Snow day? Cinema day!

Too snowy and muddy to cut down a Christmas tree from the farm. Might as well head to Durham to see “Hamnet,” “Sentimental Value” isn’t getting enough showings to make it convenient. Maybe something else. “Fackham Hall?”

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Movie Review: Injured on a Hike, Pondering what it means “To Die Alone”

Say this for the indie thriller “To Die Alone.” It certainly punches above its weight in setting, scenery and the way cinematographer Shelby Lee Parks filmed it.

Drone shots that traverse a sea of fir trees far into the horizon, with a distant snowy peak (Mount Shasta?), gorgeous waterfalls, lakes and trails. Let’s check Travelocity and Trip Advisor and see if there are any deals in a planning a visit to Shasta-Trinity National Forest in California.

Otherwise, the movie’s not even a wash, a slow, stumbling hike into perils in the wilderness and what the human psyche associates with it.

Writer-director Austin Smagalski goes for a tricky, derivative third act that wouldn’t exactly impress Ambrose Bierce. And the pokey, winded narrative that unfolds towards taht end drains the picture of any urgency or drama it might have generated.

Lisa Jacqueline Starrett plays Irving, a solitary hiker on the Pacific Crest Trail who is wary of the seemingly helpful, friendly and trail-wise stranger Ford (James Tang) who stumbles into her.

He asks to tag along, and seemingly changes directions to do so. He talks a lot, while Irving’s prone to pondering and drifting into flashbacks. But hey, he’s got lots of backpacking toys and knowhow.

It’s “off season,” he tells her. But she’s still wearing shorts and taking dips in the local lakes. When something grabs and seems to bite her as it drags her down, they’ve got themselves a crisis.

Whatever caused the injury, they’re “two days” away from the nearest car. She dropped her phone in a creek. His GPS has quit. And paramedic or not, their chances aren’t great of getting out before she bleeds out or gets hopelessly infected.

The flashbacks introduce us to a violent marriage, a little girl and a car accident. And if the visuals aren’t clear enough (they are, of course), Irving will explain them to Ford and to us.

Ford’s a seemingly determined trail savior, but Irving — whom we’ve seen contemplate jumping off a cliff — seems to want to let him off the hook.

“You just can’t save EVERYone,” she tells him.

“But you have to try,” is his motto.

For a thriller reaching for a hint of mystery, “To Die Alone” just drifts along, with every Irving whim or tantrum interrupting their wilderness escape. The script doesn’t do a good job of preserving Ford’s potential menace. His growing panic arrives all at once, not gradually.

The lack of urgency lowers the stakes, and the “explanations” are less interesting than the mystery they purport to “solve.”

The performances never rise above adequate into compelling territory.

But at least the setting is a dazzler. No wonder nobody involved — characters or crew — was in a hurry to finish and leave.

Rating: 16+, violence, alcohol abuse, profanity

Cast: Lisa Jacqueline Starrett and James Tang.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Austin Smagalski. A One Tree Entertainment release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:26

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Movie Preview: Andrew Garfield, Claire Foy, Rebecca F. and Jennifer S. seek “The Magic Faraway Tree”

“Paddington” peeps bring Enid Blyton’s novel to the big screen in March, with a Python and an Ab Fab and many others propping it up.

Looks…insistently bubbly.

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Movie Review: Taipei’s a Challenge for a young “Left Handed Girl”

The team that made the American underclass gems “Take Out,” “Tangerine” and “The Florida Project” turn their eyes to Tapei for their latest, a story of a child growing up in economic hardship and family dysfunction in the anything-for-sale markets of capitalism-crazy Taiwan.

“Left-Handed Girl” follows a “Florida Project” age pixie named I-Jing, growing up with a broke, almost-defeated single mom (veteran character actress Janet Tsai) and a bitter, high-school drop-out older sister I-Ann (Shih-Yuan Ma) who has to work at betel bean shop in one of the city’s down-market markets to help support them.

We meet this trio on moving day, but there’s little hint of the “fresh start” cliche in this move. They were gone from the neighborhood. Now they’re back, with I-Ann taking five year-old I-Jing (Nina Ye) to school on her motorscooter and mother Shu-Fen hitting up her parents (Xin-Yan Chao and Akio Chen) for money and occasional baby-sitting.

Grandpa is the superstitious one, fussing with his daughter for letting her granddaughter grow up left-handed. The left is “The Devil’s Hand,” he insists. When Shu-Fen isn’t around, he enforces that superstition on the kid.

Grandma is too busy working out the particulars of hr part in a mainland-Chinese illegal immigrants smuggled to North America scheme to care.

The other hustler in the story is Johnny (Teng-Hui Huang), a kitchen-aids and the like huxter who floods the air around his sales stall with his incessant pitches. He’s sweet on Shu-Fen, who is wary of his little kindnesses. She’s trying to get her little ramen shop going amidst a sea of competitors. And she still has an estranged husband, a dead weight who represents nothing but debt even after his terminal stay in a hospital.

I-Ann is all about acting-out — scantily-clothed, putting it all out there in the last year of her rebellious teens, putting out for her boss in that betel-nut fast-food joint.

I-Jing processes all this working poor poverty and dysfunction — she can’t figure out why Mom isn’t telling her she’s visiting Dad — and starts shoplifting. But only with her “evil” left hand.

Shih-Ching Tsou and Sean Baker co-wrote and co-directed the New York Chinese immigrant drama “Take Out,” a minor marvel that announced their presence in the indie cinema of 2004. Baker went on to direct their later collaborations, with Tsou producing them. Baker then wrote and directed and collected Oscars for “Anora.”

Tsou shows the same sure eye for street life as Baker and the same unwillingness to look away from the sordid realities of hard lives that drove “Red Rocket” and “Tangerine,” a predeliction which Baker went on to wallow in with the Oscar-winning “Anora.”

This story, with transactional sex and secrets and death and debt, is straight-up melodrama. Ask anybody in that income class about their struggles and it’ll feel and sound just like this (in Chinese with English subtitles, or dubbed) — ind of soap operatic.

But it is the child’s-eye-view of this life that stands out in “Left-Handed Girl,” and Tsou shows off the casting instincts that made “The Florida Project” the movie she and Baker SHOULD have won Oscars for.

Young Nina Ye is the very picture of innocence — wide-eyed, learning the wrong lessons before she learns the right ones, living her part of a lie until it’s exposed and clinging to a childhood doomed to end in her tweens.

And with this film, Tsou belatedly announces herself as “The Next Sean Baker,” a sure-handed director with an ear, an eye and empathy for the huddled masses whose story she tells.

Rating: R, sex, smoking

Cast: Janet Tsai, Shih-Yuan Ma, Teng-Hui Huang, Akio Chen,
Xin-Yan Chao and Nina Ye

Credits: Directed by Shih-Ching Tsou, scripted by Sean Baker and Shih-Ching Tsou. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:48

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Movie Preview: January is Jason Statham Season — “Shelter”

A retired assassin in hiding on an island.

Naomie Ackie and Bill Nighy would like to find him. Silly dears.

Jan. 30.

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Movie Review: Is “The Linguini Incident” (1991) a “Forgotten Gem” of Bowie and Rosanna Arquette?

Barely released in theaters when it was finished and tossed out on home video in a flash, “The Linguini Incident” took on a cult film afterlife thanks to its cast — David Bowie co-stars with Rosanna Arquette, Buck Henry, Andre Gregory and Marlee Matlin — and its director’s insistence that it was badly recut and “dumped” by its distributor.

Trend-setter, style, pop and rock icon Bowie didn’t make a lot of movies, and here’s one that captures him in all his Thin White Duke Fending Off Middle Age glory, paired-up with Peak Arquette, the coquette of her age thanks to “Desperately Seeking Susan” and “Baby It’s You.”

So Richard Shepard, an award winning TV (“Ugly Betty,” “Girls”) and film (“Dom Hemingway”) director thought it would be worth going back and making a director’s cut of his film along with a 4K restoration that renders the 1991 release shiny and “new.”

Re-issued on Amazon, it’s being hawked as a “forgotten gem” of Bowie’s film career, a caper comedy/rom-com that saw him take a shot at playing a straightforward romantic lead. But is it? A gem, I mean?

No. It’s still a cult film, with virtues that can be magnified by whatever cult embraces it while ignoring the inconvenient truths about jokes that don’t land, a romance that’s a non-starter and the “cute” that it aspires to and sometimes achieves.

It’s very much of its era, a picture wallowing in the ’80s downmarket artsy chic of NYC best remembered in the forgettable “Slaves of New York,” and a caper comedy with “green card” implications, a “Green Card” without the heart.

Arquette plays Lucy, a waitress to the “trendsucking leeches” at the tony Manhattan eatery/bar Dali, run by co-owners and pretentious tyrants Dante and Cecil (Andre Gregory of “My Dinner with Andre” and Buck Henry).

The gay couple may profess a sentimentality about their staff. They hired a deaf woman (Marlee Matlin) who requires an ASL interpreter to fulfill her duties as hostess, for instance. But to a one “every waitress fantasizes

about robbing” the joint, thanks to its pricey popularity and skinflint owners, Lucy narrates.

Lucy’s living the Manhattan in the ’80s dream — waitressing by night, rehearsing by day. But she’s not up for cattle calls or “A Chorus Line.” Lucy dreams of being an heir to Houdini, an escape artist. To that end, she collects every artifact that tarot card reader and shopkeeper Miracle (veteran Swedish actress Viveca Lindfors) offers up that was once owned by “Mrs. Harry Houdini.”

Lucy’s act has her dressing like a ’20s flapper and trying and inevitably failing to pick a lock, escape a sack or slip a noose she’s gotten herself into, theoretically for the entertainment value of others. The first rehearsal we see ends with her almost hanging herself, shackled and helpless, in her apartment.

Perhaps the new bartender, Monte (Bowie), will come to her rescue. He introduced himself quoting The Doors.

“Hello, I love you.”

Bit his “I think I want for you to marry me” isn’t something Lucy falls for, as he’s lied to every waitress in the joint. He was a “test pilot,” performer in the “English rodeo” or “in a coma for eight years,” he’s said. He lies like he breathes. What he really needs is a green card wife, and in a hurry.

As she needs that one last expensive talisman — Mrs. Houdini’s ring — to ensure she’ll do a winning audition for some sort of lesbian burlesque review that three humorless Spaphic sisters are casting, and he needs money to bribe a bride, maybe they should rob Dali and split the proceeds.

Eszter Balint plays Vivian, Lucy’s flaky, avante gard bra designer (“Bayonet Bra!”) who is needed to play “the trigger man” for the holdup. As she’s warm for Monte’s form, she and Lucy will have to make a pact that they’ll keep until the cash is divvied up.

“No one in this room is going to have sex with anyone else in this room. We’ll be platonic. Like our parents!”

There’s cute banter between “Lucy the Ethereal” and “Monte…the emasculated.” There’s time for a wintry walk on the beach at Coney Island to seal the deal.

And when the robbery doesn’t go quite as they planned, at least one and all can take comfort in the fact that the New York newspapers have entirely too much fun writing punny or alliterative headlines about those who take from and traumatize the trendy.

The repartee amongst the leads, and between Gregory and Henry and Matlin and ASL joker Michael Bonnabel, is the fairy dust sprinkled over this somewhat stiff comedy that makes it endurable. Look for future “News Radio” star Maura Tierney and “Drew Carey Show” regular Kathy Kinney in tiny supporting roles.

But there’s a reason Bowie was always best in cameos, faintly kinky dramas or horror. He never had a “romantic lead” vibe, not in rom-com terms anyway.

Iman, the statuesque Somali model/actress he was married to and who pops up in a crowd scene at the restaurant would probably beg to differ.

Arquette effortlessly carries her antic, chatty half of the “couple” off. Bowie doesn’t, as he gets little help from the script and none from the pacing — which is too slack and sluggish when “screwball” was what this picture was meant to be.

There are moments that charm and depictions — “real” struggling artist New York apartments of the era, for instance — that add time capsule appeal to this “cult film.”

But sometimes, you’re better off leaving your cult film to live off its legend, its reputation and your insistence that it was “ruined” by others. Especially when the director’s cut evidence proves otherwise.

Rating: R, profanity, sexual situations

Cast: Rosanna Arquette, David Bowie, Eszter Balint, Buck Henry, Andre Gregory, Marlee Matlin and Viveca Lindfors

Credits: Directed by Rochard Shepard, scripted by Richard Shepard and Tamar Brott. An Academy release recut for re-issue on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:36

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Movie Review: A Dark, Cryptic ’60s Spy Spoof from Belgium, France, Luxembourg and Italy — “Reflection in a Dead Diamond”

The descriptor “spoof” carries certain implications and obligations with it, chief among them “wit.”

French filmmakers Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani have a way with a witty title (“Let the Corpse Tan”). And their early ’60s spy spoof “Reflection in a Dead Diamond” may be spot on in design, cars and villain names (Serpentik!) mimicking the era and its movies.

Its pretentions reach for equal parts “Danger: Diabolik” and “Trans-Europ-Express,” with the merest soupcon of Godard’s “Alphaville.”

But even though the spoof becomes broader as the spy in question becomes the subject of pulp fiction novels and even a movie within a movie, something — anything — funny gets lost in translation.

“Dead Diamond” is a thriller about an aged agent (Fabio Testi) triggered into a flashback about an infamous “case” and worries about the unfinished business and villainess who survived it.

What triggers this “diamond” laced mystery? The sight of a topless sunbather’s diamond-tipped nipple piercing on the beach.

Back in the day, John D. (Yannick Renier) was a spy among spies, cutting a dashing figure through the ’60s, zipping from assignment to assignment in his E-Type Jaguar. He took on the task of protecting a mogul named Strand (Koen De Bouw), an oil tycoon who insists he needs no protection.

With leather body-suited lady ninjas on the loose doing the bidding of Serpentik, Strand could not be more wrong.

Brawls begin as seductions and diamonds rend and tear flesh as John D. looks for clues, his quarry and the film’s plot.

Extreme close-ups and montages decorate the screen as the film skips in time back and forth from John D.’s long ago “case,” and the older John D. weighing whether this Serpentik still constitutes dangers and seeing himself rendered in paperback and big screen exploits.

The menace hiding behind the endless possibilities of the James Bond films of the era is what the movie is about, the sort of “man is going to the moon” optimism that has Strand declare that nuclear energy and spaceflight mean “‘the sky is the limit’ is now obsolete'” (in French with English subtitles).

But human “progress” has its sharp edge. A soprano’s (Céline Camara) minidress of mirrored discs is a weapon in all the slashing and straight-razor slicing and misplaced body parts recovered on the beach.

Maria de Medeiros of “Pulp Fiction” turns up as our villainess in winter, and a cliffside car chase tests an ancient Alfa Romeo and that E-Type and their drivers in what passes for a finale.

The acting is rendered reductivist in the editing, and the choppiness of the narrative leaves a lot open to interpretation as to what these self-conscious filmmakers were on about.

Buying into the trippiness of it all is kind of a must. But it would be a lot easier with a lighter touch, and perhaps a bit of workshopping the impressionistic script into something more than the merest “impressions.”

Rating: unrated, graphic violence, nudity

Cast: Yannick Renier, Maria de Medeiros, Céline Camara, Fabio Testi, Manon Beuchot and Koen De Bouw

Credits: Scripted and directed by Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani. A Shudder release.

Running time: 1:26

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Movie Preview: Scots Lads Con the Early 2000s Hip Hop Scene in James McAvoy’s “California Schemin'”

McAvoy directs and is the biggest name star in this music industry dramedy about boys from Dundee who passed themselves off as hip hop stars Silibil N’ Brains and got a record deal and MTV appearances and tours before the bottom fell out.

James Corden plays a music exec, and Seamus McLean Ross and Samuel Bottomley play the rappers, who can’t catch a break from the London music industry because they’re “too Scottish.”

It’s McAvoy’s directing debut, and with all his years on sets, he’s more than ready to take that shot.

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Movie Preview: Jodie Foster’s An American Therapist in France — “A Private Life”

When our French-speaking American shrink “loses” a patient, she takes it seriously. She starts her own investigation into what she’s sure is a murder.

The great French actors Daniel Auteuil, Mathieu Amalric and Aurore Clément are in the supporting cast, with “Benedetta’s” Virginie Efira and the revolutionary documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman plays our American shrink’s…mentor, we presume?

Jodie? She speaks French among the French in this mystery, which opens in limited release Jan. 16.

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Next screening? Euro-Horror in the Buñuel Mimics Lynch on his Way to Argento Vein — “Reflection in a Dead Diamond”

A genre mashup that played a lot of festivals and comes to Shudder Friday, this one promises to be challenging for the plot-and-performance obsessed, aka “Moi.”

Looks nuts.

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