We are…intrigued. Couples vying for the same house with differing agendas but the same “need.”
Netflix has this series, premiering Dec. 12.
We are…intrigued. Couples vying for the same house with differing agendas but the same “need.”
Netflix has this series, premiering Dec. 12.


A good comic thriller knows how to frustrate the viewer in all the best ways — creating suspense through a collection of close shaves, near misses and moments when the heroine or hero “almost” gets away.
A bad comic thriller frustrates in ways that call attention to contrivances, melodramatic touches and lapses in logic.
Jon Holmberg’s Swedish caper-comedy/prison escape dramedy and “Fugitive” spoof “Trouble” is more amusingly frustrating than stupidly frustrating.
Good frustration, our hapless hero Conny (Filip Berg of “A Man Called Ove”) is a big box electronics store salesman and single dad who winds up in prison for a murder he didn’t commit. He was installing a customer’s TV, jamming to Blue Swede’s one hit on headphones, when the homeowner was stabbed right behind him. Yeah, he’s dumb enough to pick up the bloody screwdriver after the killing.
Bad frustration? Conny is arrested, given an inept lawyer (Måns Nathanaelson) and railroaded into prison facing 18 years, all before the widow (Sissela Benn) has a chance to bury her husband. Conny escapes from prison just as they come home from the funeral?
Man, Swedish justice is blind and swift.
Holmberg’s jaunty tale throws obstacle after obstacle in Conny’s way, unhappy accidents (stabbed in the hand as a bystander in a prison fight) and head-slapping coincidences.
All this happens because he’s trying to pick up extra shifts at work so that his little girl — who lives with her remarried mother — can have a horse.
Time and again this script, which takes in coke deals, SWAT raids, life in a Swedish prison, a misplaced phone with video evidence on it and a system hellbent on ensuring his case is “closed,” gives us glimpses of a way out only to have dopey Conny miss the obvious because the screenwriters are determined to get their 100 minutes in.
Conny was trapped in a low-paying dead-end job, driving a VERY old Honda Civic, and running flight training simulations on his home gaming system. Because he wants to raise his income and better his life? Or because his ex (Shirin Golchin) married a pilot?
When he gets caught-up in a murder case, the one cop to believe him, Diana (Amy Deasismont) is green and dismissed by her no-nonsense boss (Eva Melander) because Diana bases her “hunch” on her contact, that same evening, with Conny as a headphones-buying customer at his store.
Rushed into prison, his only advice from the other convicts is “go for the throat.” That doesn’t keep him from getting caught in a brawl.
Fortunately, the gang boss inside (Dejan Cukic) has plotted a prison break, and Conny stumbles across the tunnel. Unfortunately, gang enforcer Musse (Joakim Sällquist) saw him stumble across that tunnel. No, climbing into a washing machine in the prison laundry isn’t the best way to hide.
“Did you think this through (in Swedish, or dubbed into English)?”
“No.”
But a photo in Conny’s cell has them thinking he’s a pilot. Next thing he knows, he’s in on the escape as their getaway pilot/driver, trying to get to “new evidence” (that missing phone) even as he’s at the service of ruthless convicted bank robbers.
There are plot twists that even Conny recognizes. But when you’re on morphine because you’ve just been shot, you can’t quite summon up the memory amd reference the right “Harrison Ford film.”
“Indiana Jones?”
The obstacles that pile up — Evidence destroyed? Or is it? — do battle with the frustrations at Conny’s ineptitude as the picture works itself and the viewer into an amusing tizzy.
This one had me yelling at the screen more than once.
“Dude, most of the bad guys are chatting on a hotel penthouse balcony. Lock the DOOR behind them and call the cops!”
But director Holmberg, his co-writer and his leading man (Berg has an Aaron Eckhart look and John Krasinski vibe) do a splendid job of making us root for this guy and slap our heads at his head-slapping haplessness.
We do all this as we try to figure out not where this is going — that’s pre-ordained — but what logical and illogical twists they contrive to toss at us before the hero, the movie and the viewer arrive at our final, funny destination.
Rating: TV-MA, violence
Cast: Filip Berg, Amy Deasismont, Måns Nathanaelson,
Joakim Sällquist and Eva Melander
Credits: Directed by Jon Holmberg, scripted by Jon Holmberg and Tapio Leopold. A Netflix release.
Running time: 1:38



In “Another Happy Day,” Lauren Lapkus plays a new mother who knows she’s no good at mothering, a frustrated, sleep-deprived young woman feeling lost and alone until she meets that not-quite-relative who says what she most needs to hear.
“I hope you’re not going to be talking about your baby because I am truly not interested.“
Writer-director Nora Fiffer’s debut feature shows us the tears and hopes that we understand them. And she finds humor amid the insights about this particular version of post partum depression.
Joanna (Lupkus) tracks via her phone timer how little baby Alma is sleeping and weeps at the little sleep she herself is. She’s learning to let the phrase “You have poop on you” roll off her back and can’t process that her newborn still isn’t looking at her.
This is “the loneliest I’ve ever been.”
Partner Lucien (Jean Elie) works. Her mom won’t come “help” despite her fervent pleas/ And her peers either don’t have kids and just don’t get it, or expose her to the insipid mewling that is every baby shower she’s invited to.
Visiting her old graphic design workplace just triggers her mood swings, as she leaps from relieved to finally be talking with other adults outside of her apartment, to craving getting back to work to paranoid to permanently unemployed there thanks to finally crossing a line with a boss (Carrie Coon of “His Three Daughters”) who at least starts the conversation with sympathy because she’s “been there.”
But Mom remembers this one relative. Well, she USED to be a relative. Miriam also lives in Chicago. She used to be married to your Uncle Leonard, but that was years ago. You won’t remember. Go see her!
Miriam is quite old, but still a working actress, she insists. She has a big, rambling apartment and little to no interest in “family,” “babies” or even Joanna.
“But you can come here,” they eventually decide. Just yank out an unused dog bed — “It’s for babies!” — and sit together, keep the “chit chat” to a minimum and maybe run lines with the self-absorbed older woman.
Fiffer uses this dynamic — of course Miriam has her own secrets and “issues” — to guide Joanna to insights about her own adulthood and her child, whom she jokingly refers to as “this parasite.”
“She doesn’t love. She just needs.”
Lapkus does a mercurial turn here, serving up a young mom who is manic and panicked, exhausted and depressed, and who still remembers what it feels like to be funny and even witty “in my real life.”
Every generation experiences this trial of child-bearing anew, but Fiffer and Lapkus (“Orange is the New Black,” “Crashing” and “The Big Bang Theory”) show us the phone-search-what-that-white-spot-on-my-nipple-is parents, lost and struggling with the art of “adulting.” Joanna is still prattling on about her ambitions and her “dream” when Lucien, cradling their child, is here to remind her that “This IS the dream,” at least to some people, those who don’t prefer dogs or cats and travel and a career.
None of it could be called “deep.” But there are grins and laughs of recognition in all these sweet, unassuming “It’s your turn to think you’re reinventing parenthood” insights.
And yes, hospitals still give out lots of helpful pamphlets and website addresses, all of which have but one message to every new mom and dad.
“Don’t shake the baby!”
Rating: unrated, profanity, scatological humor
Cast: Lauren Lapkus, Jean Elie, Marilyn Dodds Franks, Tim Kazurinsky and Carrie Coon.
Credits: Scripted and directed by Nora Fiffer. A Gravitas Ventures release.
Running time: 1:30




Edie Falco has her best role since “Nurse Jackie” in “I’ll Be Right There,” a dramedy about an over-extended mom still dropping everything for everybody’s else’s needs well past the point she should.
Screenwriter Jim Beggarly (“Free Samples,” “A Country Called Home”) must have tailor-made this part for Falco, one that honors her screen baggage as the mistress of unconventional mothers.
Wanda is another Nurse Jackie, a juggler everybody feels the need to lean on, but who barely has the energy and personal space to keep herself upright. All her amusing-but-needy mother (Jeannie Berlin), “addiction issues” son (Charlie Tahan) or very pregnant daughter (Kayli Carter) have to do is pick up the phone and “I’ll Be Right There.”
She’s a helicopter parent in a ’90s Buick station wagon, bopping through daily freelance-bookkeeping jobs but only after taking her mother to the doctor for a Big Diagnosis, sitting in with her drug-addict son as his therapist cans him for lying and trying to help her daughter get this rush wedding planned, performed and paid for, pretty much on her own.
She’s got an ex-husband (Bradley Whitford) with new kids, a ’60s Pontiac convertible he won’t part with and no great desire to help pay for Sarah’s nuptials, and a pub owner/bookkeeping customer beau (Michael Rapaport) who adores her but whom she’s cheating on with a college professor.
That teacher, BTW, is a vivacious younger woman (Sepideh Moafi of “The L Word: Generation Q”), who’s always dropping by for a quickie.
“I have everything under control,” she insists in her most brittle Nurse Jackie voice. But long before she says “What about what I want?” we’re wondering that very thing.
The kids? “They’re at a very vulnerable time in their lives,” now. And is all that hovering helping? “Your son’s a (lying) crackhead and your daughter’s an unwed mother.”
Her mother’s got her “poker gals” and a gambling problem. And that Big Diagnosis has to be “the Big Casino.”
“I’ve had a good run, haven’t I,” Mom jokes.
The beau? He wants to help pay for her daughter’s wedding. And the side piece? She never invites Wanda to HER place, never introduces her to her friends and colleagues.
Something’s got to give, so it does.
The bland predictability of this barely-amusing-enough rural New York (Pearl River) tale takes a back seat to some winning performances, with Falco setting the tone as another overbooked stoic mother, lover, counselor and secrets-keeper.
And she’s the reason this cast, with some roles little more than cameos, showed up for work.
Director Brendan Walsh — he directed eight episodes of “Nurse Jackie” — knows the drill as Boss Falco puts another put-upon mom through her paces, one “crisis” at a time, one more ball juggled into the air, one more cell call that she answers with “I’ll Be Right There.”
Rating: unrated, adult subject matter, profanity
Cast: Edie Falco, Jeannie Berlin, Charlie Tahan, Kayli Carter, Bradley Whitford, Sepideh Moafi, Michael Rapaport and Michael Beach
Credits: Directed by Brendan Walsh, scripted by Jim Beggarly. A Brainstorm Media release.
Running time: 1:38
A sexy thriller of the “I tell you what to do and you do it” persuasion. An older woman fighting back time with botox, etc., a younger man who gets her attention and then REALLY gets in her head, etc.
Harris Dickinson plays the dangerous tempation represented by a barely legal — generations apart — younger man.
And Nicole’s CEO is cheating Antonio Banderas.
This Christmas, A24 invites you to get your kink on with this thriller from actress turned writer-director (“Bodies Bodies Bodies”) Halina Reijn.
James C. Clayton also stars in this B Movie action pic about robbing from the wrong guys.
The shoe and the movie drop Nov. 15.



“Rez Ball” is a feel-good sports dramedy tailor-made for teens and tweens.
It may be groaningly predictable in its adherence to formula, as most any adult sports film/basketball drama viewer knows what’s coming and when, and can even be bark out lines of dialogue before characters state the too-obvious. The ending is anti-climactic, and an excuse to pad on anti-climaxes after the anti-climax.
But this Sydney Freeland (“Drunktown’s Finest”) feature, based on a Michael Powell novel, is a sports drama that at least touches on some of the most widely known problems of Indian reservations — grinding poverty, pervasive alcoholism and a suicide-rate outstripping the rest of the population.
Its likeable, relateable characters may be sketched-in and never really understood at their own level. But decent performances parked in a striking setting — a Navajo Reservation in rural New Mexico — make it a genial, entertaining Native American run through the “Hoosiers,” “Coach Carter” and “Glory Road” playbook.
Two Chuska High School pals have big plans for their senior season on the Warriors basketball team. Nataanii (Kusem Goodwin) is the bigger star, but high-scoring Jimmy (Kauchani Bratt) isn’t exactly in his shadow.
They go together “like diabetes and frybread,” and are so good they can showboat through the ending of their season opener, irking their ex-WNBA star coach (Jessica Matten).
But the uncomfortable post-game interviews, radio coverage and a simple roadside memorial hint at what weighs on Nataanii’s mind. He lost his mother and sister in an off-season drunk driving accident. Jimmy’s back-home issues begin and end with his unemployed alcoholic mother (Julia Jones), who expects him to be a bread-winner as well as a possible college basketball recruit.
Their teammates may be a happy-go-lucky collection of “types” — one’s named Warlance, Bryson already has a “baby mama” — barely more than sketched-in as characters. But there’s enough in this lineup to challenge for a state title.
Then the worst happens, and Nataanii won’t be there for them to lean on. As the team struggles on the court (“grief” is a bit shortchanged), tempers flare and there’s nothing for it but to go beyond their normal “Rez Ball” style — “Run fast, shoot fast, don’t ever stop.”
They’ll need “The Old Ways,” a sagebrush smudging from their “new” assistant coach, Benny (Ernest Tsosie III), who ran the girls’ team when Coach Heather was a player there. They might benefit from a little teamwork training on a tiny sheep ranch out on the rez.
And they’ll need screenwriting magic to survive a string of cliffhangers and an avalanche of second chances.
The movie gets the job done, but I have to say does it rather clumsily. A big deal is made out of that “Hoosiers” assistant coach addition, but little is done with the character. Alcoholism is addressed, with nothing said about the teen drinking that goes on.
The picture’s early scenes hint at some splashy play, and racist on-court trash talk from their bitter white Catholic school rivals in Sante Fe — “You look like the guy that mows my yard. You guys related?” The trash talk turns funny when the depleted and downhearted boys’ team gets schooled and taunted by their own girls’ team in a scrimmage.
“Ever heard of DEODORANT?”
But the energy flags as the movie devotes most of its screen time to games. The novelties of this milieu — hearing “The Star Spangled Banner” in Navajo, players who don’t know their native language learning it so that they can “code talk” plays on the court — aren’t enough to overcome the script’s many trite shortcomings.
Yes, there are (occasionally) funny play-by-play/color announcers (Dallas Goldtooth and Cody Lightning) who cover the games and joke about “cultural appropriation” and “frybread.”
The cast is uneven, but game, with young Bratt (nephew of Benjamin Bratt) standing out, and Jones and Goodwind and Devin Sampson-Craig, as the hotheaded baby daddy point guard, make impressions.
But aside from a couple of genuinely touching moments, “Rez Ball” is dramatically flat. Heartache and heartbreak are suggested but never plumbed or embraced.
The whole ends up being is somewhat less than the sum of its players, characters and the unusual setting, a “Hoosiers” that fails to find the necessary heart to come off.
Rating: PG-13, suicide, fisticuffs, alcoholism, teen drinking, profanity
Cast: Kauchani Bratt, Jessica Matten, Devin Sampson-Craig, Julia Jones, Ernest Tsosie III and Kusem Goodwind.
Credits: Directed by Sydney Freeland, scripted by Sydney Freeland and Sterlin Harjo, based on a novel by Michael Powell. A Netflix release.
Running time: 1:51
Hoult’s on the jury of a trial of a drunk driving case he knows is bogus.
Nov. 1.




As his entire public life was a performance — grandiose, extravagant and self-important to the point of silly — it’s no wonder actors have a lot of fun portraying the flamboyant surrealist Salvador Dalí.
Sir Ben Kingsley chewed the canvas if not the scenery itself of “Daliland,” with Ezra Miller taking on nearly-as-narcissistic younger version of the painter. Adrien Brody underplayed him and pretty much stole “Midnight in Paris” as just a bit player. Robert Pattinson had a go at a gay-and-conflicted (and not nearly as much fun) Dalí in “Little Ashes,” and “Trainspotting’s” Ewen Bremner had a funny go at him in a British TV movie.
Imagine what the surrealist filmmaker we first met when he showed us a sentient, murderous runaway tire (“Rubber”), and went on to dazzle and puzzle viewers with “Mandibles,” “Smoking Causes Coughing” and “Incredible But True” could do with Dalí.
French filmmaker Quentin Dupieux serves up six Dalís for his brisk, bracing burlesque “Daaaaaalí!” That’s one Dalí for every “a” in the title, which is taken from the way the various players perform the way the affected, over-the-top and hilariously narcissistic Catalan said his name, always speaking of himself in the third person.
As in “Do you really think Daaaaaalí needs people other than himself to imagine in his stead?” And “Daaaaaalí no longer wishes the make the film! Period! NEXT paragraph!”
His driver brings him to an interview, and doesn’t want to take the Rolls Royce onto the beach because “A Rolls (Royce) is not made for sand?”
“John Lennon has one JUST like it! Drive on! Daaaaaalí has decided!”
You can’t always tell which actor — Edouard Baer,
Gilles Lellouche, Pio Marmaï, Jonathan Cohen, with Boris Gillot, and Didier Flamand as the most aged version of the painter – is playing Dalí, as they all sport the overlong and wildly-waxed mustache, the flowing hair and comically mad, penetrating eyes. They’re all fun and having serious fun with the character and the material.
The clever conceit here is a sort of “Waiting for Godot” riff on “My Dinner with Daaaaaalí.” A pharmacist turned journalist (Anaïs Demoustier of “Smoking Causes Coughing”) has landed an interview with greatest living artist. (I’m assuming the setting is the mid-70s, just after Picasso’s death).
She awaits him in a hotel room, and then he makes his entrance. She is summoned to the hotel hallway to watch as the caped crusader of melting clocks sweeps down a corridor of almost surreal length, prattling on about how “ill-conceived” this building is, his signature posh cane in hand, double-breasted suit under all that hair, that mustache and that cape.
“Where are your cameras, your microphone,” he wants to know (in French with English subtitles)? She has none. She has pitched this “portrait” to a magazine. No, this will never do. “How can you interview Dalí without a camera?” How can anyone hope to capture the performance that is Dalí with just “your little notepad.” He is “not the least bit interested.”
He grandly and gallantly kisses her hand and storms out.
Thus begins poor Judith Rochant’s immersion in the surreal, as she re-pitches the story as a documentary to a film boorish film producer (Romain Duris, hilarious) and struggles, time and again, to set up and conduct an interview with a larger-than-life figure who “hasn’t a minute to spare.”
Judith has hallucinations about these encounters, but as she struggles to get him on camera and on mike and to keep the old master from making the interview about her, the film becomes a film within a film within other films.
Dalí takes dinner with the family of the groundskeeper of his seaside villa in the South of France. A priest (Éric Naggar) has coerced their host to set up this simple meal of “ragu” — which Dalí envisions is made of worms — so that he can relate a dream to the artist and his wife Gala (Catherine Schaub-Abkarian).
As the movie progresses, the interview keeps going wrong and the priest’s “dream” comes to encompass the narrative, taking the story further into the surreal.
One can assume that every time the artist is shocked at seeing the aged version of himself (Flamand) that we are seeing the elderly Dalí as he saw himself, as younger and vibrant and creative and dashing, even into his dotage.
There’s madness afoot, and Demoustier ably captures how overmatched a mere interviewer would always be with Dalí. And the various actors playing Dalí indulge in grand vamping of the genius in a script that only occasionally hints at his sense of his own mortality.
Dupieux has fun with Dalí’s working methods, suggesting he was using artist models who look as bizarre as he imagines them. The surreal filmmaker has the surrealist painter take a call with an “I cannot speak now! It’s raining dead dogs!” And so it is. Who could talk on the phone over such a “diabolical din?”
This short, clever-but-truncated dip into Dalí reminds us that there have been decades of talk about making a proper film biography of this charismatic, colorful and influencial rock star of 20th century art. Al Pacino was to play him at one time.
But one does wonder, after all the documentaries with Dalí as Dalí, after Oscar-winners Kingsley and Brody had their shots, and now a genuine surrealist and half a dozen actors have given us a humorous glimpse of how he saw the world, and how he hilariously carried himself in it, what would be the point?
Rating: unrated, profanity
Cast: Anaïs Demoustier, Edouard Baer,Gilles Lellouche, Pio Marmaï, Jonathan Cohen, Didier Flamand, Boris Gillot, Catherine Schaub-Abkarian, Éric Naggar and Romain Duris
Credits: Scripted and directed by Quentin Dupieux. A Music Box release.
Running time: 1:17
Horror for the holidays (a Dec. 25 release) comes in the form of a new Robert Eggers (“The Witch,” “The Lighthouse,” “The Northman”) version of the classic vampire tale “Nosferatu,” starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Emma Corrin, Lily Rose-Depp and Bill Skarsgård, with Nicholas Hoult, Simon McBurney, Ralph Inesen and Willem Dafoe.
Sure, it’s the 1300th vampire movie to come down the pike. But hey, Robert Eggers!