Business Day

Five things to watch this weekend

- /Tymon Smith

MANK — NETFLIX

David Fincher makes a triumphant return to form with this gloriously shot black-andwhite drama about the other man responsibl­e for what many regard as the greatest film.

Orson Welles directed it but he couldn’t have pulled off the power and magic of Citizen Kane without the help of scriptwrit­er Herman J Mankiewicz who, in spite of his terrible addiction to alcohol and sarcasm, managed to create a universal fable about hubris, power and greed that still resonates.

Played with chameleon-like brilliance by Gary Oldman, Mank is here presented as a brilliant but troubled man who was equal to the genius of Welles and had an acute eye for the foibles and shallownes­s of Hollywood’s Golden Age which provided him with the fodder for his story.

INDUSTRY — SHOWMAX

Euphoria meets Billions in this millennial- focused examinatio­n of the glistening world of high finance in London’s City district as seen by its young and often exploited workers.

Suitably full of the ennui and existentia­l dread that comes with the high-power world of finance, the show challenges its characters to either hold on to something good and pure about themselves or allow their dark sides to gain full rein and become as immoral as those at the top.

It’s a competent and engaging look at a world that, while it may appear cold, opaque and cruel from the outside, is run by real people with real emotions, dreams and desires.

NIMIC — MUBI.COM

Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos is the master of creating heart-palpitatin­g existentia­l dread from the banalities of everyday life and this short film, an effective, absurdist piece of psychologi­cal horror, affirms his reputation.

Matt Dillon plays a morose, disillusio­ned cellist who has a creepy encounter with a woman on the subway that will teach him a hard lesson about how irreplacea­ble we all are.

MOSUL — NETFLIX

An admirably effective action drama that tells a story from the Iraq War through the eyes of the Iraqis.

It’s a tightly controlled, inthe-thick-of-it recent era combat film that also manages to deliver a strong message about the real consequenc­es of Western meddling for the daily lives of people on the ground.

 ?? Netflix ?? Brilliant but troubled: Gary Oldman as Herman Mankiewicz in ‘Mank’ ./
Netflix Brilliant but troubled: Gary Oldman as Herman Mankiewicz in ‘Mank’ ./

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