Movies Update: ‘The Last Duel,’ Selma Blair and More

Plus, the lure of "Bergman Island."

By Stephanie Goodman

Hi, film fans!

So many movies are being released this week, it's hard to know where to start. That's one sign that the fall season is shifting into high gear. Another is that several of the movies are critic's picks.

Manohla Dargis writes approvingly that with "The Last Duel," Ridley Scott "has directed what may be the big screen's first medieval feminist revenge saga." The plot of Mia Hansen-Love's "Bergman Island" may seem slight — a screenwriting couple stays at the home of the great Swedish filmmaker — but A.O. Scott finds it "slippery and enchanting." Ryusuke Hamaguchi's "Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy" is also on the unassuming side, but Dargis describes this talkathon, in which men and women circle one another, as wistful and moving.

Other critic's picks include "The Velvet Underground" documentary, the Mexican drama "Son of Monarchs" and the unnerving "Fever Dream." Notably, "Halloween Kills," the latest chapter in the Michael Myers saga, didn't make the cut.

What are readers talking about this week? To judge by the lively comments, it's Dave Itzkoff's interview with Selma Blair, the subject of a new documentary about her life with multiple sclerosis. The neurological disease can affect her voice and her ability to walk, among other symptoms. She says that since she went public with the diagnosis, she's been offered roles for aging or disabled characters: "I might be those things, but I'm still everything else I was before, and I shouldn't be relegated to that."

Hope your weekend is filled with good movies.

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NEWS & FEATURES

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The Man Who Finally Made a 'Dune' That Fans Will Love

How Denis Villeneuve broke the curse.

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Bonding With Léa Seydoux

The French actress has roles in "No Time to Die," "The French Dispatch" and the upcoming "France." She sees acting as a way to connect to the world.

By Nicolas Rapold

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Alan Horn, a top creative executive, is the latest high-ranking Disney departure.

His retirement adds to brain drain at the world's largest entertainment company as a new generation of executives rise to power.

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Critic's Notebook

Visconti's Operatic Autopsy of German History, Restored Anew

The trilogy of "The Damned," "Death in Venice" and "Ludwig" is whole again, in editions that freshly reveal their conflicted queerness.

By Joshua Barone

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Winstar Cinema

'My Dinner With André' at 40: Still Serving Hot Takes

The film was a feature-length conversation. And it is still stirring up plenty of chatter today.

By Mariella Rudi

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Kim Best

With Whiskers and Wit, the NY Cat and Dog Film Festivals Return

After a pandemic-induced hiatus, these celebrations of human-animal bonds are screening in Manhattan and beyond.

By Laurel Graeber

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MOVIE REVIEWS

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Ryan Green/Universal Pictures, via Associated Press

'Halloween Kills' Review: There Will Be (Copious Amounts of) Blood

The newest installment of the "Halloween" franchise, starring Jamie Lee Curtis, is a murderous mess that substitutes corpses for characters.

By Jeannette Catsoulis

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Andrea Giacomini/Roadside Attractions

'Hard Luck Love Song' Review: A Glossy Take on a Gritty Tune

Drawn from the plotline of a Todd Snider song, the film follows a pool shark and an escort, taking twists that are both violent and silly.

By Glenn Kenny

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Netflix

Critic's Pick

'Fever Dream' Review: Touching From a Distance

Claudia Llosa's adaptation of Samanta Schweblin's novel casts a spell, evoking more than it explains.

By Nicolas Rapold

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Kino Lorber

'Luzzu' Review: Capturing Culture on the Coasts of Malta

This subtle drama follows a young Maltese fisherman torn between fidelity to his trade and the demands of a modern world.

By Natalia Winkelman

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Icarus Films

'All About My Sisters' Review: Family Matters

Wang Qiong's debut feature traces the tragic effects of China's one-child policy on her family.

By Devika Girish

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Lionsgate

'Needle in a Timestack' Review: Put a Pin in It

The director John Ridley, who wrote "12 Years a Slave," tries to combine time travel and romance, and comes up short twice.

By Elisabeth Vincentelli

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Netflix

'The Trip' Review: With This Gun, I Thee Shoot

In this Norwegian thriller on Netflix, a murderous couple get more bloodshed than they bargained for.

By Lena Wilson

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Martin Dam Kristensen/Samuel Goldwyn Films

'Held for Ransom' Review: Negotiating With Terrorists

This thoughtful hostage drama from Denmark depicts the events surrounding the capturing of Daniel Rye, a photojournalist, by ISIS in 2013.

By Beatrice Loayza

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