The heat may be starting to die down, but the box office manages to pick up some much needed steam this weekend. Robert Rodriguez's long-anticipated "Machete" hopes to slash away the competition, attracting the action fans still hungry for blood after last month's "The Expendables." Drew Barrymore stars opposite real-life on/off beau Justin Long in "Going the Distance," though we still wish she'd find the time to team up with ex-husband Tom Green at some point (jk). Art-house fans across the country are given some love as Anton Corbijn's "The American" hits screens nationally. That's normally a given for a George Clooney project, but the pace and silence of the film may throw off more casual audiences. Getting limited releases, the Sam Rockwell sports-dramedy "The Winning Season," the Chinese "Blood Simple" remake "A Woman, A Gun and A Noodle Shop," and "Mesrine: Public Enemy #1" lead the pack.
Real life on-and-off couple Drew Barrymore and Justin Long team up for the romantic comedy "Going the Distance" from director Nanette Burstein. The thesps play a couple trying to maintain a long distance relationship from opposite coasts, he in NYC and she in San Francisco. We reviewed the movie earlier this week, finding a tonally strange film that wavers awkwardly between raunchy R-rated comedy and tender rom-com territory. Fans of "It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia" will be happy to see Charlie Day steal every scene he's in, but it's not enough to save a lukewarm date flick. RT: 46% Metacritic: 53.
Also out in limited: The second part of a 4 and a half hour crime epic, "Mesrine: Public Enemy #1" follows last week's release of "Mesrine: Killer Instinct." Vincent Cassel plays the famous French gangster in the film, which we reviewed last month, finding the second part stronger than the first, but overall the messy epic leaves much to be desired. RT: 81% Metacritic: 73. The documentary "Last Train Home" tells the story of the largest human migration on the planet as 130 million migrant workers make it home each spring to celebrate the Chinese New Year. RT: 100% Metacritic: 83. Canadian indie-rock band Broken Social Scene are at the center of director Bruce McDonald's film "This Movie is Broken." Part concert-doc and part love story, we loved the film when we saw it back at SXSW. No RT/Metacritic reviews.

0 comments:
Post a Comment