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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

More new movies have hit the shelves! Who has the popcorn?

The Wife

Actors: Glenn Close, Jonathan Pryce, Christian Slater, Max Irons, Harry Lloyd
Directors: Björn Runge
Rated:  R  Restricted
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Run Time: 100 minutes

Behind any great man, there's always a greater woman - and you're about to meet her. Joan Castleman (Glenn Close): a highly intelligent and still-striking beauty - the perfect devoted wife. Forty years spent sacrificing her own talent, dreams and ambitions to fan the flames of her charismatic husband Joe (Jonathan Pryce) and his skyrocketing literary career. Ignoring his infidelities and excuses because of his "art" with grace and humour. Their fateful pact has built a marriage upon uneven compromises. And Joan's reached her breaking point. On the eve of Joe's Nobel Prize for Literature, the crown jewel in a spectacular body of work, Joan's coup de grace is to confront the biggest sacrifice of her life and secret of his career.







Tully

Actors: Charlize Theron, Mackenzie Davis, Ron Livingston, Mark Duplass
Directors: Jason Reitman
Rated:  R  Restricted
Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Run Time: 96 minutes

The film is about Marlo, a mother of three, including a newborn. Marlo's brother gives her a night nanny as a gift. Hesitant with the extravagance at first, Marlo comes to form a unique bond with the thoughtful, surprising, and sometimes challenging young nanny named Tully.





Eighth Grade

Actors: Elsie Fisher, Josh Hamilton, Emily Robinson
Director: Bo Burnham
Rated:  R  Restricted
Studio: Lions Gate
Run Time: 94 minutes

In his feature film directorial debut, comedian Bo Burnham deftly encapsulates the awkwardness, angst, self-loathing and reinvention that a teenage girl goes through on the cusp of high school. Given that the 27-year-old stand-up comic achieved fame as a teenager himself through YouTube by riffing on his insecurities, he is uniquely capable as the film's writer and director to tell the story of Kayla, an anxious girl navigating the final days of her eighth grade year, despite creating a protagonist w female instead of male. Like Burnham did more than a decade ago, 13-year-old Kayla turns to YouTube to express herself, where she makes advice blogs in which she pretends to have it all together. In reality, Kayla is sullen and silent around her single father and her peers at school, carrying out most of her interactions with her classmates on Instagram and Twitter. Her YouTube videos are a clever narrative tool that provide insight into her inner hopes and dreams, much like an inspirational online diary. One of Eighth Grade's biggest triumphs is in its realism.





Leave No Trace

Actors: Ben Foster, Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie, Jeff Kober, Dale Dickey
Directors: Debra Granik
Rated:  PG  Parental Guidance Suggested
Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Run Time: 110 minutes

Will (Ben Foster) and his teenage daughter, Tom (Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie), have lived off the grid for years in the forests of Portland, Oregon. When their idyllic life is shattered, both are put into social services. After clashing with their new surroundings, Will and Tom set off on a harrowing journey back to their wild homeland.




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