advertisement

'True Story,' 'Monkey Kingdom' among Dann Gire's movie picks

Coming Friday: Dann Gire reviews the journalistic chiller “True Story” with best buds James Franco and Jonah Hill playing it straight from the heartless. Plus, he checks out Disney's new animal doc “Monkey Kingdom,” which has more in common with a Hollywood epic adventure than you would imagine.

Movie guide

Four stars: superior. Three stars: good. Two stars: average. One star: poor. D (drug use), L (language), N (nudity), S (sexual situations, references), V (violence). Ratings by Dann Gire, Daily Herald Film Critic, unless otherwise noted.

Picks

“The Imitation Game” — Chicago writer Graham Moore won an Oscar for this wonderfully wrought fact-based drama about brilliant British mathematician Alan Turing (cool chameleon Benedict Cumberbatch) and his mission to break the Nazi Enigma code and win World War II. Keira Knightley and Mark Strong star. (PG-13) S. 114 minutes. ★ ★ ★ ★

“It Follows” — David Robert Mitchell's nifty little horror tale is a sexually driven plot about a teenager (Maika Monroe) who has sex with a cursed young man and becomes the target of an unknown force that can take on the appearance of any person. If it catches her, she dies. Scary stuff! (R) L, N, S, V. 94 minutes. ★ ★ ★ ½

“Kingsman: The Secret Service” — Matthew Vaughn directs a seriously violent but goofy parody of 007 movies with dapper Colin Firth as a spiffy agent bringing a promising street kid (newcomer Taron Egerton) in to fight a megalomaniac techie (Samuel L. Jackson) bent on destroying civilization. (R) L, N, V. 115 minutes. ★ ★ ★

“Paddington” — A delightful, witty family comedy about a lovable bear (voiced by Ben Wishaw) who moves in with a human family in London. Nicole Kidman plays a 21st-century version of Cruella de Vil. Starring Hugh Bonneville. (PG) 95 minutes. ★ ★ ★

“'71” — A British soldier (Jack O'Connell) becomes lost during a riot on the streets of Belfast in 1971. He must survive the night through a disorientating, alien, deadly landscape. Reviewed by Stephanie Merry, Washington Post. (R) L, V. 100 minutes. ★ ★ ★

“While We're Young” — Noah Baumbach's carefully calibrated examination of aging and the fear of obsolescence. A forty-something couple (Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts) befriend a much younger couple (Adam Driver, Amanda Seyfried), who remind them of lost youth and opportunities never taken. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. At the Century Centre in Chicago. (R) L. 94 minutes. ★ ★ ★ ½

Passables

“American Sniper” — Clint Eastwood's technically well-crafted bio-drama about SEAL sniper Chris Kyle (Bradley Cooper) starts out strong, then launches into context-challenged conflicts while his worried wife (Sienna Miller) waits at home. Winner of the Sound Editing Oscar. (R) L, V. 134 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“Cinderella” — Shakespearean actor/director Kenneth Branagh directs a visually sumptuous but dramatically inert, albeit updated, live-action fairy tale about a young woman (Lily James) and her evil stepmother (Cate Blanchett). Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. (PG) 112 minutes. ★ ★

“Danny Collins” — A long-lost letter from none other than John Lennon and Yoko Ono prompts an aging rock star to take a hard look at his life and try to reconnect with the son he never knew. Al Pacino charms as the title rocker in a sweet but ultimately shallow story. Reviewed by Stephanie Merry, Washington Post. (R) L, N, D. 106 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“Desert Dancer” — A fact-based, but poorly written drama about a student (Reece Ritchie) who forms an underground dance team to protest government culture crackdowns in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The subject may be noble, but the treatment feels like safe, old-school made-for-cable-TV fodder. At the River East 21 and Century Centre, Chicago, plus the Evanston CineArts 6. (PG-13) D, L, V. ★ ★

“Furious 7” — Overstuffed and overlong with nonaction scenes dragged down by stilted dialogue. But this movie buzzes with a frenetic energy so contagious, there's no sense in resisting it. It's also not afraid to honor original star, the late Paul Walker. Kurt Russell, Tony Jaa, Jason Statham and Djimon Hounsou join series regulars Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson and others in an action-packed tale of packaged action. Reviewed by Jen Chaney, Washington Post. (PG-13) L, V. 140 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“Get Hard” — James (Will Ferrell), a financier convicted of fraud, hires nice-guy family man Darnell (Kevin Hart) to get him prepped for prison because, well, he just assumes the black guy washing his car must have experience behind bars. What follows is a dumb-funny buddy comedy that sends up stereotypes, but wallows in a few of its own. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. (R) L, N, S, D. 100 minutes. ★ ★

“Home” — A girl searching for her mom and a misfit alien in need of a friend team up in an animated adventure sure to please the kiddies. Still, the sci-fi buddy tale never quite takes off, despite the voice talents of Rihanna and Jim Parsons. Reviewed by Sandie Angulo Chen, Washington Post. (PG) 94 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“Insurgent” — Sequel to “Divergent” brings back Tris (Shailene Woodley) and Four (Theo James) to battle Jeanine (Kate Winslet) for the city (Chicago) in a story devoid of nuance and detail. Like “Transformers,” it's strong on eye-popping visuals and short on all else. (PG-13) L, S, V. 119 minutes. ★ ★

“McFarland, USA” — A white cross country coach (Kevin Costner) inspires Hispanic high school runners to go all the way to the California state meet. A workable formula sports underdog drama. (PG) 128 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“Run All Night” — Standard-issue Liam Neeson thriller about a former hit man who protects his son (Joel Kinnaman) from a ruthless mob boss (Ed Harris) and a hired assassin (Common). Never boring, but never as smart or inventive as it needs to be. (R) D, L, S. ★ ★

“Salt of the Earth” — Wim Wenders and Juliano Salgado direct a documentary about photographer Sebastiao Salgado, who has witnessed international conflicts, starvation and mass exodus. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. At the Century Centre in Chicago. (PG-13) N, V. 110 minutes. ★ ★

“The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” — Pleasant but underpowered sequel to a sentimental tale of aging Brits finding a new lease on life in India. Americans Richard Gere and David Strathairn join Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, Bill Nighy and the other cast members still residing at the hotel, managed by Dev Patel's capitalistic young co-owner. (PG) 122 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie: Sponge Out of Water” — The absorbent hero must restore order at the Krusty Krab, unable to crank out its beloved Krabby Patties. This 3-D animated comedy sequel lacks the infectious absurdity of the TV series and the previous 2004 movie. Reviewed by Jen Chaney, Washington Post. (PG) 93 minutes. ★ ★

“Still Alice” — Best actress Oscar winner Julianne Moore stars as a college professor stricken with Alzheimer's disease. With Kristen Stewart, Alec Baldwin and Kate Bosworth. Reviewed by Stephanie Merry, Washington Post. (PG-13) L, S. 99 minutes. ★ ★ ½

“Woman in Gold” — A pushy, heavy-handed drama based on the true story of an elderly Jewish woman (Helen Mirren) who sets out to retrieve family possessions seized by the Nazis during World War II with help from a nerdy attorney (Ryan Reynolds). Reviewed by Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post. (PG-13) L. 110 minutes. ★ ★ ½

Pits

“Fifty Shades of Grey” — E.L. James' best-seller comes to the big screen with Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan as kinky lovers into bondage and S&M. (R) L, N, S. 110 minutes. ½

“The Gunman” — Sometimes inadvertently comical overdone thriller about a hitman (a beefed-up Sean Penn, also producer and co-writer) who goes legit, but his past catches up to him. With Javier Bardem playing his bored friend. (R) L, S, V. 115 minutes. ½

“The Lazarus Effect” — In a modern-day take on the “Frankenstein” story, researchers Zoe and Frank (Olivia Wilde and Mark Duplass) discover how to bring the dead back to life. But when Frank — get it? — needs to use the drug on Zoe, bad things happen. Reviewed by Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post. (PG-13) S, V. 83 minutes.

“The Longest Ride” — A long, dull, predictable drama based on Nicholas Sparks' story about two intertwining couples afflicted with the usual battery of Sparks' complications. With Scott Eastwood and Brittany Robertson. Reviewed by Peter Sobczynski. (PG-13) N, S, V. ½

“The Wedding Ringer” — A disappointingly bawdy farce about a lonely guy (Josh Gad) who hires a wedding specialist (Kevin Hart) to pose as his best man. Reviewed by Jen Chaney, Washington Post. (R) D, L, N, S. 101 minutes. ½

Unpreviewed

“Broken Horses” — A music prodigy (Anton Yelchin) returns to his hometown to save his dim older brother (Chris Marquette) from the evil influences of a local drug lord. (R) L, V. 100 minutes.

“Detective Byomkesh Bakshy” — The first adventure of Detective Byomkesh (Sushant Singh Rajput), fresh out of college, pitting himself against an evil genius out to destroy the world. In Hindi. (NR) 135 minutes.

“Dial a Prayer” — A prayer call center employee (Brittany Snow) realizes her prayers can improve the lives of her callers. William H. Macy plays Bill, her boss. (PG-13) D, L, S. 97 minutes.

“Do You Believe?” — Mira Sorvino and Sean Astin star in a drama about a Christian pastor's actions that impact the lives of 12 people. (PG-13) V. 115 minutes.

“Freetown” — Fact-based drama about native Liberian missionaries who make a desperate cross-country trip to save many lives during the civil war in Monrovia. (PG-13) V. 106 minutes.

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.