'Downtown Owl' review: '80s period piece doesn't know what it wants to be
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Richard Roeper
2d ago
Naomi (Vanessa Hudgens, left) invites newcomer Julia (Lily Rabe) out to the bar in “Downtown Owl.” Stage 6 Films Let’s talk about the high school football team in the disjointed and tonally uncertain Americana period piece “Downtown Owl,” an adaptation of the 2008 debut novel by the cool and acclaimed pop culture essayist and author Chuck Klosterman. By my count, we see a maximum of eight players in a practice sequence, even fewer in a locker room scene. Granted, we’re not talking about “Friday Night Lights” or “Rudy” here — this isn’t a football movie — but even for a low-budget, indie ..read more
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Chicago Palestinian Film Festival aims to entertain, educate
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Rummana Hussain
5d ago
Actors Mahmoud Bakri (center) and Muhammed Abed El Rahman (right) from a scene in Farah Nabulsi’s film “The Teacher.” Nabulsi will be in town later this month for a screening of the film at the Chicago Palestine Film Festival, which kicked off Saturday and continues until May 4. This is the 23rd year the festival has been held. Provided Nick Leffel didn't know who he was for most of his life. He's still not completely sure, although he's been getting closer to finding out. Olive-complected with coarse black hair, he ruled out being 100% white like his "all-American" adoptive parents whil ..read more
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'Broken Horses' review: Solid FX doc offers answers on why the animals keep dying young
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Richard Roeper
5d ago
An outrider intercepts Havnameltdown after the horse lost its rider and suffered a catastrophic leg injury during a race leading up to the 2023 Preakness Stakes in Baltimore. The horse later was euthanized. Jerry Jackson/The Baltimore Sun via AP When a horse goes down in the middle of the track and a team rushes out with a black or blue tarp to block our view, it’s almost a sure sign all hope is lost. In all likelihood, the horse is about to euthanized. We see the heartbreaking images of a number of these beautiful animals collapsing on racetracks, the jockeys falling alongside them or b ..read more
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Ebertfest in Champaign a time for discovery and rediscovery
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Nell Minow | For the Sun-Times
6d ago
“Stony Island” director Andrew Davis discusses the Chicago-made film on Thursday at Ebertfest in Champaign. Timothy Hiatt/Ebertfest CHAMPAIGN — Ebertfest, now under way in Urbana-Champaign, began 25 years ago as Roger Ebert’s Overlooked Film Festival, a chance to bring audiences into the critic's hometown to see movies he thought deserved another look. While the festival does include the occasional premiere, its focus has always been films that Ebert described as “empathy machines,” the movies that tell stories that enlarge our understanding of human lives. One premiere this year is “Alb ..read more
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'Abigail' review: When the victims aren't exploding, the vampire story is meandering
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Richard Roeper
6d ago
The little girl (Alisha Weir) abducted by kidnappers turns out to have an ancient vampire trapped inside her in “Abigail.” Universal Pictures We’ve been told the gooey, gory, gross and grating comedy/horror film “Abigail” is a reimagining of the 1936 Universal Classic Monsters film “Dracula’s Daughter” and it does contain a few basic elements of that film. Mostly, though, as directed by the Radio Silence Productions duo of Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, it plays like a spiritual sequel to their far superior 2019 slapstick gore-fest “Ready or Not,” with echoes of “The Usual Susp ..read more
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'Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare' review: The unreal adventures of real WWII rule-breakers
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Richard Roeper
6d ago
Henry Cavill plays a British officer who assembles an off-the-books naval attack squad in “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Lionsgate We’re told Guy Ritchie’s slam-bang WWII thriller “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” is “based on recently declassified files of the British War Department, and inspired by true events,” and there’s further confirmation of that when we see black-and-white photos of the real-life heroes portrayed in the story. All well and terrific. Still, I’m going to go out on a particularly sturdy limb and guess that the actual ultra-secret combat group brough ..read more
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Stephen Colbert in Chicago: 'Late Show' to relocate for Democratic convention
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Darel Jevens
1w ago
Stephen Colbert announces his Chicago plans on Wednesday’s episode of “The Late Show.” CBS Stephen Colbert is taking his "Late Show" out of its storied New York theater for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic, and Chicago is where he'll be going. The host will announce on Wednesday's episode that during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, he'll be making his Aug. 19-22 episodes at the Auditorium Theatre, 50 East Ida B. Wells Dr. "I lived in Chicago for 11 years and it holds a special place in my heart, and not just because of all the Polish sausage that’s still lodged i ..read more
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'We Grown Now' review: A lovely but haunting Chicago snapshot of two boys' lives
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Richard Roeper
1w ago
Blake Cameron James (left) and Gian Knight Ramirez play the boys looking out at the skyline from their Cabrini-Green homes in “We Grown Now.” Sony Pictures Classics The closing credits for Minhal Baig’s lovely and lyrical yet haunting and heartbreaking “We Grown Now” include Annette Freeman as a consultant. That name might ring a bell for Chicagoans of a certain age. In October 1992, 7-year-old Dantrell Davis was walking to school with his mother in the Cabrini-Green Homes when he was shot and killed by a gang member who was trying to take out rival members. The tragedy shook Chicago and ..read more
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'Sasquatch Sunset' review: A surreal showcase for bigfoot bodily functions
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Richard Roeper
1w ago
Jesse Eisenberg never says a word while playing one of the hairy beasts in “Sasquatch Sunset.” Bleecker Street With sincere and true respect for the talents of all those individuals who climb inside mascot costumes and become Gritty or Mr. Met or Benny the Bull or Bucky Badger or Paydirt Pete or Brutus Buckeye, you wouldn’t know it if an equally skilled person took over mid-game, right? I mean, how could you? The Mascot Conundrum, as the experts call it — all right, I just made that up — came to mind when I was making the difficult slog through the admittedly ambitious but quite disgusti ..read more
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A new travel show promotes tourism in Chicago neighborhoods including Little Village and Humboldt Park.
Chicago Sun-Times » Movies and TV
by Andrea Flores
1w ago
Victor and Nancy Garcia, owners of Papa’s Cache Sabroso in Humboldt Park, show off their family pictures to Rob Fojtik, host of Choose Chicago’s new travel show, “The 77: City of Neighborhoods,” which explores the hidden gems and histories of five neighborhoods: Humboldt Park, Little Village, Uptown, Bronzeville, Pullman/Roseland. Choose Chicago Can Chicago tourism be reimagined as more than city skyscrapers and deep dish pizza? Choose Chicago thinks so. Their new travel show, “The 77: City of Neighborhoods” hopes to uplift neighborhoods as prime travel destinations in Chicago beyond dow ..read more
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