![]() ![]() Lionsgate, the studio behind “Joy Ride,” has high hopes for the movie, believing it could be a sleeper sensation.īoots Riley, the inventive mind behind “Sorry to Bother You,” follows that up with his first TV creation, “I’m a Virgo,” and it promises to be just as off-kilter as his award-winning film debut. Ashley Park, Sherry Cola, Sabrina Wu and Stephanie Hsu star in a film that’s described by those in the know as raunchy, hilarious and heartfelt. Aaron Zelman (“Damages”) and Paul Lieberstein (“The Office”) adapted the Richard Russo novel “Straight Man,” and this sounds like a fun sendup of higher-education dysfunction.Īdele Lim, the screenwriter of “Crazy Rich Asians” and “Raya and the Last Dragon,” makes her feature film directorial debut with this hard R-rated comedy about a group of Asian American pals in search of one of their birth mothers. He’s back at AMC for “Lucky Hank,” a comedy-drama about a college professor going through a midlife crisis. Think “The Social Network” with Russian accents.įor his first TV project post-“Better Call Saul,” Bob Odenkirk is staying in the family. Now, Taron Egerton stars in a biographical drama that pulls back the curtain on one businessman’s quest to take this puzzle game global. But getting to that point of ubiquity involved navigating a tangled legal battle, one that frequently unfolded across the Soviet Union in the waning days of the Cold War. This year’s dynamic slate includes the Satanic Panic documentary “Satan Wants You” A24 festival favorite “Talk to Me” twisty Mongolian mystery “Aberrance” Ted Geoghegan’s “Mohawk” follow-up, the period chiller “Brooklyn 45” action sequel “The Wrath of Becky” retro demonic thriller “Late Night With the Devil” charming sci-fi rom-com “Molli and Max in the Future” modern Frankenstein riff “The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster” Vietnamese crime thriller “Furies” demonic teen drama “It Lives Inside” and the Australian alien conspiracy mystery “Monolith.”įor children of the 1980s and ’90s, Tetris was synonymous with Game Boy, the handheld Nintendo game console that represented the best portable entertainment on the market in the pre-internet era. Given the talent behind the camera, this film looks to be a dynamic mix of something old and something new for horror fans, as well as a bloody good time. Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell, who directed and starred in the original films, respectively, are back as executive producers, and “The Hole in the Ground” helmer Lee Cronin is writing and directing. apartment building, but still has the outrageous gore and camera angles of its predecessors. ![]() This fifth film moves the action to an L.A. A decade after the last chapter in the “Evil Dead” franchise, the Necronomicon is headed somewhere new: the big city. ![]()
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