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Reviews of movies showing in theaters or streaming online

- — Mark Meszoros, the Willoughby News-Herald — Michael Phillips

Tom Brady may have seven Super Bowl rings, but that’s nothing compared to the latest team against whom he’s facing off, the winningest group of legends perhaps ever assembled. Just take a look at the stats: first up, Jane Fonda, with two Oscars, seven Golden Globes and two Tony Awards under her belt. Next, Lily Tomlin, boasting six Emmys, two Tonys and a Grammy; and Sally Field, coming in hot with two Oscars, two Emmys and two Globes. Rounding out the team is the EGOT herself, Rita Moreno. Count ’em: Oscar, Grammy, Tony, two Emmys and a Golden Globe for good luck. This fearsome foursome star in “80 for Brady,” a tale about a group of octogenari­an football fans and a wild weekend at the Super Bowl. 1:38. 2 ½ stars. — Katie Walsh, Tribune News Service

‘80 FOR BRADY’: ‘ANT-MAN AND THE WASP: QUANTUMANI­A’:

Paul Rudd is back as Scott Lang/ Ant-Man, as is secondbill­ed Evangeline Lilly as Hope Van Dyne/Wasp. Second-billed implies a certain portion of the action and the talking, but Lilly is practicall­y mute in “Quantumani­a,” and you keep waiting for some explanatio­n for this. A curse? A character grudge we’ll eventually find out about? Aside from the occasional boilerplat­e (“I’ve got a read on Scott!”), Hope’s strictly sideline material. The plot this time sends Scott, Hope, Hope’s brilliant and nicely coifed parents (Michelle Pfeiffer and Michael Douglas) and Scott’s enterprisi­ng and socially conscious daughter, Cassie (Kathryn Newton), into the sub-universe of Quantumvil­le. “Quantumani­a” also introduces the scowling, fearsome, highly screenwort­hy revolution-leading warrior, Jentorra, portrayed by Katy O’Brian. She’s a beast, the best kind, and ready for anything. Even when the film itself isn’t much of anything. 2:05. 2 stars. — Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune

‘KNOCK AT THE CABIN’: “Knock at the Cabin” is a real load — 100 lugubrious minutes of what is intended as steadily mounting dread and apocalypse prevention seminar. It’s frustratin­g because writer-director M. Night Shyamalan has made seriously good films and some that go splat. With every new Shyamalan project, moviegoers have a way of holding out hope based on his best efforts, and the luck of the draw. This one comes from the 2018 Paul Tremblay novel “The Cabin at the End of the World,” and there are moments when the adaptation by Shyamalan, Steve Desmond and Michael Sherman — the filmmaker wrote his version based on Desmond and Sherman’s script — feels as if it might be getting somewhere, albeit slowly. The acting’s quite good. But there is more to filmmaking and storytelli­ng than what the actors can do. 1:40. 1 ½ stars. — Michael Phillips

‘MAGIC MIKE’S LAST DANCE’: There’s no denying that there is before “Magic Mike” and there’s after “Magic Mike.” One can even point to a specific inflection point in Steven Soderbergh’s 2012 male stripper drama that was lightly culled from star Channing Tatum’s experience­s in an “all-male revue”: the scene in which Tatum, as the aforementi­oned Mike, performs a solo number to Ginuwine’s “Pony” as Cody Horn’s Brooke looks on from the crowd. It’s not just the hypnotic fluidity of Tatum’s hips and torso, but the way that Soderbergh cuts back to Brooke, our gaze becoming her gaze, her frown offering dramatic irony to the visual splendor that is Tatum’s body in motion. This final installmen­t finds Soderbergh and Tatum toying with audience expectatio­ns to disappoint­ing results. There are a few flashes of the original magic, but it’s lacking in the energy that made the first two movies a thrill. After the cultural reset of “Magic Mike,” this last dance just doesn’t bring the heat. 1:52. 2 stars. — Katie Walsh

‘OF AN AGE’: In 2022, Macedonian Australian filmmaker Goran Stolevski establishe­d himself as a talent to watch with his daring directoria­l debut, the folk horror film “You

Won’t Be Alone,” about a witch body-jumping through a Macedonian village, experienci­ng the vast spectrum of love and cruelty life has to offer. His sophomore feature, “Of an Age,” is quite different — a high school coming-of-age story set in 1999 and 2010, about a Serbian immigrant teenager, Kol (Elias Anton) growing up in Melbourne, coming to terms with his sexuality and experienci­ng first love. Despite the genre contrast, there’s a commonalit­y between the two films in the way that Stolevski captures the aching beauty snatched in life’s darker moments — the heart of the matter remains the same, the bitterswee­t tone just as poignant. “Of an Age,” which takes place over the course of two 24-hour periods set 11 years apart, is like “Before Sunrise” and “Before Sunset” combined into one film, in which two characters are rocked by a chance encounter and reckon with it years later. 1:39. 4 stars. — Katie Walsh

‘RETURN TO SEOUL’: In one of the first scenes of “Return to Seoul,” the striking film by French Cambodian filmmaker Davy Chou, and Cambodia’s Oscar entry, Freddie (Park Ji-min), a French woman who has just landed in Seoul, gets to know her new Korean friends over shots of soju. As she boldly pours her own drink (frowned upon in Korean etiquette) she casually tells them about her approach to life, which she describes as “sight reading,” as in music — learning the signs, how to read them and then plunging into the unknown. Little does she know how much sight reading she will do over the course of an eight-year personal odyssey of self-discovery, on a restless search for identity. In French, English and Korean with English subtitles. 1:55. 4 stars. — Katie Walsh

‘YOU PEOPLE’: It’s not quite peanut butter meeting jelly, but the idea of Kenya Barris and Jonah Hill getting together to make a movie is pretty appealing. Barris is the creator of the well-received and recently concluded ABC sitcom “Black-ish” and its spinoffs, “Grown-ish” and “Mixedish.” His feature-writing credits include 2017’s hilarious “Girls Trip.” Hill is the comedicall­y gifted actor known for movies ranging from “Superbad” to “The Wolf of Wall

Street” to “Don’t Look

Up.” They co-wrote the romantic comedy, with Hill co-starring — alongside Lauren London — and Barris making his feature directoria­l debut. In it, Black meets white and, to

a somewhat lesser degree, the Muslim faith clashes with Judaism. What could go wrong? Streaming on Netflix. 1:58. 2 ½ stars. ‘YOUR PLACE OR MINE’: In a funnier world, Zoe Chao and Tig Notaro are starring in their own romantic comedy together. Meantime, in the real world, they’re ringers in support of Reese Witherspoo­n and Ashton Kutcher, the ones running what we’ll charitably call “the show” in “Your Place or Mine.” No question mark on that title. None needed. It’s a flat business propositio­n, like the movie. Between Witherspoo­n, Kutcher and writer/firsttime feature director Aline Brosh McKenna, we’re talking roughly 70 years’ collective experience in the rom-com genre. So why is this one so bleh? Visually the film is pretty but also pretty lifeless. Streaming on Netflix. 1:51. 1 ½ stars.

RATINGS: The movies listed are rated according to the following key: 4 stars, excellent; 3 stars, good; 2 stars, fair; 1 star, poor.

 ?? DISNEY/MARVEL STUDIOS ?? Paul Rudd, from left, Kathryn Newton and Evangeline Lilly in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a.”
DISNEY/MARVEL STUDIOS Paul Rudd, from left, Kathryn Newton and Evangeline Lilly in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a.”

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