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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesWell-suited dudes in Ray-Bans are back to protect humans from “the scum of the universe” in “Men in Black III,” the third installment of the franchise, once again from director Barry Sonnenfeld. Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones return as Agents J and K, respectively, government agents that police alien activity throughout the universe. This iteration of the franchise sees J going back in time in order to protect K from a disgruntled extraterrestrial he put behind bars. See, the alien, a prison escapee, also plans to go back in time, where he will kill K before the agent can arrest him. Josh Brolin plays K’s younger self, and quite well, managing to adapt many of Jones’ cultivated behaviors perfectly. Our review says, “Smith and Brolin have an undeniable chemistry reminiscent of Smith and Jones in the first film, it is visually fantastic (this is one of the few 3D films out there actually worth seeing in 3D), and towards the end even manages to have an unexpected emotional kick,” and while “it might not be the most elegant or sophisticated summer blockbuster out there, but you won’t feel the desperate need to neurolize yourself afterwards, either.” Rotten Tomatoes: 66% Metacritic: 58
Wes Anderson’s “Moonrise Kingdom” also hits theaters this weekend. The film, co-written by Anderson and Roman Coppola, follows 12-year-old couple Suzy (Kara Hayward) and Sam (Jared Gilman), very much in love in 1960s New England, as they decide to run away from home. Their escape sends the town’s adults – Frances McDormand, Bill Murray, Bruce Willis, and Edward Norton – into a tizzy, illustrating their childlikeness in the face of quite adult behavior from the young heroes. Our review says the film, “like all of Anderson's films, is a very beautiful and funny movie about grief and sorrow, and the never-was 1965 the film takes place in is both a meticulously-crafted triumph of design and decor and an emotionally rich setting, full of objects you could almost reach out and touch, with feelings and yearnings that reach out to you.” RT: 97% MC: 82
“Oslo, August 31st,” the sophomore feature from Norwegian director Joachim Trier (“Reprise”), is a 24 hour visit to the titular city, counting down to the last day of August, as seen through the eyes of a recently rehabilitated heroin addict. Anders (Anders Danielsen Lie), now clean and unemployed, is looking for a job in Oslo so that he can give his life a fresh start. Throughout the day, he reconnects with people from his past, but doesn’t quite seem able to gain the hope or reconciliation he’s looking for in these brief meetings. Our review calls the film “an insider's postcard and love letter to Oslo, and a nostalgic reminder of youthful exuberance that gives way to middle age passivity,” and says that it “showcases a director with a tremendous talent for character and a striking, at times painterly, eye behind the camera.” RT: 96% MC: 81
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2 Comments
Wes Anderson | May 26, 2012 2:58 AM
When will Moonrise Kingdom be wide release!?
jimmiescoffee | May 25, 2012 11:07 PM
good weekend. i look forward to seeing both 'Men In Black III' and 'Moonrise Kingdom.' I'll be damned if 'The Royal Tenenbaums' wasn't one of my favorite theater experiences back in 2001. shit.......