHI NU’ERGUO), Zanilia ZHAO, 2018. © Well Go USA Entertainment /Courtesy Everett Collection
    Image: Well Go USA via Everett Collection

    What it is: Director Soi Cheang’s (SPL 2: A Time for Consequences; Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In) trilogy of Sun Wukong movies. The first stars Donnie Yen, while the latter two star Aaron Kwok. The first one isn’t Cheang’s best work, but they are high budget modern adaptations of the story and the series gets better as it goes along.

    Where to watch it: Free with a library card on Hoopla, free with ads on Tubi and Plex, or for digital rental or purchase on Apple and Amazon. The Monkey King 2 and 3 are both on Prime Video.

    A woman with white hair holds a weapon toward the screen in The Forbidden Kingdom

    THE FORBIDDEN KINGDOM, Bingbing LI, 2008. ©Lions Gate/courtesy Everett Collection
    Image: Lionsgate via Everett Collection

    What it is: The rare “Hollywood wuxia,” Forbidden Kingdom stars Jet Li as the Monkey King and Jackie Chan as Lu Yan. It is also primarily about a kid from Boston who is obsessed with Journey to the West and wuxia, so your mileage may vary.

    Where to watch it: For free with ads on Pluto TV and Freevee, or available to rent on Amazon and Apple

    A young kid with an angry look on their face runs toward the camera with fire behind them in Nezha

    NEZHA, (aka NE ZHA, aka NE ZHA ZHI MO TONG JIANG SHI), 2019. © Well Go USA / courtesy Everett Collection
    Image: Beijing Enlight Pictures via Everett Collection

    What it is: Adapted from a different 16th-century Chinese novel, Ne Zha was a smash hit at the Chinese box office and spawned a sequel, Legend of Deification. The movie follows a boy with great powers who is the feared protector of his community, and features stunning action sequences.

    Where to watch it: Free with a library card on Hoopla, free with ads on Plex, or for digital rental/purchase on Amazon and Apple

    A man with a spear stands in front of a massive glowing bigger man with a spear in New Gods: Nezha Reborn

    NEZHA REBORN, (aka NEW GODS: NEZHA REBORN, aka XIN SHEN BANG: NE ZHA CHONGSHENG), AO Bing, 2021. © Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection
    Image: Taopiaopiao via Everett Collection

    What it is: A more modern adaptation of the Nezha story, this one sees the mythic figure reborn as a motorbike-riding rebel.

    Where to watch it: Netflix

    A man with a tri-corner hat stands in a crowd, the only one with his head raised while everyone else bows in A Writer’s Odyssey

    A WRITER’S ODYSSEY, (aka CI SHA XIAO SHUO JIA), DONG Zijian, 2021. © CMC Pictures /Courtesy Everett Collection
    Image: CMC Pictures via Everett Collection

    What it is: A 2021 Chinese fantasy action-adventure about a writer whose fantasy novel seems to be having a mysterious impact on the real world, and the man who has been sent to kill him.

    Where to watch it: Streaming on iQiyi, free with ads on FreeVee and Tubi, or available to rent on Google Play and Amazon.

    Image: Toei Animation via fancaps.net

    What it is: It’s Dragon Ball, duh. But it’s an excuse to say Son Goku is based on Sun Wukong.

    Where to watch it: Hulu, Crunchyroll

    Austen Goslin

    Source link

  • 2024 blockbuster sequels, ranked by how they justify their existence

    2024 blockbuster sequels, ranked by how they justify their existence

    In Hollywood, the question “Does this movie franchise need another chapter?” seems to have a pretty easy answer: “Sure, if we think it’ll still make money!”

    For fans of a given franchise, though, the calculations are more complicated. Will that new installment in a movie series actually add anything worthwhile to the story, or just undermine the franchise’s original successes? Do we actually want to know more about our favorite characters, or will prequels and spinoffs ruin them? Do we have any reason to believe the latest movie using a familiar IP has a reason to exist that isn’t entirely mercenary? Will it at least be some big dumb fun?

    While plenty of 2024’s would-be IP blockbusters have shifted to 2025 dates, the year so far has still seen its share of sequels, prequels, and spinoffs. So we’re running the numbers, ranking the year’s latest-in-a-series movies by how well they justify their existence — both as movies, and as installments in ongoing stories.

    16. The Strangers: Chapter 1

    Image: Lionsgate Films/Everett Collection

    A remake of 2008’s home-invasion horror movie The Strangers wasn’t necessary, but it could have been good: With a premise as solid gold as “masked strangers break into a remote home and kill the couple vacationing there,” there are a million different takes that could have been great horror fodder that doesn’t follow the original movie beat for beat. Unfortunately, that’s exactly the uninspired approach director Renny Harlin (Die Hard 2) takes with this movie, the first in a planned trilogy that was originally written as one massive four-hour-plus movie, until Legendary Entertainment broke it down into chunks.

    This new batch of Strangers movies is meant to follow the characters in the aftermath of this initial home invasion. But it kicks off with Harlin essentially remaking the first Strangers with less style and dread. Gone is the slow creepiness of the original movie, replaced by rushed horror sequences and a few moments of lackluster action. While it’s possible that parts 2 and 3 somehow redeem the kickoff, Chapter 1 is nothing more than a significantly worse retread of an effective shocker. —Austen Goslin

    A man in a black Spider-Man-esque costume stands atop a building looking down, noticeably not-quite-blocking a Calvin Klein billboard on the building behind him, in Madame Web

    Image: Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection

    Madame Web is only loosely connected to Sony’s already loosely connected universe of Marvel characters. Ironic, given that the tagline “Her web connects them all” was the central focus of all the teasers. The one thing this offers to longtime fans of the current live-action Spider-Man narrative is a tease about Peter Parker’s existence — something that’s always been a big question mark in the Sony Marvel movies. Paramedic Cassie Webb (Dakota Johnson) is friends with Peter’s (hot, young, not yet dead in a morally instructive way) Uncle Ben, after all! Except the film never actually acknowledges that Ben’s newborn nephew is Peter Parker, to the point where holding back on that detail becomes something like a bit. It’s almost pandering, but not indulgent enough to feel fulfilling at all.

    With its stilted dialogue and nonsensical plot, Madame Web is not a good movie at all. At least it’s the sort of terrible movie that’s fun to watch in a group setting, while making jokes and tuning out the slower bits? It’s more or less Cats for superhero fans. —Petrana Radulovic

    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

    Photo: Sony Pictures

    This sequel to a sequelish reboot brings the new generation of Ghostbusters (Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard, Mckenna Grace, etc.) back to New York, and brings back the original characters (Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Ernie Hudson, Annie Potts, etc.) for more than a glorified cameo. That might be enough to make it essential for superfans, but for everyone else, it’s a nostalgic callback to the original movie with not much new or engaging to make it stand out, apart from Grace’s character’s maybe-queer storyline with a cute ghost girl. —PR

    Bald, pointy-nosed former supervillain Gru (voiced by Steve Carell) stands at a crowded gathering wearing a “Hello, my name is” nametag and scowls at former classmate Maxime Le Mal (voiced by Will Ferrell), a skinny man with a gigantic poof of hair and a shiny gold-and-green puffy coat in Despicable Me 4

    Image: Universal Pictures / Everett Collection

    No one in the Despicable Me movies seems to age. Former supervillain Gru (Steve Carell) looks just like he did in the first movie, and so do his daughters, who have been children for 14 years now. And yet somehow, Gru and his wife Lucy (Kristen Wiig) pursued a relationship, got married, and had a baby. So at least there’s some sense of time passing, even if it seems like Gru Jr. might be an infant for the next decade of sequels.

    Despicable Me 4 contributes a few fun new world-building elements to the franchise, though it unfortunately doesn’t explore them enough to make them significant. Still, some of them could set the stage for future adventures. (A whole school for villains?) This installment also adds a small but absolutely hilarious detail to Gru’s past, a backstory involving a high school talent show and the song “Karma Chameleon.” Nothing about Despicable Me 4 is essential, but it’s cool to see a few more funky details about this broadly defined world. —PR

    Martin Lawrence makes a really weird “I gotta poop” face, lips pressed together, cheeks puffed out, sweat on his forehead, and one eye squinted as he looks over at Will Smith in Bad Boys: Ride or Die

    Image: Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection

    The fourth entry in the series Michael Bay inadvertently kicked off with his directorial debut Bad Boys back in 1995 brings back a lot of cast members — chiefly the Bad Boys themselves, Will Smith and Martin Lawrence. But the filmmakers clearly think Bad Boys fans want a lot more continuity than that. Screenwriters Chris Bremner and Will Beall do their best to build a Fast & Furious-style Bad Boys universe out of every bit of character work and villain lore they can scrap together from the previous three movies.

    That isn’t a compliment. Where so many blockbuster movies suffer because the studio is trying to launch a profitable franchise instead of telling a decent story, Ride or Die assumes viewers are coming to the theater armed with nostalgia and a detail-oriented fascination with lore, rather than just wanting to see a couple of gifted comedic actors mouth off at each other between frenetic action sequences. Fans who care deeply about the posthumous legacy of Joe Pantoliano’s character, this is your movie. But mostly, the franchise-building gets in the way of the fun. —TR

    A close-up shot of a man staring at an eyeless alien creature with bared teeth and a drool-covered chin in Alien: Romulus.

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Fede Álvarez’s 2024 installment in the Alien franchise is almost perversely defined by how much it copies from past Alien movies, and how little it adds to the canon: Álvarez and co-writer Rodo Sayagues can’t even conjure up their own catchphrase, and fall back on having a new character echo the series’ most famous line.

    The film is effectively creepy as a stand-alone, and for viewers who’ve never seen an Alien movie, this might all be new, exciting horror fare. But it’d still come across as a bit underexplained, since this film is aimed directly at people who know the franchise forward and backward. It’s a greatest-hits montage, more or less: Remember how creepy Xenomorphs are in water? Let’s do that again. Chestbursters, facehuggers, Giger-esque genital imagery, evil androids suborning ships for the company — that was cool! More of that! And so forth. It’s a good time at the movies, but it could hardly be less essential. —TR

    Noa (a chimp) and Raka (an orangutan) from Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes look at each other while Noa holds a weapon

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    The fourth in the new-era Planet of the Apes movies (and the 10th Apes movie if you batch them all together) doesn’t add much to the franchise’s ongoing narrative — it jumps the story forward in time about 300 years for a story that’s frustratingly half-baked and surprisingly familiar from the previous entry, War for the Planet of the Apes, but with a gorilla dictator running a forced work camp instead of a human one. There are some powerful ideas at work — that history repeats itself, that communities are stronger than individuals, and that those communities need to band together to resist tyrants — but they aren’t communicated particularly clearly, especially since they’re mixed in with other threads, about a personal journey undercut by every Kingdom ad, and about the unreliability and unknowability of humanity.

    Kingdom is enjoyable enough in the moment, an action blockbuster with impressive visual effects and some appealing characters. It isn’t a bad or boring entry in the series. It just never feels essential, or like it’s doing much besides echoing more propulsive, dynamic earlier entries in this run at the Apes story. —TR

    Godzilla and King Kong roar at the sky together in Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire

    Image: Warner Bros. Pictures

    Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire feels like the movie where the new MonsterVerse franchise hit its stride. While 2014’s Godzilla lightly parodies disaster movies and 2017’s Kong: Skull Island does the same for dark war movies, Godzilla x Kong is a buddy movie about a giant ape and a nuclear lizard who don’t like each other much, but are often forced to team up to fight bigger monsters. It’s inescapably dumb and uncomplicatedly entertaining.

    But what makes this franchise especially fun right now is that it has a secret weapon: television. While the big screen is reserved for silly monster brawls, the MonsterVerse’s TV show, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, is a much more reserved, character-focused family drama that feels like an old-school adventure movie with giant monsters thrown in. It’s an excellent counterbalance to the silly fun of movies like A New Empire, with the added bonus that the movie’s story likely means Kong will be in the show’s next season. The MonsterVerse is a strange franchise, but as long as every entry keeps proving itself entertaining, it’s awfully hard to complain. —AG

    Po the panda (Jack Black) and Zhen the gray fox (Awkwafina) stand on the deck of a ship, both open-mouthed-smiling, in Kung Fu Panda 4

    Image: Universal Pictures/Everett Collection

    The adventures of panda kung fu master Po (Jack Black) could’ve been wrapped up in the series’ third installment back in 2016, but Kung Fu Panda 4 adds a bit of a postscript. The door is now open for another unlikely hero to take over the franchise, should DreamWorks decide to go that route: Basically, Po will eventually retire from his title as the Dragon Warrior, and a protégé will take up the mantle. (That definitely isn’t how it worked in the first movie, but I digress.) His heir apparent, the sneaky, thieving fox Zhen (Awkwafina), is actually a pretty cool character. I wouldn’t be too mad seeing more of her!

    For the fourth movie in an animated series, Kung Fu Panda 4 is decently enjoyable, mostly suffering from wasted potential. But the fight scenes are still cool, and the humor is funny enough, even if it never reaches the highs of the originals. —PR

    A pale woman (Nell Tiger Free) with deeply shadowed eyes lies on her back on a bed amid crumpled sheets, long black hair fanning around her head in a dark sunburst in The First Omen

    Image: 20th Century Studios/Everett Collection

    The First Omen is a complicated addition to this list. On the one hand, it isn’t necessary, really. And its worst moments come at the close of the movie, when the implied connections to the original film series are made even more explicit than they already were. The First Omen does, however, earn its place on this list via an entirely different version of this metric: It might just be the best movie in the Omen series, which makes it a necessity by default.

    Even better, by making a movie this scary, director and co-writer Arkasha Stevenson (Brand New Cherry Flavor) actually retroactively improves the rest of Damien’s story, just by making his origins this disturbing. The First Omen is simply an excellent horror movie, and that’s more than we can say for most franchise entries on this list, which is exactly why it clawed its way near the top. —AG

    Ultraman, a robotic figure with huge, round, glowing blue eyes and a central head-fin, rears back to throw a spinning, circular, blue, glowing energy blade as he stands silhouetted against a fan of red and orange color in Ultraman: Rising

    Image: Netflix

    Netflix’s animated Ultraman movie isn’t following a strict franchise continuity like so many of the sequels, prequels, and spinoffs in this ranking. Instead, it’s part of a sprawling history of anime, manga, comics, books, live-action movies and shows, and much more, many of which reinvent the tokusatsu hero in radically different ways. This particular installment also focuses far more on repackaging Ultraman for a new generation than on tapping into or expanding his existing lore. In this case, its value to the franchise isn’t additive, it’s introductory: This is a fine, accessible place for new and younger viewers to step into the story, especially if they happen to be fans of creative, dynamic animation. Longtime Ultraman fans won’t learn anything radically new here, but they will get a perfect launch point for the next generation of fans. —TR

    The legacy emotions from Pixar’s Inside Out all gather around a new arrival, the orange-skinned, Muppety-looking Anxiety

    Image: Disney/Pixar

    Pixar’s sequel to 2015’s Inside Out is the definition of a sequel expanding on a previous movie, sometimes to a fault. The first movie goes inside the head of 11-year-old Riley to explore how her personified emotions interact with each other; the sequel ages her up to 13, introduces new emotion characters, and shoves her into a series of new, anxiety-related decisions. In a lot of ways, this is a more-of-the-same sequel, leaning on a similar “important characters lost in the back of Riley’s brain, other characters taking over at center stage” plot, and plenty of the same corny-to-clever puns about how familiar thoughts, emotions, or related structures might manifest as landscape features.

    But the way it recognizably tells a story about the same central characters, while focusing on how profoundly time and the events of the last movie changed them, is unusual for an animated sequel. (We’re side-eying you right now, eternally-suspended-in-time Despicable Me franchise.) Inside Out 2 forwards Riley’s evolution in meaningful ways, even if that does raise some bigger questions about the rules of this particular world. —TR

    Sam (Lupita Nyong’o) sits fearfully in a dark space, covered with dust, her cat Frodo in her lap, in Michael Sarnoski’s A Quiet Place: Day One

    Photo: Gareth Gatrell/Paramount Pictures via Everett Collection

    You’d have to go back a few years to Dan Trachtenberg’s Predator franchise movie Prey to find a prequel that feels as vital, engaging, and meaningful to a film series as A Quiet Place: Day One — and it’s notable that both movies get to that point the same way. They both keep continuity with the stories they’re setting up, but neither one is trying to dole out unnecessary series lore, or explain things that never needed explaining: They’re both just telling riveting action stories in an established setting, and shifting focus to completely different characters with their own unique dynamics.

    Most disaster movies in this vein (whether they’re alien-invasion-focused or not) center on survivors. Writer-director ​​Michael Sarnoski tunes in on someone who doesn’t have survival as an option: Sam (Lupita Nyong’o) is in the last weeks of a fatal illness, and when killer aliens start raining from the skies and chumming New York City and anyone in it who makes a noise, it’s barely moving up the time table on her mortality. Sarnoski gives her a perversely meaningless goal — to get across town to her favorite pizza place and enjoy a final slice before she dies — and then spends half the movie on taut, tense alien-stalking scenes, and the rest on exploring why she’s so doggedly determined to do this one last thing before she goes. The focus on her combination of fatalism and obsession makes Day One an indelible story that expands the Quiet Place franchise in the best way possible, without piling on a bunch of extra, unnecessary world-building. —TR

    Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan Deadpool and Wolverine. Deadpool has his hands pressed over his mouth humorously, while Wolverine looks tired.

    Photo: Jay Maidment/20th Century Studios

    Deadpool’s third live-action adventure, and his first under the Disney-Marvel Studios banner, certainly earns high rankings for popularity: It has broken records on its way to the top of the box office. But more significantly for the purposes of this particular ranking, it pushes Deadpool’s story forward, to the extent that anything really means anything in a Deadpool movie. Death certainly doesn’t. It’s possible that MCU canon does. Narrative rigor and character continuity don’t — but who goes to a Deadpool movie for those?

    The snark is tamer and less transgressive this time out, but the Deadpool & Wolverine movie is still ambitious about expanding the character’s reach into new arenas, from bringing in the Loki series’ Time Variance Authority as villains to letting him beg for a shot at joining the Avengers. You can really feel producer-star Ryan Reynolds, his co-writers, and director Shawn Levy leveraging the Deadpool franchise’s popularity to get their hands on any property they want, from gleefully defiling the end of 2017’s Logan to lining up cameos designed expressly for in-the-know comics fans. They hop around Marvel movie continuity, grabbing and dropping whatever they want like nerdy magpies, and the movie is more fun for it. Most franchise filmmakers could only dream of this kind of freedom and access. Say what you want about the recent movie-multiverse boom — at least one franchise is just using it to create a bigger, more colorful sandbox. —TR

    …Furiosa (Anya Taylor-Joy) in George Miller’s Furiosa

    Image: Warner Bros. Entertainment/YouTube

    Furiosa is the rare prequel that feels not just equal to the hit movie it’s setting up, but like it adds vital context rather than gilding the lily. Conceived and written at the same time as Max Max: Fury Road so it would be consistent with that film’s story and characterization, Furiosa doesn’t unnecessarily just fill in how-did-this-character-get-here blanks, it tells its own distinct story and answers questions about who Fury Road’s most compelling new character is, and why she’s Max’s equal. More importantly, though, it’s wildly entertaining in its own right. —TR

    Lady Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson), cowled and with symbols written across her face in ink, stands in the desert, surrounded by similarly robed figures in Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two

    Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures

    The second half (or with luck, middle third) of Denis Villeneuve’s Dune adaptation has an advantage no other movie on this list has: It isn’t just an adjunct to other movies, it’s the vital continuation of an opening-act movie that was mostly setup, building to this payoff.

    Even leaving aside the compelling performances and visuals, the epic warfare, and the fascinating shift in perspective — which is to say, leaving aside the fact that it’s one of 2024’s best movies so far Dune: Part Two would top this list purely because it’s an essential part of its franchise’s story. It doesn’t just contribute new things to a franchise, it’s a cornerstone of the story Villeneuve is still hoping he’ll get to tell more of someday. —TR

    Tasha Robinson

    Source link