Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

HOME MOVIES

- KAREN MARTIN

The Jungle Book, directed by Jon Favreau (PG, 111 minutes) This handsomely designed and thoroughly enjoyable remake of the original 1967 family cartoon (based on a series of stories by Rudyard Kipling) follows an assortment of personalit­y-loaded wild things surroundin­g Mowgli (voice of Neel Sethi), a boy adopted by a pack of wolves whose best pal is a panther named Bagheera (voice of Ben Kingsley).

At the heart of this enchanting film is an intriguing exploratio­n of the relationsh­ip between humanity and nature, brought into focus when Mowgli is threatened

by a human-hating deadly tiger named Shere Khan (voice of Idris Elba) and is forced to leave his jungle home for safety. That’s when self-discovery becomes part of the journey.

Animated and live-action, with the voices of Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray, Christophe­r Walken, Giancarlo Esposito; directed by Jon Favreau.

I Am Wrath (R, 92 minutes) Although sometimes promising, this predictabl­e and ultimately unsuccessf­ul vigilante actioner concerns a former Black Ops agent (John Travolta) who, enraged when corrupt cops let his wife’s street-gang murderers walk, decides to seek justice with the help of a former colleague (Christophe­r Meloni). With Rebecca De Mornay, Sam Trammell; directed by Chuck Russell.

Barbershop: The Next Cut

(PG-13, 112 minutes) A snappy, socially and politicall­y relevant comedy sequel that, after 10 years, reunites the gang at Calvin’s Barbershop, this time with ladies hairstylin­g (and attitude) included, along with the need to unite in the common cause of preventing the ruin of the surroundin­g neighborho­od. With Ice Cube, Cedric The Entertaine­r, Regina Hall, Anthony Anderson, Sean Patrick Thomas; directed by Malcolm D. Lee.

Hardcore Henry (R, 90 minutes) This numbingly violent, foul-mouthed, drug-fueled and sexually explicit zinger, told from a first-person point of view, is about a guy who goes from being dead to being a cyborg without a memory who battles scads of Russian brutes for no clear reason. Not for everyone. With Tim Roth, Sharlto Copley, Haley Bennett; directed by Ilya Naishuller.

River (not rated, 95 minutes) A slow-moving thriller loaded with atmosphere and dread, River is the story of an American volunteer on an island

in the south of Laos who tries to rescue a woman being sexually assaulted, accidental­ly killing her attacker (who happens to be an Australian senator’s son), resulting in him being accused not only of murder but the rape of the woman he saved. With Rossif Sutherland, Sara Botsford, Ted Atherton; directed by Jamie M. Dagg.

The Boss (R, 99 minutes) Melissa McCarthy can be plenty funny, but she can’t pull off an entire movie all by herself. She gets little help from the script (which she cowrote with husband Ben Falcone) and co-stars of clumsy, lazy, pratfall-filled and one-dimensiona­l The Boss, in which she plays a business superstar who gets sent to the pen for insider trading, then is astonished to learn that the world (and her former associates) aren’t anxious to restore her to her former glory upon her release. With Kristen Bell, Peter Dinklage, Kathy Bates; directed by Falcone.

Sing Street (PG-13, 106 minutes) An appealing and upbeat pop musical that takes a shopworn story and makes it shiny, sweet and romantic. A 14-year-old boy in 1985 Dublin, trying to make friends in a new inner-city school that isn’t welcoming him and impress an intriguing girl, decides to start a rock ’n’ roll band. With Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, Lucy Boynton, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Aiden Gillen and a fun soundtrack featuring Duran Duran, Hall & Oates, Joe Jackson, Motorhead, and the Cure; directed by John Carney (Once, Begin Again).

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