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Reviews of movies showing in theaters or streaming online

- — Michael Phillips

‘FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE SECRETS OF DUMBLEDORE’: The third installmen­t in the “Harry Potter” prequel franchise, “Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore,” arrives four years after the second film, “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d.” The plot concerns Grindelwal­d’s grasps at power in the magical world because he essentiall­y wants to start a race war with the muggles (humans). Set in the 1930s (or thereabout­s), the fascist vibes are thick in the air as the motley crew of Albus Dumbledore (Jude Law), magizoolog­ist Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne), Newt’s brother Theseus (Callum Turner), Hogwarts professor Lally Hicks (Jessica Williams), and muggle baker Jacob (Dan Fogler) set out to foil Grindelwal­d’s plans by confusing his visions of the future. Does the plan work? Not really, but honestly, who’s to say? After all the running around they still end up at some rigged election in Bhutan in which a magical creature will select the “pure of heart” to lead the magical world, if anyone still cares. There is nothing of consequenc­e that occurs in this movie, as everyone involved seems to be going through the motions in order to cash a check and fulfill their obligation­s. 2:22. 1 ½ stars. — Katie Walsh, Tribune News Service

‘FATHER STU’: “Father Stu”? He’s not a regular priest, he’s a cool priest. A priest who swears, a priest with a history of boozing and boxing. That’s the story told, at least by the film’s poster, which features a diptych of star Mark Wahlberg, looking rough and rueful in a mug shot, and then beatific in Catholic clergy apparel. The journey between the two photos is the dominion of “Father Stu,” the directoria­l debut of Rosalind Ross, who also wrote the screenplay, though there’s more to the story of Catholic priest Stuart Long. There is a profound grace to be found in “Father Stu,” when everyone gets out of the way to let the message of suffering as spirituali­ty just breathe. But one can’t help but feel like that comes too little and too late to have any significan­t impact. 2:04. 2 stars. — Katie Walsh

‘HATCHING’: In the fantastica­l Finnish horror fairytale “Hatching,” the directoria­l debut of Hannah Bergholm, a young girl hatches a murderous bird monster out of an egg that she secretly nests in her bed, and that’s not even the scariest part — her perfection­ist mommy blogger mother strikes the truest terror in the film. Like many great monster movies, “Hatching” uses a monster as a metaphor for repressed emotion, and the creature at the center of this film is one of the most uniquely grotesque creations seen on screen in a long time. In Finnish with English subtitles. 1:27. 3 stars. — Katie Walsh

‘MEMORY’: Back in 2001, Guy Pearce starred in Christophe­r Nolan’s “Memento,” a film about a man tracking down his wife’s killer while suffering from memory loss, using notes and tattoos on his body to remember clues in his search. In 2022, he’s co-starring in a film in which a contract killer suffering from early onset Alzheimer’s uses similar methods in order

to keep track of details. But that’s where the comparison­s between “Memento” and Martin Campbell’s “Memory” end. The former was a groundbrea­king neo-noir classic; the latter is best forgotten as soon as possible. “Memory” is yet another entry in the Liam Neeson Gets Revenge sub-genre, a sprawling body of work that sprung up after the surprise success of the 2008 actionthri­ller “Taken.” You know the drill: a child or some other vulnerable person is threatened, his character has got a very particular set of skills, rescue and/or vengeance ensues. That’s at least one of the plots of “Memory,” a tangled mess of intertwini­ng storylines and too many two-dimensiona­l characters. In English and Spanish with English subtitles. 1:53. 1 ½ stars. — Katie Walsh

‘THE NORTHMAN’: In 1982, “Conan the Barbarian” enticed audiences with a poster promising four phases of a rough man’s rough life: “Thief. Warrior. Gladiator. King.” “The Northman,” which wanders narrativel­y

but, as cinema, basically eats “Conan” for breakfast, follows what might be considered a similar career path: Prince, followed by Slave, then Viking Marauder, and finally Newly Sensitized Lover and Potential Family Man. Alexander Skarsgard takes the title role, as well as taking a fair bit of on-screen punishment en route to a climactic battle at the Gates of Hel (one “l” in this hell, for the record). There, at Hel, Amleth, played by Skarsgard, wields his mighty sword against his kingdom-usurping uncle (Claes Bang) surrounded by rivers of flaming molten lava. They’re nude, discreetly silhouette­d, and as in much of “The Northman” the scene’s melding of digital and practical effects and design strategies doesn’t lead to the usual fantasy generica. Robert Eggers creates worlds that used to be, or never were, but thanks to his chosen medium, there they are, vivid and alive. 2:16. 3 stars. — Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune

‘SONIC THE HEDGEHOG 2’:

Based on the Sega video game franchise about a speedy blue creature, “Sonic the Hedgehog” raced into theaters in 2020. A mix of live-action and digital animation, “Sonic” was a reasonably fun family friendly adventure that benefited from a wonderful voice performanc­e from Ben Schwartz as the heroic Sonic and generally enjoyable cartoonish shenanigan­s from Jim Carrey as his nemesis, the villainous Dr. Robotnik. With “Sonic the Hedgehog 2,” we get a sequel that is, of course, bigger. And, unfortunat­ely, longer. In the movie’s production notes, producer Toby Ascher speaks of efforts to create “a Sonic cinematic universe,” because, we can only assume, the world has too few cinematic universes at this point. Well, guys, if we are to see more of Blue Justice and his buddies, a little less may prove to be a bit more next time. 2:02. 2 stars. — Mark Meszoros, Willoughby News-Herald

‘THE UNBEARABLE WEIGHT OF MASSIVE TALENT’:

Now 58, with nearly 100 film credits since he was in “Fast Times at Ridgemont High,” Nicolas Cage has handled a lion’s share of money grabs in a career distinguis­hed by a gratifying number of movies worth seeing, often just for him. Good material, bad material, big-budget studio clangers, low-budget indies on wry: The man does not coast. The central gag in the occasional­ly funny action-comedy “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent” imagines Cage, playing a variation on himself named Nick Cage at a career impasse. Divorced, with a tenuous, tetchy relationsh­ip with a (fictional) teenage daughter played by Lily Mo Sheen, the movie’s version of Cage has run up a $600,000 tab at a fancy Los Angeles hotel and needs a job. His agent, Fink (Neil Patrick Harris), comes through with a prospect: For a cool, gallingly easy million, his client is to attend a super rich Cage fan’s birthday party on the island of Mallorca, Spain. There Cage will be the special guest star, required only to small-talk about his career, get some sun and sweat his future. Through it all, Cage gives his all, which hardly needed saying. He takes on two roles, plus a cameo, playing “himself ”; a pushy, digitally de-aged ’90s version of himself, named “Nicky”; and a peppy, aged Italian crime boss with terrible fashion sense. Cage never stops trying things, whether its eccentric physical details or idiosyncra­tically timed punchlines. 1:47. 2 stars.

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

 ?? IFC FILMS ?? Siiri Solalinna in “Hatching,” the directoria­l debut of Hannah Bergholm.
IFC FILMS Siiri Solalinna in “Hatching,” the directoria­l debut of Hannah Bergholm.

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