Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

HOME MOVIES

- KAREN MARTIN

Where’d You Go, Bernadette, directed by Richard Linklater (PG-13, 1 hour, 49 minutes) From the risk-taking director of Dazed and Confused, Boyhood, Bernie, A Scanner Darkly, Before Sunrise/Sunset/Midnight comes this intriguing comedic drama that achieves its most successful moments whenever Cate Blanchett is on screen.

She plays the title character — Bernadette Branch — a brilliant architect who takes a snarly approach to life after choosing to let a career-bombing incident ruin her future. Despite great affection for her delightful and dedicated 15-year-old daughter Bee Branch (Emma Nelson) and

accommodat­ing tech-visionary husband Elgie (Billy Crudup), this is a woman at war with the world.

Her displeasur­e is displayed mostly through witty cruelty to those who cross her, particular­ly her whiny neighbor (Kristen Wiig). And her distance from reality is reflected by letting a virtual assistant handle far too many aspects of her existence, with disastrous results.

Eventually, it’s all too much, and Bernadette takes action. So does her family,

and that put-upon neighbor. Although the last half-hour collapses under the weight of unpredicta­bility, the story up to that point is lively, involving, and well worth watching.

Hotel by the River (not rated, 1 hour, 36 minutes) A textured and complex tale set against a cool black-andwhite winter backdrop, this is a look at love and loss through the viewpoint of an elderly poet, who invites his estranged sons to join him at a isolated hotel for what may be their final reunion, where he encounters a newly single woman and her friend there to overcome difficulti­es of their own. Similariti­es

in their situations bring them together. With Ju-bong Gi, Seon-mi Song, Min-hee Kim, Hae-hyo Kwon, Joon-sang Yoo; directed and written by Sang-soo Hong. Subtitled.

Don’t Let Go (R, 1 hour, 43 minutes) Yet another overly ambitious time-travel suspense drama (which requires total suspension of any sort of logical analysis), here we have Detective Jack Radcliff (David Oyelowo) endeavorin­g to solve the murder of his niece (Storm Reid) before it happens. With Mykelti Williamson, Alfred Molina, Byron Mann; directed and co-written by Jacob Estes.

Angel Has Fallen (R, 2

hours, 1 minute) Inchoate and cliched — but possessing a fine cast — this dramatic actioner concerns an attempted assassinat­ion of a U.S. president (Morgan Freeman) that gets blamed on a trusted Secret Service agent (Gerard Butler). With Jada Pinkett Smith, Lance Reddick, Tim Blake Nelson, Piper Perabo; directed by Ric Roman Waugh.

Mary (R, 1 hour, 24 minutes) A failure, even by the uneven standards of horror films, Mary blows every chance it gets to be frightenin­g in a lame story of a struggling boat captain (Gary Oldman) who buys an abandoned

ship to benefit his family, only to discover it contains characteri­stics that make it a poor choice for their maiden voyage. With Emily Mortimer, Jennifer Esposito, Stephanie Scott, Owen Teague; directed by Michael Goi.

Stay Out Stay Alive (not rated, 1 hour, 25 minutes) An unusual approach to psychologi­cal horror is presented in this unsettling tale of young hikers who, when exploring an abandoned 19th-century gold mine near Yosemite, experience an earthquake that pins one of them beneath a rock; do they call for help to save her, or enrich themselves with the gold that remains in the mine? With Brandon Wardle, Brie Mattson, Sage Mears; written and directed by Dean Yurke.

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