The Movie Cricket

Movie reviews by Sean P. Means.

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Kenna (Maika Monroe, left), returning to her home town after years in prison, has an encounter with Ledger (Tyriq Winters), the best friend of her deceased boyfriend, in director Vanessa Caswill’s drama “Reminders of Him,” based on the Colleen Hoover novel. (Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures.)

Review: 'Reminders of Him' centers on a grieving ex-con in a romantic weepie that never feels authentic

March 12, 2026 by Sean P. Means

Fans of Colleen Hoover — the novelist who has turned generational trauma into airport-ready reading material, like “It Ends With Us” and “Regretting You” — will likely latch onto this new movie adaptation, the romantic weepie “Reminders of Him,” even as its many cliches don’t mix into anything cohesive.

Our heroine is Kenna Rowan (played by Maika Monroe), who’s back in her home town of Laramie, Wyoming, after six years in prison. She was sentenced to seven, for vehicular manslaughter, but got time off for good behavior. She gets a fleabag apartment and must secure a job to pay for the rent, which she manages to do only after a day of rejection. 

For a hard luck case, Kenna manages to luck into some beneficial situations. For example, she walks into a bar because it used to be a bookstore where she and her boyfriend, Scotty (played in flashbacks by Rudy Pankow), used to hang out. The bar’s owner is Ledger (Tyriq Winters), who was Scotty’s best friend growing up — but Kenna never met him during her and Scotty’s courtship. 

The second Kenna realizes the bar owner is Ledger, she gets out of there. We soon find out the reason why: Kenna went to prison because of her role in Scotty’s death. What’s more, Kenna was pregnant at the time, and has never seen her 5-year-old daughter, Diem (Zoe Kosovic), who lives with Scotty’s parents, Grace (Lauren Graham) and Patrick (Bradley Whitford). Ledger lives across the street from Diem’s grandparents, and is a surrogate uncle to her. And none of them want Kenna coming around, for fear she’ll try to take Diem away.

Kenna, though, is trying to do things the right way, earning her way back into society and, eventually, into custody of her daughter. That effort gets complicated, first by attempts to stay out of sight of Grace and Patrick — and, since this is a Colleen Hoover book, by romantic sparks with the hunky Ledger.

Director Vanessa Caswill — who directed some of the 2017 “Little Women” miniseries with Maya Hawke as Jo — understands the assignment. That’s to bring together characters who are broken, yet impossibly good-looking, for cathartic confrontations and and some safely PG-13 sex scenes. The problem is the script, by Hoover and co-writer Lauren Levine, which puts the actors in situations that only happen in bad movies that bear no resemblance to real life.

Winters is an appealing male lead, as he tries to give some weight to scenes where he’s asked mostly to take off his shirt. And Monroe, whose best-known credits are in horror (“It Follows,” “Watcher,” “Longlegs”), shows a bit of range as the tearful heroine in a romantic drama. Their charms carry “Reminders of Him” a bit farther than the material does, but not that far. 

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‘Reminders of Him’

★★1/2

Opens Friday, March 13, in theaters everywhere. Rated PG-13 for sexual content, strong language, drug content, some violent content, and brief partial nudity. Running time: 114 minutes.

March 12, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Luis (Sergi López, right), a dad looking for his daughter, meets up with a group of traveling rave fans (from left: Stefania Gadda, Joshua Liam Herderson and Richard “Bigui” Bellamy) in director Oliver Laxe’s “Sirāt.” (Photo courtesy of Neon.)

Review: 'Sirāt' is an intense movie experience, a life-or-death drama set to the beat of rave culture

March 12, 2026 by Sean P. Means

French director Oliver Laxe’s existential thriller “Sirāt” has qualities in common with the rave music that serves as its soundtrack: It’s hypnotic, energetic, propulsive and raises the tension to almost unbearable levels. 

The action starts at a rave somewhere in northern Africa. It seems less like a commercial concert than a communal group happening. People set up a wall of speakers, then dance and gyrate together in a shared ecstasy of togetherness. If you don’t go to Burning Man regularly, the opening minutes of this movie may be the closest you get to feeling that.

Luis (played by the Spanish actor Sergi López) is not there for the music. With his young son, Esteban (Bruno Núñez), in tow, Luis is searching high and low for his missing daughter, Mar. Luis meets one group of ravers who travel from one event to another, who tell him they might have met Mar — and that she might be at the event where they’re going next. Luis decides to follow this group, even dodging military police to get there.

On the road, Luis and Esteban are soon accepted into the family of oddballs — a group all played by nonprofessionals chosen in street-casting by costume designer Nadia Acimi, who is a former raver (and Laxe’s ex). But the route becomes more treacherous, and something happens (no spoiler here) that turns the trip into something darker and more tragic.

Laxe, who co-wrote with Santiago Fillol, takes us deep into the world of rave culture, then takes that world and plunges it into the desert of Northern Africa — a place where life and death are close companions, and danger is a constant. Luis and these nomadic ravers experience that danger, and it both bonds them and divides them. 

It’s hard to be more specific about the plot, because this is a movie that rewards those who don’t know too much when the lights go down. “Sirāt” is an intense, gripping movie about the end of the line, and the choices that have to be made when these people get there.

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‘Sirāt’

★★★1/2

Opens Friday, March 13, at the Broadway Centre Cinemas (Salt Lake City). Rated R for language, some violent content and drug use. Running time: 114 minutes, in Spanish, French and Arabic, with subtitles.

March 12, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Evy (Nina Kiri), the host of a podcast that explores the supernatural, hears something truly terrifying in writer-director Ian Tuason’s “Undertone.” (Photo courtesy of A24.)

Review: 'Undertone' is a satisfyingly dark thriller about guilt and death that plays best on the ears

March 12, 2026 by Sean P. Means

What you hear is what you get in “Undertone,” an effective horror-thriller from Canada that gets its biggest scares in its sound mix.

Evy (Nina Kiri) has a lot going on for someone who almost never leaves the house. She’s a full-time caretaker for her mom (Michèle Duquet), who’s laid up in bed and approaching the end of her life. She is co-host of a podcast, “The Undertone,” playing the skeptic to her unseen audio partner Justin (voiced by Adam DiMarco), the believer in the supernatural doings they talk about. As we go into the story, we suspect she’s nursing some feelings about an ex, dealing with some guilt as a lapsed Catholic, and trying to maintain her sobriety.

Evy always records the podcast at 3 a.m., we’re told to accommodate the London-based Justin’s schedule, But it’s also a fitting witching hour for spooky things to go bump in the night, or for intrusive thoughts to play on Evy’s heart and soul. Then Justin introduces a collection of 10 audio files, sent by an anonymous podcast listener. As they start listening to the files, in order, Evy and Justin try to talk through what they’re hearing — something about a young couple trying to sleep with a new baby in their lives — until it becomes … nope, can’t give away more than that.

Writer-director Ian Tuason, making his feature debut, shows a flair for composition. He sets up perfectly creepy shots that frame Evy on one side, her noise-canceling earphones eliminating distractions, and a darkened part of the house on the other, from which might come something bad. 

All the best scares, though, are in the sound mix, whether it’s from Evy hears from those videos or the strange noises coming from upstairs where her mom is sleeping. “Undertone” could almost be effective a scream generator as an audio presentation, but then you wouldn’t get Tuason’s strong visuals or the chance to watch Kiri, who’s a dynamic young actor I think we’ll see more of.

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‘Undertone’

★★★

Opens Friday, March 13, in theaters everywhere. Rated R for language. Running time: 94 minutes.

March 12, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Joan Huang (Shirley Chen) is a Chinese-American teen who finds a drastic way to assimilate into U.S. culture, in writer-director Amy Wang’s psychological thriller “Slanted.” (Photo courtesy of Bleecker Street and Tideline Entertainment.)

Review: 'Slanted' is a body-horror thriller with some shocks and a painfully obvious message about race and assimilation

March 12, 2026 by Sean P. Means

First-time writer-director Amy Wang has some good ideas floating around “Slanted,” a body-horror drama about race and assimilation taken to the extreme. One wishes Wang had gotten a couple movies under her belt before biting off so much here.

Joan Huang is a first-generation Chinese-American girl, having arrived in the States with her parents, Roger (Fang Du) and Sofia (Vivian Wu), when she was 7. Now 17 (and played as a teen by Shirley Chen), Joan is obsessed with being the all-American girl — personified in the pursuit of becoming her school’s prom queen.

When the odds-on favorite for prom queen, Olivia Hammond (Amelie Zilber), drops out because she’s landed a role in a TV show, Joan sees her opportunity — and even bleaches her black hair blonde to try to impress Olivia’s circle of friends. Olivia, who’s not above using Joan to get discounts at a Chinese-run nail salon, isn’t buying it. “I can see your black roots. Ew,” Olivia tells her dismissively.

That’s when Joan walks into Ethnos Inc., a storefront that offers a unique medical service: Making anyone of color look and sound white. “If you can’t beat ‘em, be them,” intones Dr. Willie Singer (R. Keith Harris), who tells Joan that he used to be Black before inventing the process. (The premise sounds like a variation on a “Saturday Night Live” sketch from the ‘80s, when Eddie Murphy put on makeup to appear white, and learned that without Black people around, white folks give each other stuff for free.)

Without getting into too many spoilers, Joan takes the Ethnos treatment — and soon everyone at school see a new student, Jo Hunt (played by McKenna Grace). 

Wang’s story plays like an old “Twilight Zone” morality tale, or a grotesque mash-up of “Mean Girls” and “The Substance.” The pacing is slack, however, and the dialogue — like when Joan’s parents see what she’s done to herself — is trite and obvious. And the third-act reveal, when Joan/Jo realizes something’s gone wrong with the treatment, doesn’t hit as hard as it could. 

Watching “Slanted,” I wondered what a director like Jordan Peele might have done with it — applying some subtlety and sly wit to Joan’s rejection of her Chinese identity in order to fit in with white America, and discovering how shallow that pursuit is. But one sees in Wang’s flawed film the potential for something more biting on her next film.

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‘Slanted’

★★1/2

Opens Friday, March 13, in theaters everywhere. Rated R for language, some sexual material, teen drug use and brief violent content/bloody images. Running time: 104 minutes; in English and in Mandarin with subtitles.

March 12, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Mabel (left, voiced by Piper Curda), a human whose mind has been transferred to a robot beaver, learns from a real beaver, King George (voiced by Bobby Moynihan), how to build like a beaver, in Pixar’s new animated tale, “Hoppers.” (Image courtesy of Disney / Pixar.)

Review: 'Hoppers' is Pixar's delightful return to form, a glorious mix of strong animation and lots of humor in the animal kingdom

March 05, 2026 by Sean P. Means

Whew. Pixar, you had us worried there for a little while, with a string of not-so-amazing movies — “Elio,” “Inside Out 2,” “Elemental” and “Lightyear” — and some great movies, like “Turning Red,” “Luca” and “Soul,” relegated to streaming during the pandemic. But “Hoppers,” the first great Pixar theatrical movie since “Toy Story 4” in 2019, is worth the wait.

The central figure in “Hoppers” is Mabel (voiced by Piper Curda), a lifelong animal lover who at 19 spends more time crusading against Mayor Jerry (voiced by Jon Hamm) and his habitat-destroying freeway project than actually attending her college classes. Then she learns that her professor, Dr. Sam (voiced by Kathy Najimy), is running a secret project where she’s built robot versions of animals into which she can insert human consciousness.

Or, as Mabel says when she sees it, “It’s just like ‘Avatar,’” to which Dr. Sam insists, “It’s nothing like ‘Avatar.’” It took a multi-billion-dollar merger between Disney and 20th Century Fox to make that joke happen, and I’m here for it.

Of course, Mabel sneaks in and uses the technology, in an effort to communicate with the mammals in the habitat Mayor Jerry’s plans could destroy. Mabel learns some hard lessons at first — namely, that the animals are accepting of their fate in life, particularly as prey to other predators. Mabel befriends George (voiced by Bobby Moynihan), the beaver king of the mammals, and discovers there’s a whole council of kings representing birds, insects and other categories of animals, and they don’t always get along.

Director Daniel Chong and screenwriter Jesse Andrews (who wrote “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”) create an elaborate world of creatures with fur, fins and feathers, and their complicated interactions with each other and those naked apes known as humans. They also mine those interactions for a great deal of humor, to create a more gut-busting movie than Pixar usually makes — while still packing an emotional punch and one of the wildest finishes an animated movie has delivered in a long time.

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‘Hoppers’

★★★1/2

Opens Friday, March 6, in theaters everywhere. Rated PG for action/peril, some scary images and mild language. Running time: 105 minutes.

March 05, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Frank (Christian Bale, left) and the Bride (Jessie Buckley) become fugitives in “The Bride!,” writer-director Maggie Gyllenhaal giddily unhinged take on “The Bride of Frankenstein.” (Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.)

Review: 'The Bride!' nearly falls to pieces, but Christian Bale and Jessie Buckley create monsters with beating hearts

March 05, 2026 by Sean P. Means

After proving her directing skills with the tricky material of Elena Ferrante’s “The Lost Daughter,” writer-director Maggie Gyllenhaal takes on one of the classics of literature and film — the bride of Frankenstein — in “The Bride!”, and the results are never boring.

They are a lot of things — brash, striking, perplexing, emotionally intense, often ill-conceived and narratively all over the damn place — but “boring” is not one of Gyllenhaal’s attributes.

Gyllenhaal reimagines the classic monster story as part tragic romance, part gangster drama and part, I don’t know, “Moulin Rouge” spectacle. Set in the 1930s, the story starts in Chicago with Ida (Jessie Buckley), a bar-hopping party animal who mouths off about a local gangster’s dirty dealings. So it’s no surprise that two of the gangster’s underlings (John Magaro and Matthew Maher) rough Ida up, and end up sending her tumbling to her death down some stairs.

Meanwhile, the creature sometimes called Frankenstein’s monster (Christian Bale) has also arrived in Chicago, seeking help from Dr. Euphronius (Annette Bening), an acolyte of the monster’s deceased creator. Frank wants Doc to help him achieve a dream: Building a female counterpart of himself, to be his mate. Doc takes some convincing, but soon Doc and Frank are digging up a potters’ field for a corpse to reanimate — and they find what’s left of Ida.

Here, Buckley — who’s just over a week from getting an Oscar for “Hamnet” (I don’t think this movie will cause Academy voters to have a “Norbit”-style reconsideration) — plays both the bride but also Mary Shelley, the author of “Frankenstein.” That’s meant as a cheeky nod to director James Whale’s 1935 “The Bride of Frankenstein,” where Elsa Lanchester was credited for playing Mary Shelley in the prologue, and was uncredited as the bride in her Hostess cupcake hairdo. Alas, it’s more obvious and less thought-provoking than Gyllenhaal likely intended.

The movie is littered with similar references, and you’re invited either to groove with or groan at the attempts — which include, and I kid you not, Bale and Buckley leading a musical number to “Puttin’ on the Ritz,” evoking the holy memory of Peter Boyle and Gene Wilder in “Young Frankenstein.”

Gyllenhaal also calls in some favors. She casts her brother, Jake Gyllenhaal, as a ‘30s Hollywood movie idol who’s Frank’s idol. And she casts her husband, Peter Sarsgaard, alongside Penelope Cruz as a pair of detectives following Frank and his amnesiac Bride on a cross-country killing spree that Bonnie & Clyde would have envied.

So “The Bride!”, with its porto-feminist narrative and gimmicky pacing, throws a lot of spaghetti at the screen, and only some of it comes together as anything coherent or compelling. Thankfully, two of the most arresting parts are Bale and Buckley, who put a lot of conviction in their renditions of screendom’s most enduring monsters. For all the mismatched parts of Gyllenhaal’s fever dream, the leads are the beating heart that keep the movie alive.

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‘The Bride’

★★1/2

Opens Friday. March 6, in theaters everywhere. Rated R for strong/bloody violent content, sexual content/nudity and language. Running time: 126 minutes.

March 05, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Three donkeys walk around an observatory complex in Chile, in Alison McAlpine’s “Perfectly a Strangeness,” one of the five Oscar-nominated documentary short films for 2026. (Photo courtesy Roadside Attractions.)

Review: Oscar-nominated documentary shorts deliver half-hour looks at big issues — and one beautifully strange walk around an observatory

March 05, 2026 by Sean P. Means

Four of the five nominees for the 98th Academy Awards in the documentary short categories are more than 30 minutes long and take oblique looks at some of the thorniest issues of our time — school shootings, abortion rights, the wars in Ukraine and Gaza — that engage brains and hearts to devastating effect.

The program, curated by filmmaker Taika Waititi, starts with the oddball in the group, director Alison McAlpine’s “Perfectly a Strangeness.” On the surface, there doesn’t seem to be a lot here, just three donkeys walking around an astronomical observatory in a desert in Chile. But McAlpine’s stirring cinematography and observant eye make us stop to really consider the intersection between stubborn nature and cosmic technology.

The other four I’ll list from simply good to really great:

• “Armed With Only a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud” is a labor of love by two of Brent’s filmmaking collaborators — his brother Craig and their producer friend Juan Arredondo — to capture the work of the first American journalist killed in the war in Ukraine. The movie captures Brent Renaud’s determination to dive into conflict zones, from Iraq to Somalia to Afghanistan, and tell the stories of the people on the ground who were affected by decisions made elsewhere. If there’s a weakness here, it’s that Brent seldom pointed the camera at himself, so we only get by inference what he was feeling and thinking when he courted danger. The bond between brothers is evident, including in the credits, where Craig shares directing credit with his late brother.

• “Children No More: ‘Were and Are Gone’” follows a silent protest movement in Israel, where volunteers line up holding posters depicting children who have been killed by Israeli military operations in Gaza. Director Hilla Medalia interviews some organizers, who insist their efforts are nonviolent and anti-violence, not anti-Israel — then shows the vitriolic responses the events get from other Israelis. Like so many aspects of the divide between Israelis and Palestinians, the emotions the movie evokes are, well, complicated. 

• “The Devil Is Busy” goes inside a different battle zone: A women’s health clinic in Atlanta, where women who need reproductive care must deal with Bible-quoting protesters outside and the possibility inside that they’ve gone past Georgia’s restrictive ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. Directors Geeta Gandbhir (who’s nominated in the documentary feature category for “The Perfect Neighbor”) and Christalyn Hampton focus on the clinic’s weary but determined staff members, notably the chief of security, who’s the first one in and last one out every day. It’s a concise and heart-breaking chronicle of women facing hard choices because of someone else’s holy war.

• “All the Empty Rooms” is the toughest watch of the bunch, and ultimately the most rewarding. Director Joshua Seftel profiles Steve Hartman, a CBS News correspondent, and photographer Lou Bopp, who have taken on a challenging personal project: They meet families who have lost children in school shootings, and create profiles of those children by taking exhaustive photos of those children’s preserved bedrooms. The project, and Seftel’s chronicling of it, are reminders of the real young people and the lives they lived — and the lives they might have lived if they had the chance to become grown-ups.

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Oscar-nominated documentary short films

★★★1/2

Opens Friday, March 6, at the Broadway Centre Cinemas (Salt Lake City). “All the Empty Rooms” is rated PG-13 for brief strong language and thematic material; “Armed With Only a Camera” is rated TV-MA; “The Devil Is Busy” is rated TV-14; “Children No More” is unrated, but probably PG-13 for language; “Perfectly a Strangeness” is not rated, but probably G. Running time: 157 minutes in total; one film is in Hebrew, the other partly in Ukrainian and other languages, both with subtitles.

March 05, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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Sidney Prescott-Evans (Neve Campbell, left) talks with her husband, Mark (Joel McHale), after another slasher killing, in the horror sequel “Scream 7.” (Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures.)

Review: 'Scream 7' brings back Neve Campbell to the 'final girl' role that made her a star, but this time nostalgia's the real killer

February 26, 2026 by Sean P. Means

Thirty years after Wes Craven’s thriller “Scream” launched a meta-slasher series, the new installment “Scream 7” is what the franchise always despised — a by-the-numbers bloodbath.

The one upside to this installment is that Neve Campbell is back as the franchise’s original “final girl,” Sidney Prescott, after the star sat out the last movie when Paramount Pictures didn’t want to pay her what she’s worth. In a sequel that constantly references back on its past chapters, Sidney’s absence from “Scream VI’s” New York misadventures gets referenced the most.

This movie’s attempt at emulating the original’s trademark opening kill gives away what director Kevin Williamson — who wrote the original, and co-wrote this one with Guy Busick — is going for here. The opener shows a dudebro (Jimmy Tatro) with a true-crime obsession dragging his girlfriend (Michelle Randolph) to stay at the Macher house, the site of the murders in the first “Scream” movie. Now a tourist trap with Ghostface Killer animatronics and posters from the franchise-within-a-franchise “Stab” films, the house, like this movie, is a nostalgia-heavy cash grab.

Sidney has holed up in a small town, where her husband Mark (Joel McHale) is the police chief. They have a daughter, Tatum (Isabel Ray), who’s 17 — the age Sidney was when the first murders happened — and resentful that Mom doesn’t talk about those horrific experiences. (Fans will note that Tatum is named for Sidney’s best friend in high school, played then by Rose McGowan, who didn’t survive the original movie.)

Tatum has friends, Hannah and Chloe, played by McKenna Grace and Celeste O’Connor, who are both familiar with the legacy-sequel money play, since they both co-starred in the recent “Ghostbusters” movies. Tatum also has a boyfriend, Ben (Sam Rechner), and there’s a boy next door, Lucas (Asa Germann), who’s a bit obsessed with Sidney’s previous exploits. Being teens in a teen-slasher movie, the audience is fairly sure these characters are suspects or targets. 

Other characters who might be carrying the knife or getting one between the ribs are: Jessica (Anna Camp), Sidney’s neighbor and friend; Tatum’s drama teacher (Timothy Simons); an orderly (Ethan Embry) at a nearby psychiatric hospital; and an ambitious local TV reporter (Mark Consuelos). Three more familiar faces — who we’re quite sure aren’t suspects — are TV reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox), the only person who’s been in all seven of these movies, and her interns, twins Mindy (Jasmin Savoy Brown) and Chad (Mason Gooding), who have survived the fifth and sixth chapters. 

There are some other familiar faces — I won’t say who, but their appearances require more fancy writing than the script can deliver. Their presence, particularly in the grand finale, point out how desperately Williamson and company want to play the greatest hits.

Williamson does manage to stage one clever sequence — the one in the trailer, where Sidney and Tatum are in a tight crawlspace trying to elude ol’ Ghostface. But that doesn’t make up for the movie’s many killings, which range from ho-hum to tasteless. If there’s an eighth movie in the series, they should change the name to “Yawn.”

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‘Scream 7’

★★

Opens Friday, February 27, in theaters everywhere. Rated R for strong bloody violence, gore, and language. Running time: 114 minutes.

February 26, 2026 /Sean P. Means
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