The Big Screen


“CINEMATIC Sentences” returns for a massive screen dump at the start of Oscar season.

Love Hurts promotes beloved Ke Huy Quan (Everything, Everywhere All at Once) to leading man in this action-comedy from first time stuntman-turned-director Jonathan Eusebio.

The movie is about a realtor who is drawn back into a criminal conflict from his past as a mob enforcer.

Presence is a new film from Stephen Soderbergh in which he continues to impress with incredible visual flair.

It is about a dysfunctional family parented by Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan, who are contending with their own issues as well as an entity inhabiting their new home.

This entity becomes invested in their daughter.

Daniel Craig “burns a hole in the screen” in Queer, an adaptation of the WIlliam S. Burroughs novella from Italian filmmaker Luca Guadagnino, in which the author stand-in wrestles with addiction, sobriety, sexuality and identity in Mexico City, 1950.

September 5 is a historical drama account of the terrorist incident at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, in which eleven members of the Israeli team were held hostage and tragically executed by militant radicals.

The event is seen from the vantage of the ABC Sports broadcast teams that televised the horrific affair to the world.

For the wine connoisseurs, Widow Cliquot is inspired by the true story of Barbe-Nicole Ponsardin Clicquot, who assumed control over a vast vineyard enterprise following the death of her husband in 1805.

She overcomes societal prejudice to build an impressive dynasty.

Long running anime series Attack on Titan gets the cinematic treatment by releasing the most recent specials as The Last Attack, carrying on the story of a post-apocalyptic world beset by giants who devour and destroy the surviving pockets of humanity.

Dark Nuns is a Korean horror film in which a duo of young nuns must face opposition from the church in their efforts to perform an exorcism on a young boy before an evil spirit overcomes them all.

Finally for the rock fans, Becoming Led Zeppelin, the long-awaited music documentary charting the formation of the legendary band, arrives from renowned music-history documentarian Bernard MacMahon (American Epic).

It draws on input from band members Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, John Bonham and Robert Plant.

By Lindsay HALL

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