The Press

Eclectic films to warm your winter

Will Ferrell sings, Rob Brydon eats and Dame Judi plays a fairy, in flicks coming to a screen near you, writes James Croot.

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Cinemas may be back in New Zealand but, with the world still in the grip of Covid-19, blockbuste­rs are still some way off. That doesn’t mean that there isn’t plenty for film fans to get excited about, whether it be in a movie theatre or on a streaming service.

Among those titles heading to a big screen near you, are Ku Klux Klan drama Burden (June 4), World War II tale Resistance (June 11 and starring Jesse Eisenberg as a young Marcel Marceau), the Roddy Doyle-penned Rosie (June 18), British baking dramedy Love Sarah (June 18), spooky New Zealand Internatio­nal Film Festival returnee In Fabric (June 4), and dark Irish crime story Calm with Horses (June 25).

Meanwhile, Netflix’s ever eclectic lineup includes anime A Whisker Away (June 18), Polish romance 365 DNI (June 7), and Cuban-set Cold War drama Wasp Network (June 19); Apple TV+ debuts Bryce Dallas Howard’s documentar­y Dads (June 19); and Amazon Prime Video has 7500 (June 19), a terrorist thriller starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

However, after looking at the lineups, we’ve come up with our list of eight great-looking movies we’re excited to see in June.

(June 12, Netflix)

Four African-American war veterans return to Vietnam in search of the remains of their fallen squad leader and hoping to find buried treasure, in Spike Lee’s latest joint. The quartet have to face up to forces of humanity and nature, as well as the lasting ravages of the conflict.

Delroy Lindo, Chadwick Boseman, Jean Reno and Giancarlo Esposito are among those to feature.

Megaton directs this action movie featuring Edgar Ramirez, Michael Pitt and Anna Brewster.

It focuses on a bank robber who joins a plot to commit one final, historic heist before the government turns on a mind-altering signal that will end all criminal behaviour.

(June 3, Netflix)

While the gripping television event that is America’s Scripps National Spelling Bee was another Covid-19 casualty in 2020, this documentar­y at least gives us a chance to remind ourselves what made it special.

It explores the near two-decade trend of Indian American students dominating the competitio­n.

Since 1999, 19 of the 23 winners have been of South-Asian descent, including the last 11 in a row.

 ??  ?? Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in
Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in
 ??  ?? has already proven to be popular in America.
has already proven to be popular in America.

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