r-2016-12-01

Page 19

SHORT TAKES

This plays out like a deranged Batmanwith-a-calculator action flick. Ben  Affleck plays Christian Wolff, a high functioning  autistic man who has managed to harness his  extreme intelligence with numbers and physical tics down into the strangest of professions.  By day, he’s your average accountant helping  a farm owner find tax loopholes to save a few  thousand bucks. At night, he’s some sort of accountant ninja who can take out a room full of  mob guys with a dinner knife and some totally  Batman forearm blasts to the face. Christian  takes jobs laundering books for dirty folks  all over the world and, while he does have a  modest, sparsely decorated home, he also has  a mobile man cave—or, should I say, Batcave— that keeps all the spoils of his riches—money,  gold, Jackson Pollock paintings and, yes,  collector’s items like Batman comic books.  During one job, trying to find missing money for  a prosthetics company led by John Lithgow, he  takes a liking to fellow accountant Dana (the  invaluable Anna Kendrick), and they conspire  to find the missing money, which, of course,  wasn’t really supposed to happen.

one who really stops to listen is her teacher (a  hilarious Woody Harrelson) who actually has no  choice given his profession. Craig’s screenplay  is first rate, and her directing results in some  great performances. Steinfeld is good enough  here to be considered for her second Oscar  nomination, while Jenner (who starred in this  year’s Everybody Wants Some!!) is equally  good. This one draws comparison to the best  of John Hughes, and I would call the movie a  good companion piece to The Breakfast Club.  It’s good to see Steinfeld getting a role she  very much deserves and exciting to see a new  voice like Craig’s on the scene. Kyra Sedgwick is  also very good in a supporting role as Nadine’s  mother, while Hayden Szeto does excellent  work as a high school boy who hasn’t mastered  the art of properly asking somebody out.  (His performance is all the more impressive  because he’s over 30 playing 18.)

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Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

Director Denis Villeneuve has made  one of the year’s best science fiction  films. Amy Adams stars as Dr. Louise Banks,  a linguistics teacher crippled by visions of a  daughter who died of a rare illness. She lives a  life of seclusion, where the only thing she really  does is teach her class and mope around her  lakefront home. (Man, that must be one abnormally high paying teacher’s gig.) During class,  a bunch of phones go off, a student instructs  her to turn on the TV, and, bam, that’s how she  discovers the planet seems to be getting a visit  from an alien force. Strange giant pods have  parked themselves all over the planet, and  nobody knows their intent. A solemn military  man (Forest Whitaker) shows up in Louise’s  office and informs her the world needs her.  She has a sense of purpose again. It isn’t long  before she’s inside an alien ship trying to talk  to the “Heptapods,” large elephant looking  aliens with seven legs. She’s joined by a science  officer played by a surprisingly low-key Jeremy  Renner. The movie is drawing comparisons to  Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind.  It’s a very different type of film from that one.  If you’re looking for some sort of action pic,  you will not find that here. This is a sci-fi movie  that gives itself time to breathe.

Peter Yates returns to helm the next  chapter in the Harry Potter universe, a  prequel called Fantastic Beasts and Where  to Find Them, the title of a textbook Harry  studied at Hogwarts. The film takes place  well before Harry’s time, as the world of  wizardry comes to New York City in the 1920s.  Unfortunately, Beasts struggles with some  of the same problems as the first, lackluster  Harry Potter. It’s a sometimes good-looking  movie with a screenplay that never takes hold.  It’s all over the place, with no real sense of  purpose other than setting up future movies.  It’s nothing but an overblown place-setter. In  place of Daniel Radcliffe’s Harry, we get Eddie  Redmayne’s Newt, author and caretaker for  a variety of “fantastic beasts.” The film opens  with him coming to New York toting a suitcase  with a variety of beasts bursting to get out.  Some of them do, indeed, escape and wreak  havoc. Most notably a little platypus-looking  thing called Niffler. There’s a fun moment when  Newt opens his case, and drops into it like it  contains a staircase. It reveals a vast home for  the creatures inside, where he feeds them and  plays. And that’s it, really. The movie is a big  setup for the occasional sequences involving  Redmayne interacting with special effects.  The creatures might look relatively cool, but  none of them register as great characters  that move the plot along. Dan Fogler is pretty  good in a supporting role as somebody who  befriends Newt.

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Arrival

Doctor Strange

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The Edge of Seventeen

Writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig  makes an impressive debut with this  darkly funny take on the life of a modern day  high school outcast. Hailee Steinfeld gives her  best performance since True Grit as Nadine,  a highly intelligent teen going through an  awkward stage when her best friend (Haley Lu  Richardson) starts dating her brother (Blake  Jenner). Nadine is a practitioner of brutal  honesty, which basically gets her ostracized at  school and in trouble with her family. The only

NOVEMBER 19, 2016 – JANUARY 22, 2017

LEAD SPONSOR

The Bretzlaff Foundation MAJOR SPONSORS

Clark/Sullivan Construction; Eldorado Resorts; Sandy Raffealli, Porsche of Reno

Hacksaw Ridge

Mel Gibson directs his first movie in  a decade and—surprise—the sucker  bleeds. It bleeds a lot. As a director, Gibson  stands alongside the likes of Sam Raimi, David  Cronenberg and Peter Jackson as a master of  body horror. Yes, I will go so far as to say his  latest, Hacksaw Ridge, is an all out horror film  in parts. His depiction of a World War II battle  makes George Romero’s Dawn of the Dead look  like Zootopia. The movie tells the true story of  Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield), a battlefield  medic and the first of three conscientious  objectors in U.S. warfare history to receive the  Medal of Honor. The dude refused to pick up a  gun, or any weapon for that matter, during his  time served in Okinawa. That didn’t stop him  from braving the battlefields with comrades,  eventually saving the lives of 75 men battles.  Much of the film’s first half is devoted to  Doss’ backstory, a troubled childhood with his  alcoholic World War I veteran father (a good  Hugo Weaving) and an eventual romance with  future wife Dorothy Schutte (Teresa Palmer).  The early goings in the film are handled well, although schmaltzy at times. When Doss goes to  boot camp and faces off against commanding  officers like Captain Glover (Sam Worthington)  and Sgt. Howell (Vince Vaughn), the film starts  to get very interesting. Due to his Seventh Day  Adventist beliefs, Doss refuses to pick up a  rifle, and this gets him into all sorts of jams.  After a detour for a court-martial hearing,  Doss and his infantry mates are deployed to  Japan. When the action switches to the scaling  of the Maeda Escarpment a.k.a. Hacksaw Ridge,  the movie becomes perhaps the most grueling  war movie experience ever made.

TA L K

Collector Barbara L. Gordon on A Shared Legacy SAT U R DAY, D E C E M B E R 3 / 2 P M

RnRsweetdeals.newsReview.com

The latest Marvel movie is certainly  one of the weirder ones, with Benedict  Cumberbatch starring as the title character, a  sorcerer who can cast spells and slip through  passageways in time. It’s an origin story,  showing how Strange loses his surgeon’s hands  in an accident, travels to India, and learns  about the mystical arts from The Ancient One  (Tilda Swinton). I have to admit, I didn’t always  follow exactly what was going on in this movie,  and I found some stretches a little convoluted  and boring. When the movie soars, it soars  high, and Cumberbatch winds up being a  decent choice for the role, even with his weird  American accent. Director Scott Derrickson  (Sinister), who looked like an odd choice for  a Marvel movie with his horror film pedigree,  acquits himself nicely. The movie often plays  like a Matrix-Inception mashup with a little  bit of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon thrown  in for good measure. The special effects are  first rate. Doctor Strange is a bit of an oddball  character, and he’s supposed to factor into  future Avengers movies.

This guy saves you money.

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The Accountant

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This exhibition is drawn from the Barbara L. Gordon Collection and is organized and circulated by Art Services International, Alexandria, Virginia. Attributed to Edward Hicks, The Peaceable Kingdom with the Leopard of Serenity, 1846-1848, oil on canvas.

12.01.16    |   RN&R   |   19


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r-2016-12-01 by News & Review - Issuu