The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Spring films

- OPENING >>

picked 10 movies (a couple we’ve seen in advance) that we think will be worth a trip to theaters to gorge ourselves on overpriced popcorn and top-rate entertainm­ent, not necessaril­y in that order.

Here’s our roundup.

`The Fall Guy'

Hollywood never tires of tinkering with beloved — OK, even terrible — TV series by turning them into mostly forgettabl­e movies. There’s been a handful of good ones (“21 Jump Street,” the “Star Trek” films and “The Fugitive”), but more than a share of duds (“Starsky & Hutch,” “The Flintstone­s,” “S.W.A.T.”) and some utter clunkers (“Wild Wild West,” “The Beverly Hillbillie­s,” “The Dukes of Hazzard”). So where does “The Fall Guy” fall? The good news is it looks like a winner. Uber-athletic filmmaker David Leitch’s redo of that kitschy ’80s series starring Lee Majors as a stuntman/bounty hunter earned raves in its South by Southwest Film Festival premiere this month. A big reason is its dreamy star, Gosling, following up on his Oscar-nominated turn as Ken in “Barbie” and who struts his stuff as stuntman Colt Seavers. In this romance-laced blockbuste­r, Colt is on the hunt for an action star (Aaron Taylorjohn­son) who’s gone missing while shooting a film directed by Colt’s ex-girlfriend (Emily Blunt). Anyone who watched the Oscars on March 10 knows that Gosling and Blunt have real chemistry together. Just take our money now.

OPENING >> May 3 `Civil War'

With a contentiou­s presidenti­al election advancing from the back burner to the disturbing forefront, Alex Garland’s “what if” film proposes a sickeningl­y believable scenario, that our nation becomes so entrenched and divided and outraged that a civil war breaks out. As a filmmaker, Garland likes to engulf you, rattle you, then spit you out. (The last 10 minutes of his “Men” made everyone squirm. EVERYONE.) Here, Garland assembles an A-list cast that includes Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny and Nick Offerman for a nailbiter that follows journalist­s as they risk all to cover a volatile story about angry, heavily armed Americans squaring off with a totalitari­an government. Call it the ultimate American Horror Story.

April 12

OPENING >> `Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire'

Hot off a first-ever Oscar win, that workaholic Godzilla is already back on the job, teaming up with that massive, cranky ape King Kong for Legendary Pictures’ latest Monsterver­se smackdown. But can returning director Adam Wingard’s focus

on the historical legacy of these titans and that monster haven Skull Island rival anything we witnessed in the Oscar-winning (for best special effects) 2023 extravagan­za “Godzilla Minus One”? We have doubts, but that won’t stop us from seeing this effort starring Rebecca Hall, Brian Tyree Henry and Dan Stevens. OPENING >> March 29

`Wicked Little Letters'

A serial letter writer spews LOL profanitie­s and hurls spurious accusation­s at residents of a quaint 1920s English village. The anonymous extracurri­cular activity creates a ruckus and leads to pious fingers pointing directly at Rose Gooding (Jessie Buckley), an Irish migrant and raucous single mom who does indeed curse like a proverbial sailor. In stage director Thea Sharrock’s truthbased

dark comedy, feisty Rose tangles with her nosy, buttoned-up, pursed-lipped neighbor Edith (Olivia Colman) while a smart female investigat­or (Anjana Vasan) runs smack into sexism wherever she turns. “Wicked Little Letters” might well be that pleasing antidote to make you laugh during these troubled times. The creative use of naughty words deployed in those scandalous letters sure had me cackling.

OPENING >> `Femme' April 5

Two of the finest performanc­es of the year power Sam H. Freeman and Ng Choon Ping’s provocativ­e, unique queer revenge drama/thriller. When Black drag performer Jules (Nathan Stewart-jarrett) runs into homophobe Preston (George Mackay),

the tatted, tightly wound brute that violently gaybashed him, a vengeance plan takes root. But as Jules enters Preston’s life, the power dynamic begins to shift in unexpected, dangerous ways. “Femme” never allows you to take one breath of air — one reason this is the find of the indie spring season The two performanc­es gut you. OPENING >> In limited release Thursday

`Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes'

Director Wes Ball had his work cut out for him, following in the foot- and handprints of 2010’s sensationa­l trilogy (“Rise of the Planet of the Apes,” “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” and the exceptiona­l “War for the Planet of the Apes”). But the filmmaker behind “The Maze Runner” trilogy

gives the film and the franchise his best shot by leaping over generation­s to a new time when apes rule and humans acquiesce. When a power-drunk ape goes bananas and starts acting more and more like a dictator, a young ape emerges on the scene.

May 10

OPENING >> `I Saw the TV Glow'

A film that defies genre identifica­tion often turns out to be a head trip. And that pretty much sums up this Sundance Film Festival breakout, which received an enthusiast­ic response there and continues to draw sizable buzz. Jane Schoenbrun (“All Going to the World’s Fair”) takes us to the mid-1990s, where an isolated teen develops an intense connection with an eerie late-night TV show. Justice Smith, Brigette Lundy-paine, Ian Foreman and Helena Howard star. We’ll certainly be tuning in.

OPENING >> May 2 in select cities, May 12 nationally

`The Ministry of Ungentlema­nly Warfare'

To try and figure what the heck Guy Ritchie’s comedic adventure is about, all you need to do is digest the tile of the book that inspired the mayhem: Damien Lewis’ “Churchill’s Secret Warriors: The Explosive True Story of the Special Forces Desperadoe­s

of WWII.” That gives you the nuts-and-bolts of this “truth-based” exercise that stars a flotilla of hunks (Henry Cavill, Alan Ritchson, Alex Pettyfer, Hero Fiennes Tiffin, Henry Golding and so on). Let’s just hope Ritchie channels more of “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” (even if it bombed at the box office) and less of “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” (which made oodles).

April 19

OPENING >> `Monkey Man'

We’ve always loved Patel as an actor, and now we can extend that adoration to his skills as a filmmaker, co-screenwrit­er and producer, at least based on the word out of South by Southwest, where his directoria­l debut premiered. The violent fight club-adjacent thriller stars Patel as Kid and is set in Mumbai. Patel, who reportedly incurred numerous injuries during the film’s fight sequences, plays a gorillamas­ked fighter who directs his rage not only at his ring competitor­s but at those who have kept him down for the count. The fight sequences are supposedly phenomenal.

April 5

OPENING >> `Challenger­s'

Oh, the games pro athletes play — on the field (or court, in this case) and in their bedrooms. In this steamy threesome drama helmed by Luca Guadagnino (“Call Me by Your Name”), Tashi, a former star player turned coach (Zendaya), seeks to up the slumping game of her topranking client (Mike Faist, of “West Side Story”), who’s also her hubby. Trouble and temptation knock on their door in the strapping form of her hubby’s former bestie, who also happens to be Tashi’s ex-lover (Josh O’connor of “Emma”). He happens to also be the oncourt competitio­n, leading to tangled emotions, ambitions and probably ethics. “Challenger­s” looks to be Zendaya’s bid for another winning title, and the versatile performer keeps on pushing herself and impressing critics and audience alike. She lands her biggest lead role in a theatrical release yet, and we think she’s more than up for the challenge.

April 26

 ?? COURTESY OF 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS ?? A young ape (Owen Teague, left) and a young woman (Freya Allan) join forces in “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes,” the latest release in the popular movie franchise.
COURTESY OF 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS A young ape (Owen Teague, left) and a young woman (Freya Allan) join forces in “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes,” the latest release in the popular movie franchise.
 ?? COURTESY OF METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER ?? Zendaya, center, plays a tennis coach caught between two competing players in “Challenger­s.” Also appearing in the games-people-play film are Mike Faist, left, and Josh O’connor.
COURTESY OF METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER Zendaya, center, plays a tennis coach caught between two competing players in “Challenger­s.” Also appearing in the games-people-play film are Mike Faist, left, and Josh O’connor.
 ?? COURTESY OF SIGNATURE ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? A drag performer (Nathan Stewart-jarrett, left) plots revenge against a homophobic man who attacked him (George Mackay) in the tense drama “Femme,” but the power dynamic begins to shift in unexpected, dangerous ways.
COURTESY OF SIGNATURE ENTERTAINM­ENT A drag performer (Nathan Stewart-jarrett, left) plots revenge against a homophobic man who attacked him (George Mackay) in the tense drama “Femme,” but the power dynamic begins to shift in unexpected, dangerous ways.
 ?? COURTESY OF A24 FILMS ?? Jesse Plemons plays a soldier in “Civil War,” a drama about a contentiou­s American presidenti­al election that leads to armed resistance. The stellar cast also includes Kirsten Dunst and Nick Offerman.
COURTESY OF A24 FILMS Jesse Plemons plays a soldier in “Civil War,” a drama about a contentiou­s American presidenti­al election that leads to armed resistance. The stellar cast also includes Kirsten Dunst and Nick Offerman.

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