Friday, April 22, 2022

Movies Update: ‘The Northman’ and More

Plus Nicolas Cage stars as Nick Cage.
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By Mekado Murphy

Movies Editor

Hey, movie fans!

Would you like a Nicolas Cage action comedy in which the actor plays himself this week? Or perhaps you'd prefer a grandiose Viking revenge film featuring Alexander Skarsgard. Or perhaps an animated heist movie? You've got options.

"The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent" has Cage poking fun at his big-screen persona. Fans of the actor should be on board, though the critic Manohla Dargis calls it "a single joke sustained for 106 minutes, amid many rapid tone shifts, mood swings and set changes." Read an interview with Cage and watch this scene breakdown that pays tribute to "Con Air."

"The Northman" takes its protagonist Amleth on a long, dark, bloody journey, wreaking havoc and encountering Björk along the way. It's from Robert Eggers, a director whose attention to detail is his calling card. A.O. Scott writes, "Amleth inhabits a world whose operating principle is cruelty, and Eggers's accomplishment lies in his fastidious, fanatical rendering of that world, down to its bed linens and cooking utensils."

For those seeking something a little more kid-friendly, there's "The Bad Guys," an animal-centric heist movie from DreamWorks Animation. Though it's a little smirkier than the critic Calum Marsh prefers. Of the main characters, he writes, "they steal, they banter, they have car chases, as animals do not. There's barely a frame in which they don't smirk."

The critics recommend a couple of festival favorites this week, the family drama "Hit the Road," from Panah Panahi and a once-upon-a-time tale from Céline Sciamma called "Petite Maman."

Enjoy the movies!

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MOVIE REVIEWS

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Nick Wall/Pathe UK/Sony Pictures Classics

'The Duke' Review: Suspect's 61

This film from the director Roger Michell has a compelling art-thief protagonist, but is weighed down by soggy family drama.

By Amy Nicholson

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Strand Releasing

'Saturday Fiction' Review: Theater of History

In this period drama set in Shanghai in December 1941, the resplendent Gong Li conveys depths of pain and longing even when the script offers none.

By Devika Girish

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Nanu Segal/FilmRise

'Marvelous and the Black Hole' Review: Finding Magic Amid Rage

A teenager reeling from the loss of her mother discovers an unlikely companion in an older magician.

By Concepción de León

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Dreamworks Animation/Universal

'The Bad Guys' Review: Smirking All the Way to the Bank

In a heist film-inspired DreamWorks comedy, the Big Bad Wolf goes good, begrudgingly.

By Calum Marsh

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Breaking Glass Pictures

'See You Then' Review: The More Things Stay the Same

Former lovers reconnect, litigating the past and present, in this drama from Mari Walker.

By Kyle Turner

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Film Movement

'Sexual Drive' Review: Best Served Hot and Heavy

Natto, mapo tofu and fatty ramen become objects of titillation in this intriguing Japanese triptych that centers on sex without ever depicting it.

By Natalia Winkelman

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Good Deed Entertainment

'Charlotte' Review: An Artist's Brief Life

This animated biopic about the German Jewish painter Charlotte Salomon takes faithful inspiration from her life. What if it had taken more energy from her art?

By Lisa Kennedy

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Pantelion Films

'¿Y Cómo Es Él?' Review: A Fraught Buddy Comedy

A jealous man tries to exact revenge on his wife's lover, but ends up taking a road trip with him instead.

By Beatrice Loayza

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NEWS & FEATURES

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Robbie Lawrence for The New York Times

Alexander Skarsgard's Viking Dream

Stories from his grandfather inspired what would eventually become "The Northman." But it took years of development and then seven months in the mud to complete.

By Kaly Soto

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Sinna Nasseri for The New York Times

Nicolas Cage Is in on the Nicolas Cage Jokes

In his new movie, "The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent," the actor plays "himself" in all his meme-ified glory.

By Sarah Lyall

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Alex Ingram for The New York Times

In 'The Duke,' Jim Broadbent Puts an Eccentric at the Center

The British actor has spent six decades seeking out carefully observed, often quirky characters. In his latest film, he's also the lead.

By Simran Hans

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Eric Gaillard/Reuters

Will Smith, Before the Slap

Plenty has been said about Oscars night. But what about the rapper-turned-actor's remarkable journey up to that point?

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Pool photo by Jim Lo Scalzo

Johnny Depp Confronted With Texts and Audio at Libel Trial

Mr. Depp was questioned on the stand by lawyers for his ex-wife Amber Heard, whom he is suing for defamation.

By Julia Jacobs

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