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Another week of movie watching is complete, and over at Find Your Film we highly recommend Leos Carax’s latest feature Annette as well as the Prime Video documentary Val. Naked Singularity and John and the Hole are also covered!
Annette centers on Henry (Adam Driver), a stand-up comic who has a passionate romance with an opera singer named Ann (Marion Cotillard). Their union ultimately leads to the birth of Annette. What one would assume is domestic bliss turns into a nightmarish journey for the lovers, and this Los Angeles set musical is not even close to being sunshine and rainbows.
Written by and featuring music from The Sparks Brothers, this 140 minute epic wowed all three of us and it should be in each of our “best of” lists this year. Annette is now playing in theaters and hits Prime Video August 20.
The documentary Val delivers an insightful and evocative look at Val Kilmer’s life. Never before seen home footage from Kilmer is featured, so on a film geek level it’s great to see his recollection on some of his most popular films. His unabashed affection for his children Jack and Mercedes absolutely won me over as well; Val is recommended by all of us.
During our Val segment, each of us pick two Kilmer films that we love. Eric’s choices are Spartan and At First Sight, Bruce chose MacGruber, and Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans. I chose The Birthday Cake (recently released on Blu-ray) and The Ghost and the Darkness.
I loved Olivia Cooke and John Boyega in Naked Singularity, the story of an overworked defense attorney (Boyega) who gets embroiled in a drug heist that is being engineered by a former client (Cooke). Both Bruce and Eric give this film a mild recommend. If you are a Cooke and/or Boyega fan, I would also encourage checking it out. That said, the listless narrative kept me at arm’s length. Overall, for me, this movie is a mixed bag that left me underwhelmed. Naked Singularity comes out today in NY at the Village East. It has a wider theatrical release and will be available On Demand next week August 13.
That underwhelmed feeling carried me through most of John and the Hole, and ultimately Bruce and Eric did not enjoy the film. That said, this movie ultimately won me over as an insightful family drama about accountability. John (Charlie Shotwell) is a 13-year-old who drugs his rich parents (Michael C. Hall, Jennifer Ehle) and older sister (Taissa Farminga) and places them in an unfinished bunker.
Check out our latest Find Your Film episode on Apple Podcasts: