Movie Preview: Bill Murray, Jennifer Coolidge, Gabrielle Union and Pete Davidson — Trigger Happy “Riff Raff”

Low rent gangsters keep their feuds all in the family?

Ed Harris, Emanuela Postacchini and Lewis Pullman also star in this violent farce, which rolls out March 6.

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Movie Preview: “M3GAN 2.0”

Nothing like an upgrade, amIright?

The horror audience has been mostly AWOL for the past year. “Nosferatu” blew up, but “Presence” and “Companion” are far more indicative of the malaise that has set in with fans of that genre. Tepid turnouts.

Maybe a familiar face can remedy that.

June 27.

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Netflixable? A Disabled Child, a Mom Determined to Save Him — “Lucca’s World”

A guilt-ridden journalist tries everything, grasping at any “miracle treatments” straw, in an effort to save her disabled-at-birth son in “Lucca’s World,” an engrossing Around the World with Netflix weeper from Mexico.

Based on the non-fiction book by Bárbara Anderson, it’s about her endless “What have we got to lose?” efforts to undo what she feels was her failings in giving birth to baby Lucca (Julián Tello), a child diagnosed with pediatric cerebral palsy, given to epileptic seizures as well.

While we can guess that Bárbara ( Bárbara Mori) is unjustly blaming herself, and the burden these efforts place on the rest of the family — including chronically underemployed one-legged husband Andrés (Juan Pablo Medina) and their younger son — based on earlier films of this genre (“Lorenzo’s Oil,” etc.), what’s unexpected are the blunt depictions of the medical establishment.

Mexican doctors and hospitals might rightly insist that “the science” and data isn’t there to back up Bárbara’s latest hopes. But as a reporter, chance meetings and interviews with the wealthy and the connected point her to that one long shot that may pay off. And frank depictions of the opportunism and money-grubbing on the other side of this “miracle” device paint a portrait of the darker, bottom-line world of “medicine for the elite” and medicine that’s available to the rest of us.

No kidding, this film (in Spanish with subtitles, or dubbed into English) has the longest and most CYA “Based on a true story” opening credits you’re likely to ever see. Anderson’s book and Mariana Chenillo’s film has villains, and one in particular wears a lab coat and seems downright predatory at times. Names were changed, etc., to avoid lawsuits.

The rich and the sketchy are always quick to sue.

“Lucca’s World” takes us from that difficult birth through compassionate doctor’s struggling to “know the full extent” of the child’s “limitations.” Bárbara narrates her story and the family’s struggle to allow him to “do what the world denies” him. Not every country has an ADA, we’re reminded.

But there’s this Dr. Kumar in India, and this gadget — the cytotron — that’s being used for cancer and arthritus treatment. It stimulates the brain into working in therapeutic ways. Maybe it can reset Lucca’s brain to improve his quality of life.

Husband Andrés is skeptical, as Lucca’s expenses already have them drowning in debt. Lucca’s Mexican doctors dismiss the long shot attempt, going so far as to call the trek to India “life threatening.” But Dr. Go-Between (Ari Brickman) is always positive, always laying out the cost and the possibilities, facilitating even as he takes care to never let Bárbara speak directly to Dr. Kumar (Danish Husain).

Director and co-screenwriter Chenillo takes pains to show us the extent of Bárbara’s desperation as the family not only flies to India for a month of treatments, they visit local temples to hedge their religious bets as well.

The narrative allows us to focus on villains, and understand that — in the real world — such people must be worked around, as deposing entrenched pieces of the status quo is nigh on impossible.

The film honors doggedness, gets lost in arcane details on occasion and skims over the advantages Bárbara brings to the table. She’s a journalist, with access to information, the best people and those in power. She doesn’t even have to take the step of meeting and convincing a journalist to take up her child’s cause, which puts so many families with sick kids on local and national TV in the U.S., pleading for help.

But such movies thrive on the hope they present and the big moments when that hope is either proven or sadly dashed by the finale. And this “Lucca’s World” delivers.

Rating: TV-14
Cast: Bárbara Mori, Juan Pablo Medina, Julián Tello, Ari Brickman and Danish Husain.

Credits: Directed by Mariana Chenillo, scripted by Mariana Chenillo and Javier Peñalosa, based on the book by Bárbara Anderson. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:36

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Classic Film Review: Susan Hayward, Robert Mitchum, Arthur Kennedy in a Rodeo Love Triangle by Nicholas Ray — “The Lusty Men” (1952)

Which classic film to watch on a chilly Sunday afternoon often comes down to a coin toss for me.

Does the day have a ’40s, ’50s melodrama vibe? That usually means it’s Douglas Sirk or Nicholas Ray time. And if there’s a Ray film I haven’t seen popping up on the usual classic film menus, sometimes I don’t even bother tossing that coin.

“The Lusty Men” has a homoerotic title, Robert Mitchum and Arthur Kennedy and a rodeo setting with Susan Hayward as the woman set up to “come between them.” The possibilities in that are many, considering its bisexual director and the ways he toyed with male relationships and female archetypes in such classics as “Rebel Without a Cause” and “Johnny Guitar.”

Sure enough an overtly “butch” woman or two slips past the censors, even if they aren’t the focus of the movie. Even if the plot of “Lusty” lapses into the predictable, there’s sure to be something interesting to unpack in a Ray picture.

“Lusty Men” is groundbreaking in a much more conventional way. Rodeo had been featured in some of the earliest silent films, which used real life rodeo competitors to show off their roping, riding and cow-punching skills. But it was an alien world to the Wisconsin-born, former Frank Lloyd Wright apprentice, folk-music-connected, Federal Theatre Project trained Ray.

So Ray makes this love triangle melodrama a rodeo “explainer,” using grandstand announcers to detail the rules and traditions and dangers of each event. Real rodeo footage is edited into events that “legendary” bull rider Jeff McCloud (Mitchum) and cowhand/protege Wes Merritt (Kennedy) compete in.

Editing emphasizes the man-vs.-beast violence of the sport, especially in those “safety last” good ol’days when even veteran cattlemen didn’t know diddly about how to evade a goring/stomping by a Brahma bull who doesn’t like to be ridden and just “threw” you.

Safety and rodeo clowning evolved over the decades. But the character “types” and the reasons they do what they do haven’t changed in “The Wildest Show on Earth.”

It’s a way for fellows far from the center of the universe with an archaic professional skill set to change their luck, their fate and their cultural invisibility.

“For a little bit there,” crusty rodeo cowboy Jeff intones, “you’re a lot more than you was.”

But that isn’t what married man Wes will admit to when he talks about his motivations for trying his luck.

“A fella’s bankroll could get fat in a hurry, rodeoin’,” Wes muses. “I wanna toss a rope over my own cow, just once.”

He dreams of owning their own place. Jeff has met Mrs. Merritt (Hayward). And whatever she says about their current state — her keeping a modest cabin that’s not their own, him just a ranch hand with access to a war surplus Jeep — everybody involved knows the stakes.

Jeff has taken one fall too many, “busted my last three ribs” and just limped back “home” to Big Springs, Texas. He ducks into the dusty hovel he grew up in, jaws with the old timer (Burt Mustin) who owns the family “ranch” now, and meets the Merritts, who keep stopping by.

The Merritts need $5,000 to buy the Old McCloud place from old Jeremiah. And they ain’t getting there fast on cowhand cash.

“Wes tells me you once made three thousand dollars in one day, rodeoin,'” Louise asks Jeff.

“That’s right.”

“And threw it all away,” she quizzes.

“Oh, I didn’t throw it away. It just sorta’… floated.”

Mitchum, the quintessence of manly cool in his day, is effortlessly credible as McCloud, a tough guy who rode hard, earned big and partied and frittered it all away on fancy saddles, boots and a cowboy’s idea of high living.

Louise may be tempted by the dollar signs, the shortcut her man might master to get them to their $5k quicker — if he doesn’t get hurt or killed. But most of her reservations are given voice by others.

Crusty Jeremiah describes the McClouds as “the most shiftless family ever to hit these parts.” A lady rodeo performer (“Ain’t no ladies around here,” cracks notwithstanding) wants to know if “Jeff ever made a pass at you,” on meeting Louise. Other women swoon or sulk at hearing Jeff’s name, and about his mentor/”partner” relationship with Wes, once he’s gone behind his wife’s back and started competing.

Wes? He’s dreaming of that yet-to-be-written Garth Brooks tune, “Rodeo,” with lines about “It’s the roar of a Sunday crowd, It’s the white in his knuckles, The gold in his buckle, He’ll win the next go ’round.”

Louise is the only one who envisions the unborn Garth and his song’s dark side — “a broken home and some broken bones, Is all he’ll have to show, For all the years that he spent chasin’ This dream they call rodeo.”

Ray sets all this up with a montage of a “rodeo days” parade, clever quick cuts that put Mitchum straddling that stall, dropping down on that one bull he shouldn’t have ridden and his slow limp through an empty, windswept and litter-strewn arena — his belongings stuffed into small duffle bag — a rodeo rider who hits the end just shy of 40.

Other scenes of veteran riders chewing the fat and rodeo groupies hanging around, man-hunting and husband-stealing, immerse us in this living-in-a-trailer/always-on-the-road life, which Louise finds herself hurled into without her consent.

Mitchum’s Jeff has been around the block. He knows the conflict that’s coming. He doesn’t have to lean into any hunch about “chemistry.” Hayward and Mitchum set off the sparks that tell us what could happen. It’s just a question of “Will it?” and “What then?”

The atmosphere and intimacy of this time-tested story, even the squarish “Academy” aspect ratio of it all, lower expectations for this black-and-white-but-not-noir classic. It looks, feels and sounds like a very good B-movie with an A picture’s cast and producer (Jerry Wald), which is what it is.

The film embraces — at arm’s length — the pageantry and romance of rodeo, but never loses its cynicism about this risk-your-neck-for-a buck “sport.” Veteran character actor Arthur Hunnicutt gives voice in many digs at the high-risk/low-returns lifestyle in portraying a busted-up hanger-on whose rodeoing days are long gone. “Booker” shows off his “most busted leg in the world” to newbies who fork over a quarter.

“Twenty years rodeoin’ done that. Leg busted nine times, kneecap five, and the ankle four… Nobody’ll ever beat it unless they jump off one of them New York skyscrapers!”

But nothing will break the fever of a man who catches it, not even the concern of the prettiest hash joint waitress-turned-wife ever.

Guys like “rodeo tramp” Jeff may serve up jaundiced endorsements. But nothing he or anyone else says, poetic or discouraging or both, expresses anything but blind optimism about their “chances” and the bargain they struck to take them.

“There never was a bronc that couldn’t be rode, there never a cowboy that couldn’t be throwed. Guys like me last forever.”

Rating: “approved,” fisticuffs, rodeo violence, alchohol abuse, infidelity — TV-PG today

Cast: Susan Hayward, Robert Mitchum, Arthur Kennedy, Arthur Hunnicutt, Carol Nugent, Frank Faylen, Lorna Thayer, Maria Hart and Burt Mustin.le

Credits: Directed by Nicholas Ray, scripted by Horace McCoy and David Dortort, “suggested by” a magazine story by Claude Stanush. An RKO release streaming on Tubi, et al.

Running time: 1:53

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Movie Review: It’s a wedding, and Reese, Celia, Meredith, Geraldine and Will say “You’re Cordially Invited,” Y’all

“Commitment” is a cornerstone of the marriage contract. And it’s damned important in a romantic comedy about marriages as well.

Say this for the cast of writer-director Nicholas Stoller’s “You’re Cordially Invited.” These kids — and Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon, Celia Weston on down to Nick Jonas — commit the f out of this, to use a word that earned and earned and earned again this comedy’s R-rating.

It’s a tidy but rude “dueling weddings” farce that doesn’t break new ground in the genre, and Stoller (“Forgetting Sarah Marshall”) peppers the script with all those f-bombs in a vain attempt to give it “edge.” There’s no edge to this. At all.

But here’s what it gets just soooo right. Everybody on set performs at a fever pitch, even the slower talking, colorful colloquia quipping Southerners.

The energy level is never quite manic but it never flags.

Stoller follows wedding rom-com master P.J. Hogan’s (“My Best Friend’s Wedding/Muriel’s Wedding”) long-established golden rules for the genre. The efforts to sabotage True Love have to be believable, petty and yet redeemably selfish.

And it’s a wedding. What’s a wedding or a wedding movie without singing?

As it co-stars Witherspoon, it’s a lot closer to her “Sweet Home Alabama” sweetspot than a great wedding rom-com. But Witherspoon, playing an ex-Atlantan now a Left Coast reality TV mogul, is given a couple of grand sparring partners that help this come off.

Ferrell, playing an over-the-top doting dad whose wedding is double-booked into the same S.C. island hotel, knows “over-the-top.” And towering over Reese, he offers no quarter.

And Witherspoon’s fellow Southerner Celia Weston (“Dead Man Walking”) plays the Steel Magnolia mom whom TV producer Margot fled to the other coast to get away from, the matriarch of a drawling Atlanta clan so Southern fried contemptuous of everything about Margot they might as well be wearing red baseball caps.

“The sins of the country have been blamed on The South,” Mama drawls, as we notice the lily whiteness of their wedding party.

Ferrell is blessed with having the gonzo Geraldine Viswanathan (“Drive-Away Dolls”) play his very young, mercurial daughter. Yeah, she inherited her Dad’s hair-trigger temper. Yes, she indulges his baking her cake and doing her wedding day hair (that’s not his profession).

And noooo, there’s nothing Frank-and-Nancy icky about father and daughter dueting Kenny & Dolly’s “Islands in the Stream.”

The meanness of two people and two families competing for a double-booked “exclusive” weekend is somewhat undercut by characters sweetly rising to the occasion and doing the right thing. But that doesn’t mean rehearsals, weddings and receptions won’t get down and dirty and downright out of hand.

The laughs are a combination of slapstick low-hanging fruit and little random bits of yokel whimsy. Witherspoon’s sister Neve (Meredith Hagner) is A) marrying a cowboy male exotic dancer (drawling scene-stealer Jimmy Tatro) and B) secretly pregnant.

Southern enough for you?

Pop star Jonas plays a hip young (Southern) pastor who figures crooning a little Creed should go with every marriage ceremony.

Jim’s daughter’s “wedding planner” is “a drunken child” (Keyla Monterroso Mejia) and utterly incompetent and unready for the real world. And the bridesmaids are also Gen Z cheap shot in the making.

The picture, which is earning dismissive reviews in some quarters, wouldn’t work without the oddball, mismatched chemistry between Witherspoon and Ferrell, who are a walking sight gag when they’re in the same shot.

But again, they “commit” to her drunken toast scene, his gator wrestling one, her withering, pissy put-downs of her family — and his — and Ferrell’s not-quite-Boomer “anything for a laugh” ethos turned loose on the delicate sensitivities of 20thing bridesmaids.

And say what you want, but that’s funny, till death do us part.

Rating: R, for profanity (lots and lots of F-bombs)

Cast: Reese Witherspoon, Will Ferrell, Geraldine Viswanathan, Meredith Hagner, Celia Weston, Jimmy Tatro, Leanne Morgan, Stony Blyden, Keyla Monterroso Mejia, Nick Jonas, and Jack McBrayer

Credits: Scripted and directed by Nicholas Stoller. An Amazon Prime Video release.

Running time: 1:52

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Netflixable? “The Sand Castle” is a child’s fantasy of war, loss and displacement

Today’s “Around the World with Netflix” film comes from Lebanon, a nation no stranger to strife and conflict like most of the Middle Eastern nation states surrounding her.

Lebanon isn’t mentioned by name or treated directly as the subject of this Arabic language (or dubbed into English) child’s fantasy of endless war and escape. But as schoolkids sing “They say my country is beaautiful, and besieged by anger” that fits Lebanon better than any most any place on Earth.

A family of four has found itself stranded on a tiny spit of a Meditteranean island, with only a lighthouse, reeds, rocky beaches and the sea around them.

We gather that they were en route somewhere when they landed here. They have a radio that picks up Greek news, and that can be used to call for help at night when the signal carries farther. They can crank up the generator that runs the perhaps-abandoned light. They do this as a service to others, “so those who are lost can find their way in the dark,” father Nabil (Ziad Bakri) tells his little girl Jana (Riman Al Rafeea).

Mother Yasmine (Nadine Pabaki) frets over the “friends” they paid to pick them up from here. Every so often, they expect that rescue to arrive, and take their luggage to the currents-swept edge of the sea.

Teenaged Adam (Zain Al Rafeea) impatiently gripes at their tiny rations and their plight, but finds some escape in the music on the radio.

Jana, whose voice is the first we hear, narrates and speaks of “the big blue monster” in the water. She cannot swim, so even a floating tarp has menace about it.

There isn’t much to do but forage, beach comb and try to hide their panic. Not Adam.

“We’re never getting out of here.”

First-time feature director Matty Brown, who co-wrote the script, dabbles in “Twilight Zone” and Theatre of the Absurd “plotting,” inciting incidents and the like. But he finds precious little to animate this blunt-edged metaphor in search of poignancy, universality and mystery.

The images can be lovely, but the cryptic clues in the story fail to surprise when they arrive or move when they’re “explained.”

And knowing how often Rod Serling & Co. delivered this sort of tale in thirty minutes, with commercials, over 60 years ago just makes the slack pacing and parsimoniously doled-out “message” a terrible drag.

Rating: TV-14, peril, images of war, profanity

Cast: Nadine Pabaki, Ziad Bakri, Riman Al Rafeea and Zain Al Rafeea

Credits: Directed by Matty Brown, scripted by Matty Brown, Hend Fakhroo and Yassmina Karajah. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:37

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Movie Review: Meet your compliant and cuddly new AI robotic “Companion”

“Companion” is a horrific and caustically cautionary sci-fi thriller about how the digitized alternatives to dating might go wrong. Very wrong.

Signing on an impressive cast, writer-director Drew Hancock takes a big, roundhouse swing at “coupling” in a distracted, instant gratification craving, uncompromising and not-entirely-adult era, and at sending up a rom-com convention or two. But the best he manages is a slow roller to shortstop with this icy, rarely amusing and gory dark comedy.

“Yellowjackets” alumna Sophie Thatcher plays Iris, whom Josh (Jack Quaid) “meets cute” in a supermarket. She is the idealized pale, pert and perfect pixie. He’s the good-looking clod who knocks over the stacked display of oranges.

Iris voice-over narrates about their “instant connection” and the feeling she got from him the day she met him, a feeling repeated at the end of their relationship.

The happy, cute couple is off to spend a weekend with friends at a designer mansion on a private lake. Iris is nervous, as Kat (Megan Suri) doesn’t “like” her, she’s sure. The gay couple, cuddly Eli (Harvey Guillén) and hunky Patrick (Lukas Gage) may accept her. Will Kat’s paramour, the married and sketchy Russian owner of all this exclusivity, Serge (Rupert Friend) be as kind?

Iris frets over how she’ll fit in on the (self-driving) car ride up, and in bed after she’s met and mingled, and after she’s “satisfied” Josh.

“Go to sleep, Iris,” he snaps.

It’s only later, the second time he says this, that we’re told she’s his rented “companion,” the latest tech from Empathix Robotics. We flash back to Josh taking delivery, his assurances that he can control how “smart” and how “strong” she is and how that original “meet cute” was one he selected for their shared “memory.”

Just keep that digital tablet or phone app at hand to “control” her and he’s golden. Or so he’s told.

Hancock — he created the short-lived “My Dead Ex” TV show — works in all sorts of jabs at selfish lovers, rich, rapey louts and the threat such synthetically “perfect” sexual ideals might be to sugar babies like Kat.

“My replacement” is how she sees the attractive but vaguely mechanical Iris.

The scripts ‘revelations are generic thriller cant and the plot places and takes them are quite predictable. That goes for the ways things go wrong and the order that this intimate party shrinks, Agatha Christie style, towards “And Then There Were None.”

I appreciate the ambition here, and there’s potential amusement in the generational digs, romantic illusions and grimly transactional “I just want to make you happy, Josh” Hancock sets up for Generation Gamer/Incel/Reddit rants.

But as horror, there’s nothing here that truly shocks. Covering Thatcher’s pixie in blood is the shortest-lived jolt of all. The deaths have no meaning or pathos. They’re simply perfunctory. The rom-com satire never quite works, except in a suspect-every-relationship where one partner seems “Out of His/Her League” sense.

The “reasons” for all that transpires could have been a slap heard all across Gen Z. But the punch is pulled.

And the cast never overcomes the sterility of it all, although Suri and Friend in particular register as characters with agency and flaws that could be their salvation, or undoing.

Nobody embarrasses himself or herself, but their writer-director lets them down. This “Companion” might have been the perfect picture pitch, but our batter never makes clean contact.

Rating: R, graphic violence, suggestions of sex, profanity

Cast: Sophie Thatcher, Jack Quaid, Harvey Guillén, Lukas Gage, Megan Suri and Rupert Friend

Credits: Scripted and directed by Drew Hancock. A New Line release.

Running time: 1:37

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Movie Review: Combat at Its most Cliched — “Valiant One”

The bar was raised on combat films decades ago. Corny, tactically sloppy flag-wavers no longer cut the mustard.

And thanks to the most documentary filmed in history — Iraq and Afghanistan — it’s not just the feature films that made viewers more sophisticated, tactically savvy and jargon-friendly.

So even viewers who’ve never darkened a recruiting office’s door know when a picture’s not exactly regulation. In the case of “Valiant One,” a glib, cliched, behind Korean lines thriller plainly shot in Vancouver, our commitment goes a lot further than the simple act of “embrace the suck.”

This may be the least “GI” combat film since Spike Lee’s “The Miracle of St. Anna,” hurling a collection of “types” into a dawdling tale that wanders from “This has possibilities” to “This is ludicrous” over 87 never-that-serious-or-suspenseful minutes.

Chase Stokes plays Sgt. Brockman, a uniformed tech and analyst with Silicon Valley dreams after his hitch. But he’s been enlisted as a babysitter/helper for a non-military technician (Desmin Borges) who’s needed to check and repair a non-functional ground radar gadget in the Korean demilitarized zone.

They’re attached to a small squad helicoptered-in to do the quick in-and-out. The weather closes in, they crash and their Master Sgt. (Callen Mulvey) is among the mortally wounded. With no communications and no navigation other than a map and compass, Gen Z has to get out of danger — behind North Korean lines — led by a guy who lacks confidence, and fails to inspire it.

Selby (Lana Condor), the most GI grunt among the survivors, quotes Tupac to buck our unqualified team leader up.

“No matter how hard it gets, stick your chest out, keep ya head up… and handle it.”

They must dodge patrols, negotiate with traumatized, disadvantaged
North Koreans and try not to cause an international incident as they do.

The trigger happy Ross (Jonathan Whitesell) might be spoiling for a firefight, but that’s why he’s not in charge.

Amusingly enough, the movie storms across that “incident” line in a hail of bullets by the middle acts as we figure out who’s competent, who’s cowardly and marvel over the American semi-automatic weapons that take forever to run out of rounds and the odd telling detail. Yes, poor North Korean farmers still drive wood burning trucks and lack electricity, if not a daughter who needs rescuing from the People’s Republicans who enslave them.

That “rescue,” the “I’ll buy you some time” self-sacrifices, the Korean American who speaks “almost” no Korean, “Valiant One” never ran across a combat cliche it doesn’t like.

The performances are semi-serious, at best, and longtime producer turned director/co-writer Steve Barnett’s first feature directing job staggers right up to the DMZ between awful and “OK, at least that’s over with.”

Rating: R, violence, profanity

Cast: Chase Stokes, Lana Condor, Jonathan Whitesell, Desmin Borges, Daniel Jun and Callen Mulvey.

Credits: Directed by Steve Barnett, scripted by Steve Barnett and Eric Tipton. A Briarcliff release.

Running time: 1:27

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Movie Review: Liam and Colm, Ciarán and Kerry “In the Land of Saints and Sinners”

“In the Land of Saints and Sinners” is an embarrassment of riches, a forlorn thriller cast with many of the greatest Irish character actors of their generation and featuring the cream of the next generation of Irish leading ladies.

Of all the tales of vengeance built around men of violence Liam Neeson has undertaken since “Taken” gave his career a long, lucrative act, this Robert Lorenz B-picture has to be the best. It’s colorful and pitiless, sad and even sentimental and set in Ireland when the IRA spilled blood and shrugged off “collateral damage” like the worst among us.

Neeson plays a WWII vet turned “freelance” triggerman in mid-70s Donegal, “the forgotten county” not nearly as far from “The Troubles” as you might think.

Colm Meaney plays the purser and facilitator of these hits, poetically staged in a grove of tiny fur trees. They’re tiny because Finbar Murphy (Neeson) plants them. And they’re a grove because that’s what he has his victims carry to the spot where they dig their own grave before their shotgun execution.

Every tiny tree is a grave.

Ciarán Hinds is the lone local member of the Garda, the police of the Republic of Ireland, a cheerful constable who loses target shooting bets with Finbar on the cliffs overlooking the Atlanic because he thinks he’s shooting against a buyer and seller of rare books. The chap has a handsome seaside cottage and drives a new Triumph. He must be doing something…lucrative.

And Kerry Condon is the fanatical IRA crew chief whose latest bombing in Belfast killed children. Now she and her bomb-making crew (Desmond Eastwood, Conor MacNeil and Seamus O’Hara) are on the lam, bringing their “war” to sleepy Glencolmcille and environs.

The Mark Michael McNally and Terry Loane script is a collection of tropes, set-pieces and genre picture cliches. Our killer wants to get out.

“There’s more to me than this,” Finbar tells Robert (Meaney) after one particularly grim shooting. “I’d like folks to see it.”

The victim was Mr. “Favor us with a song” at any pub that knew him, and he sings as he faces death after digging his grave in the grove of the dead.

Finbar wants to give this up, maybe be better and less dangerous company to the gardener-neighbor (Niamh Cusack) caring for a dying husband.

That’s when Doireann (Condon, of “The Banshees of Inishirin”) comes crashing into town, hiding out on the property of her late brother’s barkeeper-widow (Sarah Greene), with her loutish punk little brother (Eastwood) in tow.

How that brother acts around widowed Sinéad’s little girl (Michelle Gleeson) is what gets Finbar’s attention. He decides he will take care of it the way men of violence “take care” of things. Robert’s warnings that “He might be IRA” are unheeded.

And that’s when “The Troubles” in Glencolmcille really begin.

The cast is across-the-board believable and affecting. The leads are on-the-nose right for their parts, with the Oscar-nominated Condon adding another “Banshee” to her repertoire.

“None know the shadows better thjan those under the rocks,” she purrs. And that’s when she’s being nice.

Neeson, Hinds and Meaney each easily reprise variations of characters they’ve played more than once in their careers.

And “Game of Thrones” alumnus Jack Gleeson plays a callow young sharpshooter Finbar regards with contempt, until he thinks the kid is saveable.

Director Lorenz (“Trouble with the Curve,” “The Marksman”) walks a tightrope with the story’s tone — a beautiful setting, overcast skies with flowers in bloom, but most everyone we meet is involved in one aspect or another of the grim and bloody business of “making Ireland free.”

McNally and Loane pepper us with punchy slang about “bone men” (killers) and “peelers” (cops), and with pithy dialogue.

“We had things in common, things we keep hidden.” A redheaded victim who runs is “some ginger Jesse Owens.” Neeson’s meanest threat might be “Ay’ll beatcha with my old anm hands” to a youngster.

Condon’s Doireann frightens most everyone she meets with her fury, her profanity and her threats.But she’s lost her brother, “a sad bastard whose only job was layin’ low.” She’ll have her pound of flesh, thank you.

The great players performing colorful characters delivering great lines virtues transform a fairly routine thriller into something of higher aims, a B-picture almost as poetic as its title — “In the Land of Saints and Sinners.”

Rating: R, violence, profanity

Cast: Liam Neeson, Kerry Condon, Ciarán Hinds, Desmond Eastwood, Niamh Cusack and Colm Meaney.

Credits: Directed by Robert Lorenz, scripted by Mark Michael McNally and Terry Loane. A Samuel Goldwyn/MGM release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:46

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Movie Preview: The Supernatural looks like “Double Exposure” in this indie thriller

Howard Golberg wrote and directed this Freestyle (Feb. 18) release.

Caylee Cowan (“Willy’s Wonderland”), Alexander Calvert (“Supernatural,” Gen V”), and Kahyun Kim (“Cocaine Bear,” “St. Denis Medical”).

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