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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Game On: Saints Row has arrived, but who’s it for?

I was cautiously optimistic when the Saints Row reboot was unveiled at the August 2021 Gamescom. On one hand, it was evident that the overall tone of the game would be a departure from earlier titles in the series when the trailer didn’t display the same level of profane humor and bombastic gang-related antics as its predecessors. On the other hand, the franchise had arguably become too ridiculous with 2013’s Saints Row IV and 2015’s Saints Row: Gat out of Hell.
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8 twisty miniseries to squeeze in before summer’s end

We’ve reached the last broody stretch of summer, which feels like the perfect time to stay in and watch an absorbing miniseries. This year has brought many options: Whether you gravitate toward twisty seven-episode thrillers or a taut five-part drama, there should be something for you on this list.
A&E >  Entertainment

‘Three Thousand Years of Longing’: All talk and no magic

On paper, "Three Thousand Years of Longing" might have looked like a sure thing: An adaptation of an A.S. Byatt short story, it has wonder and fantasy and sexual heat; it also has Idris Elba and Tilda Swinton, two of the most fascinating and charismatic performers on any screen, big or small.But what should be a cinematic journey into amazement and otherworldly adventure instead becomes a tedious, word-heavy slog - all the more disappointing considering the director in charge is George Miller. Miller is known for the artistry and imagination he brought to bear on the visionary Mad Max franchise; here, his instincts seem to fail him as he falls prey to the pictures-of-people-talking trap that has ensnared so much of modern cinema.Swinton plays Alithea Binnie, a scholar on her way to a conference in Istanbul, where she is slated to deliver a talk on narratology or, in her words, "tell stories about stories." It gets even more meta once she lands: Alithea spies, or maybe hallucinates, a mysterious man at the airport in Turkey, then another maybe-not-real character in the audience of her lecture. Back at her hotel - where she has pointedly been given the same room Agatha Christie occupied while writing "Murder on the Orient Express" - Alithea is scrubbing a glass bottle she purchased in a nearby market when an altogether more alarming figure appears: a djinn, played by Elba with pointy ears, a dramatically outsize physique, and his reliable combination of reassurance and seductiveness.What ensues is a dialogue wherein the djinn explains his various loves and captivities to Alithea, who listens enraptured with her wet hair wrapped in a towel. The djinn recalls his exploits in the time of Solomon and Queen Sheba, Suleiman and the Ottoman Empire, his tales illustrated in flashbacks that Miller stages as elaborate tableaux, complete with special effects and stylized storybook-like designs.It all gets very heady, with Alithea and the djinn jousting about whether science has replaced myth, whether fate exists and the nature of desire, contentment and purpose. But at the end of the day, and despite its metaphysical ambitions and air of epic romance, "Three Thousand Years of Longing" is essentially two people in a room conversing, with occasional breaks for illustration. There are moments in the film when viewers could be forgiven for thinking that if they wanted to watch two preternaturally attractive people chat in their bathrobes, they could watch "Good Luck to You, Leo Grande" for a third time.That's snarky, perhaps unfairly. Eventually, "Three Thousand Years of Longing" escapes the Istanbul hotel room and absconds to London, where the story becomes choppier and even more episodic, but also more of a modern-day fairy tale. It's also when the politics of the story become subtly problematic, as Alithea constantly refers to Elba as "my djinn," as if he were the ultimate magical Negro.Thanks to his self-possession and towering presence (even when his character is human-sized), Elba comes through "Three Thousand Years of Longing" with his dignity and star power intact. So does Swinton, whose character could so easily be made to seem ridiculous and pathetic. If they were placed inside a more involving movie, their chemistry would be truly magical.Instead, like the recent "Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris," Miller's "Three Thousand Years of Longing" seems to have been engineered for a moment that demands tenderness and hope above all else. If the audience is nodding off by the end, it's due as much to the story's comforting contours as to its inertia.- - -One and one-half stars. Rated R. At theaters. Contains some sex, graphic nudity and brief violence. 108 minutes.Rating guide: Four stars masterpiece, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.
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After ‘Top Gun: Maverick,’ Val Kilmer sets his sights on another revival: ‘Batman’

Val Kilmer fans, rejoice: Iceman wants to play Batman — again. In a recent interview with IGN's Jim Vejvoda, the actor confirmed that he would definitely reprise his role as the Caped Crusader after returning to the screen as Adm. Tom "Iceman" Kazansky in the 2022 blockbuster "Top Gun: Maverick." Vejvoda used email to communicate with Kilmer, whose voice was significantly weakened by a ...
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Movie review: John Boyega stars in true story of a veteran at his ‘Breaking’ point

The tragic case of Brian Brown-Easley didn’t take the nation by storm back in 2017 when he walked into a Marietta, Georgia, Wells Fargo branch and passed the teller a note reading, “I have a bomb.” But attention was what the former Marine demanded, and deserved, in that moment of desperation, and with “Breaking,” a depiction of the tense hours that unfolded during the hostage standoff that ...
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Game On: Do video games ever release on time anymore?

Like most adult gamers, I’m a patient one with a significant backlog of video games waiting for me. I’ve got bills to pay and can’t afford to buy the latest AAA releases, especially with many of them asking for $70 now. I prefer to wait for discounts, because even most good games drop in price and have sales – with the notable exception of certain first-party Nintendo games.
A&E >  Entertainment

As She-Hulk, Tatiana Maslany Is Beautiful When She’s Angry

She-Hulk was born in 1980, in a comic titled “The Savage She-Hulk.” Endowed with superstrength and a sensational blowout, she stood 6-foot-7 in her bare, green feet and taller in heels. She had biceps like cantaloupes, skin like a cocktail olive, the waist-to-hip ratio of a lingerie model. Could she smash? Could she ever.As the latest Marvel character to bound from page to screen, she makes her television debut in “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law,” a loopy half-hour comedy that arrives on Disney+ on Thursday. The series stars Tatiana Maslany, the Emmy-winning actress best known for the critics’ darling clone thriller “Orphan Black,” who has also starred in demanding stage roles and a handful of indie films. Maslany described the character She-Hulk — giant, verdant — as “weirdly, the closest thing to my own experience I’ve done ever.”This was on a recent, sultry Wednesday morning, when New York City felt like the inside of a steamer basket. Maslany, 36, who had recently flown in from Los Angeles, where she lives with her husband, actor Brendan Hines, had suggested walking across the Brooklyn Bridge. She commuted this way just about every day, usually by bike, when she appeared on Broadway in Ivo van Hove’s version of “Network.” The trip calmed her, giving her a channel for her restlessness and intensity, and helped her find her way into a role on the way there and back out on the way home.(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)“The energy that it requires to be open in front of people just is really hard for me to modulate,” she said as she sidestepped some sun-melted chocolate. “At the same time, it’s quite an alive place to be.”Maslany pulses with that aliveness in person, which manifests in playfulness, attention, intensity. Without the benefit of computer-generated imagery, she stands 15 inches shorter than She-Hulk. She’s a flick knife of a woman — small, sharp. She showed me a tattoo on her arm, a random drawing of an infant that her husband had done.“It’s a little tough baby,” she said approvingly.(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)That morning, she had dressed in yellow cycling shorts and a T-shirt with a picture of a dirt bike on it, and her curly half-blond hair was arranged half-up, half-down. Kid-sister chic. No one seemed to recognize her on the bridge — a tribute, maybe, to her ability to disappear into character. In “Orphan Black,” she played a dozen clones who were differentiated by hair and makeup but also by Maslany’s extraordinary plasticity of affect and expression. And while Hollywood sets certain expectations for how actresses should look and behave, she has rarely bowed to them, on screen or off.“I’ve never played the bombshell,” she said.But She-Hulk is a bombshell. She is also the alter ego of Jennifer Walters, a meek public interest attorney with a listless dating life and a passion for workplace separates. When Jen receives an accidental transfusion from her cousin Bruce Banner (Marvel’s original Hulk, played by Mark Ruffalo), she suddenly becomes She-Hulk. While Bruce’s Hulk is a cinder block of a man — or as Maslany put it, “a roided-out gym maniac, to such a cartoonish degree” — Jen’s transformation, triggered by anger, looks different. Only some muscles bulge. Her breasts — not muscles! — bulge, too. Her waist whittles. Her hair straightens.“She fulfills the stereotypical feminine ideal body, while still being, like, too tall and green,” Maslany said. (This was not lost on viewers of the “She-Hulk” trailer, who criticized the character’s voluptuous proportions.)(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)Despite sometimes playing four clones in a single scene, Maslany has never transformed in quite this way. And if she knows she looks good in green, it’s because she once dressed up as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle at a comic-con. But she gets what it’s like to have the world suddenly see you differently. And if she doesn’t understand her talent as a superpower, her colleagues do.“She has so many superpowers,” said Jessica Gao, who wrote “She-Hulk.”(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)Raised in a medium-size town in Saskatchewan, Maslany was never that interested in fame. “There was, like, absolute flying in the opposite direction, doing everything to not end up there,” she said. She loved acting. She was less enthusiastic about the accouterments of celebrity. At one point, I referred to a fashion shoot she had done.“I’m getting better at it,” she said, making a face.But she did become reasonably famous. So Jen’s resistance to becoming She-Hulk — “The idea of being a superhero is not appealing to me,” Jen said — resonated with her. Maslany didn’t have to imagine how she would feel if she became a public figure practically overnight, if she were scrutinized for her appearance and affect.“It’s a very easy jump for me,” she said.(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)On the red carpet and in media appearances, she plays a role to make it through. “It has to be another character, or else it costs me too much,” she said.This helps to explain why an actress who would have sworn that she would never do something as mainstream as a superhero show signed on. “I didn’t want to do anything of that scale ever,” she said. “But there was something about the script that felt really weird and funny in a way that was like, ‘Oh, I don’t know why, but it’s undeniable to me.’” (Actually, she did deny it, in at least one interview, but she explained that as a contractual matter: She couldn’t announce it until Disney announced it first.)The move surprised Helen Shaver, a director who worked with Maslany on “Orphan Black.” But it didn’t surprise her for long. “I was like, ‘OK, that’s a wild choice,” Shaver said on a recent call. “But I also know she has this playful, wacky element to her as well. She is willing to abandon herself to madcap humor.”(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)The shoot began in the spring of 2021, in Atlanta. As Jen, Maslany played a version of herself, although she noted that she has never worn more makeup to play a supposedly mousy character. (“I’m truly wearing full lashes,” she said. “I’m contoured to hell. The story around Jen being undesirable is absurd.”) And because Jen retains her consciousness even in superhero form, She-Hulk is a version of her, too — although one achieved almost entirely by digital effects.When She-Hulk appears at her sexiest, Maslany is slinking around the set in a silver motion-capture suit and a helmet. “I feel like a little kid in pajamas,” she said.Yet Ginger Gonzaga, who plays Nikki, Jen’s spirited paralegal, could always tell whom she was acting opposite. “When she’s She-Hulk, she has this physicality that instantly changes, and it happens very fast,” Gonzaga said. “It’s a proud stance and a statuesque stance.”Maslany described She-Hulk’s bearing as heavier, less fidgety, more centered in the pelvis. “The weight of She-Hulk brings her down into her loins in a different way,” she said. This might be the way a woman moved if she felt safe in the world, if she knew that no one could hurt her.But “She-Hulk” suggests a further fantasy, one that has nothing to do with irradiated blood and is arguably even more incredible that the sci-fi imaginings of “Orphan Black.” This new show suggests that a woman could be angry and that the world would really like it.I asked Maslany about the last time she felt angry. “It’s never not there,” she said. But she rarely allows herself to express it in her personal life. And it never looks as good on her — “I would love to be able to be angry but not, like, shaking and crying,” she said — as it does on She-Hulk.“She transforms into a hyperbeautiful, hyperfeminine version that might be more palatable in that anger,” Maslany said as she stepped off the bridge and into the muddle of Manhattan. “It’s wild. It’s super wild.”This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
A&E >  Movies

A lion goes Cujo in Will Packer’s ‘Beast’ starring Idris Elba

ATLANTA — Idris Elba is going to test his box-office appeal as a lead in a big, brawny thriller with the upcoming film "Beast," in which he plays a dad protecting his two teenage daughters from a rampaging lion in South Africa. It's also a major test for Atlanta producer Will Packer, best known for comedies like "Ride Along" and "Girls Trip" and his recent stint as the Oscar producer. He has ...
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Movie review: ‘Mack & Rita’ an age-swap comedy that lacks soul

Who doesn’t love Diane Keaton? Or frankly, want to be Diane Keaton? The Oscar-winning star has had a film and television career spanning six decades, she’s a fashion icon, and she’s done it all in her own singularly unique and quirky way. It’s not surprising then, that in the fantastical and fluffy comedy “Mack & Rita,” written by Madeline Walter and Paul Welsh, directed by Katie Aselton, a struggling young writer wishes to be as cool and confident as Keaton herself, or someone like her, as in, older. Rendered literal, that wish results in a tale that could be described as “Freaky Friday” meets “Old.” It’s a cute concept, but one that turns out to be a lemon once you start kicking the tires.
A&E >  Movies

‘Bodies Bodies Bodies’ review: A slasher with some surprisingly sharp satire

It's telling that the official synopsis for "Bodies Bodies Bodies" - a darkly comic slasher film centering on a party game that turns deadly - does not, as you might expect, use the word "friends" to describe the participants: eight (mostly insufferably) young and (mostly insufferably) hot soon-to-be victims. Rather, they are a "group" of rich 20-somethings who have gathered under the threat of an imminent hurricane at a remote, mansion-like estate to drink, take drugs and pursue the murder-mystery-style role-playing game of the title, in which players must identify an unknown "killer" (who chooses his or her "targets" by tapping them on the back).To be sure, there are several par-for-the-course couplings here: Sophie (Amandla Stenberg) is with Bee (Maria Bakalova); David (Pete Davidson) is with Emma (Chase Sui Wonders); Alice (Rachel Sennott) is with Greg (Lee Pace, a 40-ish outlier in this cast of kids). And then there are Jordan (Myha'la Herrold) and Max (Conner O'Malley), the latter of whom almost doesn't count as a cast member because he shows up only at the very end to deliver the great laugh line: "What happened?" It's great because the scenery and the ensemble cast are drenched with blood, and, well, it's kind of hard to explain.Jordan also gets off a good line early in the proceedings: "Be careful," she whispers conspiratorially to Bee, one of two newcomers, along with Greg, in this otherwise loosely knit assembly of frenemies. She's warning Bee about Sophie, a recovering addict with whom several people in the group seem to have fraught histories.In general, the dialogue (by Sarah DeLappe and Kristen Roupenian) is sharp, is appropriately satirical and does not go easy on the film's ridicule-worthy protagonists, one of whom, naturally, has a podcast that no one listens to. Another is a self-absorbed actress, and David - whose father owns the house they're about to trash - lays into a party guest for using the criminally overused buzzword "gaslighting." Of her own content creation, another character declaims, defensively, "It's creative nonfiction, which is a valid response in an attention economy."Touché, I guess?Dutch director Halina Reijn ("Instinct") choreographs all this obsessive self-regard and catfighting as skillfully as one can under the circumstances, which quickly include a storm-induced blackout, lit by smartphone flashlights and the occasional bolt of lightning, after the storm hits and the first fake murder gives way to what appears to be a real one, followed by an Agatha Christie-esque winnowing of the flock. It's intentionally chaotic and, now and again, surprisingly funny.There's also a third-act twist, and it's not a bad one. Rather than allow these characters to elicit our concern as casualties of a stalker/psychopath, they're portrayed as fatalities of something far more pernicious: their own stupidity.- - -Two and one-half stars. Rated R. At theaters. Contains violence, bloody images, drug use, sexual references and pervasive crude language. 94 minutes.Rating guide: Four stars masterpiece, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.
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‘Fall’ review: Sweaty palms and a bad screenplay at 2,000 feet

If sweaty palms were the sole measure of a film's greatness, then the thriller "Fall," which centers on two young women stranded atop a rickety, decommissioned, 2,000-foot-tall TV tower in the middle of nowhere - on a platform not much wider than a cafe table for two - may be some kind of masterpiece. And while the dialogue is pretty spartan, including many iterations of "Are you OK?" and "It's OK," punctuated by periodic swearwords, the cinematography is suitably, almost sweepingly acrophobic.Maybe that's the wrong word. Acrophobia is the irrational fear of heights, and the terror deliberately instilled in the audience over the course of an hour and 45 minutes or so by director Scott Mann ("Final Score"), reuniting with his frequent co-screenwriter Jonathan Frank, makes perfect sense. Who in their right mind would climb such a thing?Well, Hunter (Virginia Gardner) would. She's a professional daredevil who goes by the nickname Danger D on social media, where she has monetized her amateur drone videos and selfies, shot under hair-raising circumstances, into a career of sorts. For her latest misadventure, Hunter recruits her best friend Becky (Grace Caroline Currey) as a way of helping Becky overcome her devastation at the death of Becky's husband in a mountain climbing accident one year ago. (The film opens with this tragic prologue, so Becky's trauma - magnified by the idiocy of Hunter's plan - feels vividly appropriate.)Hunter and Becky are supposed to be expert climbers, tuned into their surroundings with the heightened awareness of true athletes. But as they're mounting this death trap, they seem not to notice all the rusted, rattling rivets that are about to come loose from the ladder they're ascending - and that in one instance do come lose, tumbling past Becky's head. Miguel López Ximénez de Olaso (the cinematographer known professionally as MacGregor) certainly does pay attention to those details, in a way that makes "Fall" feel like a hyper-coaster of a movie: It ratchets up the tension to an almost unbearable degree, before releasing it in a torrent of nausea and nerves.Lots of people pay good money to endure the kinds of thrill rides that make them wish they were back on solid ground. "Fall" does the same thing, but with the added benefit of being entirely vicarious. Just keep telling yourself: "It's only a stupid movie."- - -Two stars. Rated PG-13. At theaters. Contains bloody images, intense peril and strong language. 107 minutes.Rating guide: Four stars masterpiece, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.
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Movie review: Aubrey Plaza is stellar in so-so crime thriller ‘Emily the Criminal’

A kind of gravitational pull emanates from Aubrey Plaza as the title character in "Emily the Criminal," a passably diverting crime thriller where, in place of a moral center, Plaza delivers a performance that is entertainingly blackhearted. (Well, perhaps not entirely black, but certainly a lovely shade of charcoal gray.)As a 30-something art school graduate trying to pay off $70,000 in college loans by working for a Los Angeles catering company who discovers the lucrative world of credit card fraud - and, if only briefly, a hint of romance - Plaza draws and holds our focus. That she does so without sliding into the easy deadpan she is so often pigeonholed into, thanks to her droll turn on "Parks and Recreation," is a nice surprise.Plaza, sporting a plausible New Jersey accent to establish her character's Newark roots and toughness, plays Emily, a talented and underemployed artist with skills beyond the canvas and a criminal record for DUI and unspecified aggravated assault. When she stumbles onto a way to make a quick $200 working as a dummy shopper - using a stolen credit card to purchase, say, a flat-screen TV that will later be sold on the street - she proves to be a quick study in the ways of deception.Her mentor in the field is Youcef (Theo Rossi), a Lebanese immigrant who's a perverse manifestation of the American Dream (Hollywood version): Make a buck however you can, until you can go legit with your ill-gotten gains. Youcef, who wants to buy and run an apartment building, takes Emily under his wing and teaches her the tricks of his illicit trade. They're a simpatico pair, and soon have more than a business relationship.But there are a couple of rules: Never conduct business at your home, and don't try to scam the same store twice in one week. Emily eventually breaks both of them, which leads to trouble with Youcef's cousin and business partner (Jonathan Avigdori), who is less warm and fuzzy than Youcef.This is where Emily reveals herself to possess an untapped reservoir of badassery - compressed into diamond-hardness by the weight of life's unfairness. One scene in which Emily interviews for an unpaid internship with the dismissive and condescending head of an ad agency (Gina Gershon) shows Emily to be far from a pushover. As she later explains to Youcef, confiding in him that the aggravated assault charge had been filed by a former toxic boyfriend: It's not that Emily went too far with him, but that she didn't go far enough to stand up for herself. If she had really scared the guy, he never would have pressed charges.In the film's third act, Plaza is kind of fun to watch, but also a little scary.When Youcef takes Emily to meet his mother (Sheila Korsi) and the older woman asks Emily what she wants to do with her life, Emily says she doesn't still know. You'll figure it out, Mom reassures her. "Emily the teacher? Emily the mother? Emily the something."Aubrey Plaza has already figured that last part out. "Emily the Criminal" may not be much of a role model, but its star is something else.- - -Three stars. Rated R. At theaters. Contains strong language, some violence and brief drug use. 97 minutes.Rating guide: Four stars masterpiece, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.
A&E >  Seven

Hayden Cinema launches comedy night

With the demand for stand-up comedy on a steady rise, Hayden Cinema is officially bringing live comedy to the big screen – that is, to a stage just in front of the big screen.