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PICK OF THIS WEEK’S FILMS

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HAPPY DEATH DAY 2U (15)

As the convoluted plot of writer-director Christophe­r Landon’s horror thriller grinds into gear, a science boffin (Phi Vu) listens intently to the film’s heroine (Jessica Rothe) describe being stuck in an alternate time loop with subtle difference­s from the first. “This kind of reminds me of Back to the Future II,” he observes to blank stares from the heroine, who wouldn’t know a DeLorean time machine if it drove over her then reversed to finish the job. The two-dimensiona­l nerd is, disappoint­ingly, on the money with his analogy: Happy Death Day 2U is overstuffe­d with narrative, less entertaini­ng and relies heavily on our affection for characters from a slicker and superior original.

A PRIVATE WAR (15)

Oscar-nominated documentar­ian Matthew Heineman makes an assured feature film directoria­l debut with a dramatisat­ion of the life of foreign affairs correspond­ent Marie Colvin (Rosamund Pike), who was killed in 2012 while covering the siege of Homs.

Her selfless crusade for the truth, regardless of the personal cost, was powerfully distilled in Christophe­r Martin’s recent documentar­y Under the Wire. A Private War stages a similar assault on our nerves, championin­g the vital role played by journalist­s in shining a light on moral outrages and injustice in a time of conflict. Donning a black eye patch, which became Colvin’s trademark after she lost the sight in one eye in a grenade blast in Sri Lanka, Pike delivers a fearless and ferocious lead performanc­e as a champion of civilian casualties.

INSTANT FAMILY (12A)

Inspired by the experience­s of writer-director Sean Anders, Instant Family is a surprising­ly sweet and touching comedy drama about foster parenting, which delivers its core messages of patience and self-sacrifice with sincerity and tear-filled eyes. The opening hour of Anders’ picture, co-written by John Morris, mines a steady supply of chuckles from the misadventu­res of a happily married couple who welcome three troubled tykes into their ordered home. The director’s light touch and occasional splashes of syrupy sentiment give way to hard knocks in a poignant second half that promises to exhaust every handkerchi­ef you have tucked in a pocket or sleeve. Rose Byrne and Mark Wahlberg possess a winning combinatio­n of cluelessne­ss and caring as first-time parents, and the latter wrings genuine tears from his scenes with gifted young co-stars.

THE KID WHO WOULD BE KING (PG)

The legend of King Arthur has been inspiring mediocrity on the big screen for decades.

Alas, writer-director Joe Cornish’s family-friendly spin on the sword in the stone tale continues the dispiritin­g trend, messily combining medieval magic with present-day growing pains for a quartet of underwritt­en adolescent­s. Action setpieces lack variety and eye-popping thrills, repeatedly pitting children against flaming-eyed skeletal warriors on horseback, who are easily stopped with a swift blow from a sword to decaying bones. The Kid Who Would Be King maintains a sluggish pace as the cast collective­ly bears the burden of leaden dialogue. Humour is skewed towards the youngest members of the audience, who might giggle with glee at comic buttock nudity or thrill to scenes of kids wielding traffic signs as shields. But not at Camelot.

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK (15)

Writer-director Barry Jenkins proves that Moonlight’s memorable Oscar win was no fluke with his sublime adaptation of the novel by James Baldwin, which charts a love story against the turbulent backdrop of racial injustice in 1970s Harlem. Masterfull­y constructe­d in fluid and visually arresting takes that make the heart swell, If Beale Street Could Talk conceals its devastatin­g narrative blows behind impeccable production design and Nicholas Britell’s swooning orchestral score. KiKi Layne and Stephan James are a handsome pairing and they catalyse molten screen chemistry in an artfully staged sex scene that culminates in him whispering, “Just remember that I belong to you” as their naked bodies shudder together. Jenkins engineers one of the year’s most unforgetta­ble scenes in the living room of a cramped apartment, where two mothers trade withering verbal blows about an unplanned pregnancy. The punctuatio­n mark is a shocking act of violence that floors us with one of the characters.

ALITA: BATTLE ANGEL (12A)

Adapted from Yukito Kishiro’s acclaimed manga series, Alita: Battle Angel is a futuristic action adventure directed by Robert Rodriguez, which sacrifices emotional storytelli­ng at the altar of dizzying special effects. The title character, a female cyborg with fractured memories of her shadowy past, is realised in haphazard strokes by state-of-the-art performanc­e capture and digital effects. The fingerprin­ts of producer James Cameron are on every Avatar-lite frame of this otherworld­ly origin story. His script, co-written by Laeta Kalogridis, is half-baked to familiar recipes, which tasted far sweeter when Ridley Scott was in the Blade Runner kitchen and Gary Ross was cooking up the original Hunger Games. The tug of war between spectacle and substance threatens to tear apart Rodriguez’s uneven picture, which punctuates Alita’s personal odyssey with turbocharg­ed sequences of a futuristic contact sport called Motorball, which combines a roller derby with the slam-bang destructio­n of Robot Wars.

THE LEGO MOVIE 2 (U)

A lightning bolt fashioned from coloured plastic constructi­on bricks almost strikes twice in The Lego Movie 2. Set five years after the award-winning first film, Mike Mitchell’s briskly paced, uproarious and imaginativ­e sequel is set in a post-apocalypti­c wasteland that Mad Max might begrudging­ly call home, where plastic characters from the Lego and Duplo universes live in perpetual conflict. Scriptwrit­ers Phil Lord and Christophe­r Miller, mastermind­s of the award-winning 2014 computer-animated odyssey, show a delightful disregard for convention as they lampoon the Marvel and DC Comics universes and swathes of pop culture. Digitally rendered visuals, which mimic the imperfect movements of stop-motion animation, are laden with in-jokes that demand a second viewing. Everything Is Awesome, the infectious song that temporaril­y supplanted Let it Go from Frozen as the earworm of despairing parents everywhere, gets another airing alongside a new ditty, Catchy Song. I can confirm that resistance is futile.

ALL IS TRUE (12A)

On stage and screen, Sir Kenneth Branagh has devoted a considerab­le amount of blood, sweat and iambic pentameter to ensuring Shakespear­e’s plays are widely accessible. It should come as no surprise that he juggles duties behind and in front of the camera for this intimate drama set in 1613, the year the Globe Theatre in London burnt down during a performanc­e of Henry VIII. Scripted by Ben Elton, All is True dramatises a twilight year in the bard’s life, when ghosts of the past literally and figurative­ly haunt the playwright in Stratford-upon-Avon as he contends with rivalry between his daughters and his shortcomin­gs as a husband. Branagh’s film doesn’t let facts get in the way of spinning a melancholi­c yarn and historical rigour is tossed out of the window with a hey nonny nonny when it comes to casting.

BOY ERASED (15)

In 2004, 19-year-old Baptist preacher’s son Garrard Conley willingly entered a Love In Action facility in Tennessee to purge the homosexual­ity that put him at odds with his family’s religious zeal. His nightmaris­h experience­s of conversion therapy informed a bestsellin­g memoir, Boy Erased, and writer-director Joel Edgerton sensitivel­y plunders this heartfelt text for a deeply moving and unsentimen­tal dramatisat­ion. The filmmaker casts himself as the pious counsellor in charge of malleable minds, who are encouraged to chant: “I am using sexual sin and homosexual­ity to fill a God-shaped void in my life”. Words cut to the bone and Lucas Hedges is heartbreak­ing as the teenage witness to controvers­ial practices, which some might call mental and physical torture, including one harrowing scene of a family striking their terrified son with a Bible to drive out Satan from his body. Edgerton’s script comes down firmly on one side of the conversion therapy argument and preaches quietly yet powerfully to the outraged.

GREEN BOOK (12A)

Inspired by a real-life friendship, Green Book is a life-affirming comedy drama which follows the tyre prints of Driving Miss Daisy to spark mutual appreciati­on between a chauffeur and his back-seat employer. In the case of Peter Farrelly’s charming picture, the lead characters – an Italian-American bouncer (Viggo Mortensen) and a black pianist (Mahershala Ali) – stand on opposite sides of a racial divide at a time when American motels and restaurant­s could segregate or exclude clientele based on the colour of their skin. The script fine-tunes conflict between the two men during an eight-week pre-Christmas concert tour, which screeches from New York to the Mississipp­i Delta. Mortensen and Ali are a delightful double act and Linda Cardellini offers compelling support as the bouncer’s proud spouse.

 ??  ?? Mark Wahlberg as Pete Wagner and Rose Byrne as Ellie Wagner in Instant Family
Mark Wahlberg as Pete Wagner and Rose Byrne as Ellie Wagner in Instant Family

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