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Movies Update: ‘The Equalizer 3’ and More

Plus, dispatches from the Venice Film Festival
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Movies Update

September 1, 2023

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By Mekado Murphy

Movies Editor

Hey, movie fans!

Excited for Labor Day? While the long holiday weekend does not include too many new movie releases, it is the beginning of the usually star-studded fall film festival season. Remember all the celebrity dust-ups and hubbub involving "Don't Worry Darling" during last year's installment of the Venice Film Festival? Things are a wee bit different this year. With the SAG-AFTRA and Writers Guild strikes continuing, the news is more about how many stars aren't at the festival, rather than how many are.

Our reporter Kyle Buchanan is on hand to cover the films in Venice (yes, a star or two is around) and how the Hollywood shutdown is making the red carpet a bit roomier. Telluride is also this weekend, and the Toronto International Film Festival starts next week. (We'll have more on those soon.)

In theaters, Denzel Washington makes mincemeat out of rooms full of bad guys again in "The Equalizer 3." Even though our chief critic Manohla Dargis sees the movie as more of the same, she writes that it is "as reliably watchable if ethically challenged as the previous ones."

If you're looking for less violence and more charm, try the "Ernest and Celestine" sequel, "A Trip to Gibberitia." In her Critic's Pick review, Natalia Winkelman thinks it is fun for children and adults alike, writing, "The brisk, lively plot has shades of a French Revolutionary spirit," but "the film's real magic lies in the illustrations."

If you'd like to check out something at home this weekend, you could look into that new choose-your-own-adventure Netflix rom-com. Though, if you're going on the advice of the critic Claire Shaffer, maybe not. About that movie, "Choose Love," she writes that its main selling point "seems to be that viewers get to pick which stale rom-com trope they see play out onscreen."

Whatever you opt for, enjoy the movies!

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CRITICS' PICKS

A still from the animated film: A bear is driving a van, a mouse is in the passenger seat, looking happy and excited to be on an adventure.

GKIDS/StudioCanal

Critic's Pick

Review: In the 'Ernest & Celestine' Sequel, a Prodigal Cub Returns

The delightful odd couple of the Oscar-nominated French film head to the mountains in "A Trip to Gibberitia." Every frame brims with painterly detail.

By Natalia Winkelman

MOVIE REVIEWS

Magnetic-poetry tiles of words that often appear in certain movie titles, randomly arranged.

Yellow Veil Pictures

'We Kill for Love' Review: What They Did in Hollywood's Shadows

This documentary explores a narrow genre of direct-to-VHS soft-core thrillers that found a niche with the advent of video rentals and home viewing.

By Ben Kenigsberg

In a black-and-white image, a young woman with medium-length hair gazes into the distance. The background is out of focus.

Music Box Films

'Fremont' Review: Rapid Transit

This dry, understated film follows a young Afghan refugee looking for connection in her new home, the San Francisco Bay Area.

By Beatrice Loayza

A woman with brown hair and a fancy orange sweater smiles while holding a smartphone.

Nicola Dove/Netflix

'Choose Love' Review: Pick Your Own Clichรฉ

This interactive Netflix rom-com lets viewers make choices on behalf of the main character, changing the story. But each path is banal.

By Claire Shaffer

A man sits in a tent on a snowy mountaintop, eating.

Strand Releasing

'The Mountain' Review: Stone-Faced in Nature's Splendors

In this drama directed by and starring Thomas Salvador, an urbanite plunges into treacherous conditions.

By Amy Nicholson

ANATOMY OF A SCENE

Two girls in long-sleeve rugby-style shirts stand in a high school gymnasium.

Orion Pictures Inc.

Anatomy of a Scene

How a Fight Club Starts in 'Bottoms'

The director Emma Seligman narrates a sequence from her film featuring Rachel Sennott and Ayo Edebiri.

By Mekado Murphy

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NEWS & FEATURES

A man holds open his blazer lapels to make his T-shirt more visible. It reads "Writers Guild on Strike!"

Claudio Onorati/EPA, via Shutterstock

The Projectionist

Venice Film Festival: No Zendaya as the Strikes Change the Picture

Day 1 brought challenges but not "Challengers," the film that had been scheduled to open this usually starry event until it was delayed by the strikes.

By Kyle Buchanan

A black-and-white photo of Chick Strand wearing a long necklace and holding a camera against her shoulder while looking away from the camera.

Canyon Cinema Foundation

Overlooked No More: Chick Strand, Pioneering Experimental Filmmaker

Often turning her lens on women, she emerged as one of independent cinema's fiercest proponents on the West Coast.

By Sean Malin

Nick Hitchon, a teenager in glasses, black jeans and a sweater, poses outside for a publicity photo.

ITV Studios/First Run Features

Nicholas Hitchon, Who Aged 7 Years at a Time in 'Up' Films, Dies at 65

He was one of the original children profiled in "Seven Up!," a 1964 British documentary, and reappeared in subsequent installments for more than a half-century.

By Neil Genzlinger

STREAMING RECOMMENDATIONS

A figure in a tight red and silver body suit with lighted eyes walks through smoke.

Cleopatra Entertainment

Five Science Fiction Movies to Stream Now

This month's picks include cute-robot charm and alien abduction angst.

By Elisabeth Vincentelli

In a crowded room, men stand around a Wisconsin primary leaderboard. Seated at a table, a man has a conversation with another man.

The Criterion Collection

Stream These Three Great Documentaries

This month's picks include a look back at a presidential primary, a remembrance of the victims of a hate crime and an intriguing visit to a Northwest Atlantic island.

By Ben Kenigsberg

A black and white scan of the front page of the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet dated Nov. 9, 1970. Printed in it are photos of the poet Mustafa Zaidi and the socialite Shahnaz Gul, along with poetic verses by Zaidi. All type is in Urdu.

Punjab Public Library, Lahore, Pakistan

The Best True Crime to Stream: Leaving the United States

Four picks across television, film and podcast that will take American viewers and listeners to places with vastly different systems and understandings of justice.

By Maya Salam

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