Los Angeles Times

Awkward talk at the table

- By Noel Murray calendar@latimes.com

New on Blu-ray

The Dinner Lionsgate DVD, $19.98; Blu-ray, $24.99; also available on VOD

Herman Koch’s bestsellin­g 2009 novel “The Dinner” has already been made into movies in Dutch and Italian and now gets an English-language adaptation courtesy of writer-director Oren Moverman. Richard Gere and Steve Coogan costar as estranged brothers who meet for a meal with their wives (played by Rebecca Hall and Laura Linney), where they have an uncomforta­ble conversati­on about a crime committed by their children and whether they should tell the truth about what happened. The script is over-explanator­y and relies too much on flashbacks, but the cast is excellent in long scenes together at the dinner table, hashing out a tough moral dilemma. As he showed with his films “The Messenger” and “Rampart,” Moverman has a feel for stories that straddle the line between social realism and genre fiction. Special features: A Moverman/Linney commentary track

VOD

The Transf iguration Available Tuesday

First-time feature filmmaker Michael O’Shea steals from the best with his indie horror film, borrowing liberally from (and occasional­ly name-checking) George Romero’s “Martin,” Tomas Alfredson’s “Let the Right One In” and Larry Fessenden’s “Habit,” all while telling the story of a lonely New York teen obsessed with vampires. As much a character study as it is a slasher, “The Transfigur­ation” asks the audience to identify with the psychologi­cally damaged Milo (played by Eric Ruffin), who strikes up a sweet romance with the new girl in his neighborho­od while going out at night to experiment with vampirism. Effective as both a textured slice-of-life and as a discomfiti­ng commentary on modern alienation — marked by subtle observatio­ns about race and class — “The Transfigur­ation” is sublime art-horror.

TV set of the week

Portlandia: Season Seven VSC DVD, $19.95

Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein’s hipster-skewering sketch comedy series will be airing its eighth and final season next year, which is a shame, because judging by the 10 episodes of Season 7, the creators aren’t out of good jokes yet. With guest appearance­s by the likes of Kumail Nanjiani, Maria Bamford, Laurie Metcalf, Abbi Jacobson, Claire Danes and Kyle MacLachlan — and routines taking on men’s rights activists, the gig economy and restaurant­s that fetishize garbage food — “Portlandia” remains one of cable’s sharpest, funniest shows.

From the archives

Freebie and the Bean Warner Archive Blu-ray, $21.99

Hollywood was on such a roll in the first half of the ’70s that even the studios’ lesserknow­n films were classics of a kind. On paper, this 1974 buddy cop picture sounds utterly generic: an urban crime story packed with car chases and gunplay. But producer-director Richard Rush brought an appealing shagginess to Robert Kaufman and Floyd Mutrux’s script, and costars James Caan and Alan Arkin have terrific chemistry as two very different partners who work well together to bring down organized crime. From its vividly seedy San Francisco locations to its hysterical­ly over-the-top violence, “Freebie and the Bean” is memorably funky — the kind of movie that modern writer-directors like Quentin Tarantino, Paul Thomas Anderson and Shane Black are still trying to ape.

 ?? The Orchard ?? BROTHERS Steve Coogan, left, and Richard Gere talk tough in “The Dinner.”
The Orchard BROTHERS Steve Coogan, left, and Richard Gere talk tough in “The Dinner.”

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