One of the Great Ones, Terence Stamp — 1938-2025

Dashing, urbane, underestated and soulful, British character actor Terence Stamp might have had a run as a matinee idol. That wasn’t the hand the movies dealt him.

So he crafted one of the most colorful careers of any of his peers, that post-Burton — O’Toole, Reed and Caine generation of British actors.

Yes, he was menacing as General Zod in the ’70s-80s “Superman” franchise. But check Stamp out as a British father hunting for answers about his daughter in Los Angeles as “The Limey.” Watch him upend the dynamic of a hostage awaiting his doom as “The Hit.”

Bathe in the glories of his dignified camp “Not f—–g ABBA” turn in “Priscilla: Queen of the Desert.”

Remember his place in “Swinging London” in “The Collector,” “Modesty Blaise” and his other ’60s roles in “Far from the Madding Crowd” and “Poor Cow.”

Stamp passed away in the UK today. He was 87.

He dated Julie Christie, turned down “Alfie,” never got but so close to James Bond, but the career he carved out and left behind is distinguished, iconoclastic and fun.

Stamp’s “comeback” years, kicked off by “The Limey,” kept my attention and when “Valkyrie” came out back in 2008, I jumped at the chance to interview him. He came off charming, thoughtful and exacting — an actor who knew characters and how to make them work within his own understated but outsized persona.

He helped make the under-rated “Last Night in Soho” a dazzling experience, play-acting in an era (The ’60s) he helped define. It the last film he made,our last chance seeing him in — just four years ago.

I have my orders this evening. So do you. Let’s find “The Limey” on Tubi or Amazon Prime or Plex and revisit one of the great one’s finest hours.

RIP.

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Movie Preview: Scoot McNairy’s the Gay Dad explaining himself to his Daughter — “Fairyland”

Andrew Durham’s film — based on a memoir by Alysia Abbott (played by Emilia Jones), also stars Maria Bakalova, Adam Lambert, Eddie Murphy’s daughter Bella and Geena Davis also star in this American Zoetrope (Sofia Coppola, producing for her dad’s company) release.

This picture, like “Americana,” was slow to get distribution (premiered in 2023), and like “Americana” Lionsgate has it and we’re likely to see it in a theater near us.

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Movie Review: “Groundhog Day” goes Gallic, “Palm Springs” swings Moroccan — “An Endless Wedding”

The French take on “Palm Springs” is something of a departure from the Hulu original film starring Andy Samberg, Cristin Miliotti and J.K. Simmons.

Director and co-writer Patrick Cassir’s “An Endless Marriage” is just as funny, but more brisk and with a panache that the cute but often crude Max Barbakow film never managed, right down to its title in French — “Un mariage sans fin,” A Wedding/Marriage Without End.”

This destination wedding is at a Morrocan resort. And the outsider swaggering through it, all tropical shirt, jaded grin and je nais se quois is Paul, played by Tarek Boudali of the French “Babysitting” comedies.

He knows the wait staff by name, even if that always prompts a “Do I know you?” (in French with English subtitles) from them. He’s over his tone-deaf fiance, Justine (Claire Chust). We can see it in his eyes, in the cringe he barely suppresses as she stumbles through a song she’s performing for her best friend, the bridge, Gala.

He’s heard that mess before.

Gala (Marie Papillon)? She’s a bit bowled over by this runaway wedding — French, with Morrocan dancing, decor and ululating. The groom (Bertrand Usclat) moved here and has gone whole hog in the cultural appropriation department.

It’s all too much for Paul. He hates weddings, with their “idiotic table plans” and “chocolate fountains,” he mutters in voice-over narration. But he knows the drill. Even if the father of the bride is always wondering “Who IS that guy?” And the mother mutters “Why isn’t he DRESSED?”

When the dancing starts, he navigates the dance floor like he knows this Pac-Man maze by heart, grabbing that next drink that he’s certain will show up in just that hand at just this moment.

And when the maid of honor, the bride’s big sister Louna (Camille Rowe) stumbles through a toast she hasn’t prepared, he gallantly steps up to the mike and to the rescue.

He may hate weddings, but “Who are you?” Paul is the grease hat makes this wheel turn.

And when it turns out Louna hates weddings too, she and her toast-rescuer might just connect. Especially when she learns he’s engaged.

“I drink like a fish” and “I only sleep with unavailable men.”

But an attack by a crossbow-wielding avenger (Youssef Hadji) interrupts that. A dash to a cave emitting a supernatural light further confuses her. And when he is snatched away, not to worry. “We’ll meet again…and again…”

Louna awakens to the same man-in-her-shower shame that she did on this long wedding day. And tracking down Paul, who’s also up with the first discordant notes of Justine’s attempted “song,” just confirms what she fears.

“We’re in a time loop…a vortex.” Don’t bother with the RFK idiotic “science” of the situation. Don’t fight it. You can’t run away from it. Don’t kill yourself. This is your lot, to relive this “Endless Wedding,” day after day into eternity.

The louche Paul has endured this day “thousands of times” already. He reads the same newspaper every morning, reassured that “nothing’s changed.” He visits a cafe in town where he knows the regulars by name (they have no idea who he is) and he plays the lottery, and wins, because he knows the right numbers.

Can Louna give herself over to this? Can Hakim, the vengeful crossbowman, be placated or reasoned with?

Will anyone learn to “Live in the present, nothing else matters,” as Paul claims he has?

Now that Amazon has joined Netflix in that “Let’s remake our intellectual property (scripts) for all the many cultures that we serve” ethos, streaming consumers who don’t mind subtitles are going to run into the same plot more than once.

You can either “I’ve seen ‘Palm Springs'” and move on, or you drop in and see how another filmmaker might tailor the tale for another part of the world, vive la difference and all that. I found the Franco-Moroccan touches amusing and charming, the laughs less crass.

The “oh no they didn’t” turns in the tale, the “history” of our “hero” and the like are more amusing than explosively funny. I remember the oft-stolen-from classic “Groundhog Day” a lot better and more fondly than the much more recent “Palm Springs.” But thescattered big laughs in the latter film are genuine spit-takes. There’s little here in Morocco that manages that.

However, this remake just breezes by, a comedy more in touch with its tone, more whimsy than wham-bam-thanky-ma’am and the like. It’s less carnal and more romantic.

Boudali never lets us see him straining for laughs, and Rowe, Chust and Papillon have their moments.

And while neither film is on a plane with “Groundhog Day,” they’re certainly on a par with each other. Vive le difference and all that.

Rating: 16+, suicide, sexual situations, profanity

Cast: Tarek Boudali, Camille Rowe, Claire Chust, Youssef Hadji, Bertrand Usclat and Marie Papillon.

Credits: Directed by Patrick Cassir, scripted by Jim Birmant and Patrick Cassir, based on the “Palm Springs” script by Max Barbakow and Andy Siara. An MGM release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:21

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Movie Preview: Chalamet, Paltrow, Drescher and Ping Pong? “Marty Supreme”

This Christmas release by A24 had me straining to see if Pete Davidson and/or Adam Sandler were lower in the credits.

Because any movie, directed by Josh Safdie, built around Timothee Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow and Fran Drescher has GOT to have more “widely hated actors” than just those three.

Maybe “resented” is the better word. Listening to people hiss Paltrow’s appearances in the “Iron Man” movies, and getting a whiff of the entitled/insufferable blowback Chalamet inspires points to that.

And Drescher remade herself as a SAG president with some nerve, after all.

Not a big Safdie/Bronstein (“Uncut Gems” ) fan, to be honest.

But if ping pong makes a comeback, you’ll know where that came from.

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BOX OFFICE: “Weapons” brandishes another $22, “Nobody 2” scares nobody after another big “Freakier Friday”

“Nobody 2” is a classic “more of the same” sequel to an unlikely action hit starring unlikely action hero Bob Odenkirk. Others were more generous reviewing this second helping of a 2021 (right after Covid) hit than I was.

The first film, again re-opening cinemas after a global pandemic, managed just under $6.8 million on its opening weekend and enjoyed a healthy post-cineplex afterlife.

So you’d think even a complete stinker sequel would have Odenkirk’d its way past a $10 or even $15 million opening. No dice. Even with Sharon Stone as a “dragon lady” and Colin Hanks as a crooked sheriff. After a middling $1.3 million Thursday night preview take (I saw it with maybe three other people in the theater) and a not-quite almost-embarassing $3-4 million Friday worked out to  a $9.25 million opening weekend, per The Numbers.

That means the second weekends of “Weapons” and “Freakier Friday” rule the roost, with the smart, chilling and allegorical horror tale collecting another $25 million+ (clearing $80 million by Sat. afternoon) and the Jamie Lee Curtis/Lindsay Lohan sequel adding another $14.5 million, crossing the $50 million mark by Saturday night.

So, Julia Garner and Josh Brolin and Benedict Wong have themselves a blockbuster. Lindsay Lohan gets her career back. But Jamie Lee Curtis is money in the bank.

Lionsgate opened “Americana” in a “moderate” to limited release — probably less than a thousand screens. So no numbers are available on the Sydney Sweeney/Halsey thriller yet. It may be in enough theaters to crack the top ten, but as I watched it in an empty theater Thursday night, let’s call that a long shot.

With “Nobody 2” opening in third, that pushes Marvel’s “Fantastic Four: First Steps” into fourth place, as it is slated to earn another $8.8 million, closing in on $250 million in North America.

“The Bad Guys 2” is chipping away, coming in fifth with a $7.5 million weekend, probably destined to reach the $70-75 million mark by summer’s end.

“Nobody 2” pushes the fast-fading “The Naked Gun” ($4.8) reboot out of the top five as the longer-running “Superman” ($5.825) also passes it.

And the falling dominoes means the smart body horror thriller “Together” ($1.1) is about to exit the top ten, with “F1” ($2.66) ready to take the checkered flag (“chequered”) with something around $186 million, all in. That’s just behind “Jurassic World: Rebirth,” still in the top ten ($2.9), is destined to wind down the summer with $340 million in the bank.

The Indian action film “Coolie” will crack the top ten, rounding up less than ($2.45) million from the diaspora, Rajinikanth fans and Subcontinent Action aficionados, according to Box Office Mojo.

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Netflixable? Vanessa Kirby goes Desperate and Dressed Down for “Night Always Comes”

When it works, there’s a heedless, reckless energy to the desperation Vanessa Kirby brings to “Night Always Comes.”

As a sex worker whose unhappy home life led to a string of impulsive, life-threatening decisions, Lynette is racing against a deadline to raise the down payment for a house that won’t so much lift her prospects for the vanishing “American Dream” as allow her to cling to what little she has.

And when Lynette lurches into crimes, ill-considered “deals” and rash, in-the-moment miscalculations, director Benjamin Caron (“Sharper,” TV’s “The Crown”) finally achieves the pace this day-and-night ticking clock melodrama demands.

But the rest of the time, this dressed-down version of the “Mission: Impossible,” “Pieces of a Woman” and “The Crown” star is a case study in why “melodrama” is not something you want out of a film.

Contrived situations abound as Lynette reels from her mother’s (Jennifer Jason Leigh) spiteful decision to impulsively buy a car with the down payment money Lynette now needs to raise.

Lynette stumbles into a series of “stock” characters . A married “regular” (Randall Park), an old friend “in the life” (Julia Fox), a pawn broker who once “used” her (Michael Kelly), an ex-con co-worker (Stephan James) at one of her two jobs to an ex-con safecracker (Sean Martini) down to a sleazeball drug buyer (Eli Roth) all must be met, charmed or cheated in her mad pursuit of $25,000 in roughly 18 hours time.

Every encounter could get her closer to the cash or deeper in trouble. And lying, angling, finagling Lynette can’t help but insult or otherwise cross every single person she needs to do her bidding or supply the down payment.

Her mania to “save” her older special-needs brother (Zack Gottsagen) from “the system” (supervised care) is meant to explain everything. But this journey through one hellish night in Portland, Oregon is just one set-piece encounter/negotiation/confrontation after another, each one feeling more “scripted” than organic.

James, as Cody the guy she’s heard is an “ex-con,” is the most fully-rounded character among Lynette’s parade of “The Used.” But their repetitive, mistrustful and interogatory conversations between action beats stop the picture dead.

In Sarah Conradt’s script based on a Willy Vlautin novel, Cody went to jail for robbery.

“That’s not the whole story.” “”What’s the whole story?”

“I was set up.” “You were set up?”

“Yeah, that’s the WHOLE story.”

Kirby’s down-and-dirty look here doesn’t wholly obscure the famous eyebrows and cheekbones, and the picture rarely comes close to wallowing in what “the bottom” looks like, and that goes for her performance, too.

Lynette’s late-for-meetings/work excuses fibs and bigger lies, thefts and confrontational moments with those she “blames” for her plight occasionally feel lived-in or credible. She strikes one as somebody who has leaned on her looks for a lot in life, even a life this downmarket.

That’s why for all these shortcomings in the name of scripted expedience, this picture had possibilities. Breathless, ticking-clock pacing would have stripped the narrative of the many pauses where we’re allowed to think “Oh come ON” before the next stock character makes a bow, the next blow lands or next crooked angle presents itself.

Rating: R, violence, drugs, sexual situations and profanity

Cast: Vanessa Kirby, Stephan James, Zack Gottsagen, Randall Park, Julia Fox, Sean Martini, Eli Roth and Jennifer Jason Leigh.

Credits: Directed by Benjamin Caron, scripted by Sarah Conradt, based on a novel by Willy Vlautin. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:52

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Movie Preview: Tim Blake Nelson does his Fight Picture — “Bang Bang”

Andrew Liner, Daniella Pineada, Nina Arianda, Glenn Plummer and Kevin Corrigan star in this “I wantcha to hit yer GRANDPA” and “It’s swimmin’ around in your DNA” boxing film.

Vertigo Releasing has it, so very limited theatrical window starting Sept. 12, followed by VOD, etc.

Love that Tim Blake. Looks good.

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Movie Review: Everyman Odenkirk faces Sharon Stone — “Nobody 2”

Sixtysomething Bob Odenkirk returns as a middle-aged-man wish fulfillment fantasy antihero in “Nobody 2,” a sequel to the violent action comedy about a family man/good provider who happens to be a professional fury in a fight.

More people underestimate snowflake-whiskered, balding and wrinkled Hutch Mansell. And more people pay the price in this picture that peaks early and tumbles towards cutesy and manages to outstay its welcome despite breezing by in 89 minutes.

Workaholic hitman/collector Hutch still has too many jobs to do and too little time for his not-wholly-unsuspecting family (Connie Nielsen, with Paisley Cadorath and Gage Munroe). His “debt” with The Barber (Colin Salmon) won’t pay itself, after all.

But with out-of-his-league wife Becca almost sending that “We need to talk” text over that “other side of you,” his late nights at “the office,” getting more nicks and bruises in his savage fights-to-the-death seems like a test this marriage won’t pass.

“I’m gonna take a break.”

Stumbling into a bumper sticker for Plummerville’s vintage “Tiki Rush” theme park, that’s where he’ll drag the wife and teens to.

“You need to have happy memories to carry you through” life’s other tests, he tells them. So they roadtrip from Ohio to northern Wisconsin, “just like we did when I was a kid.” Grandpa (Christopher Lloyd) checks out of “the home” to come along.

But wouldn’t you know it, the water slide is closed and there’s bullying of hotheaded teen Brady at the arcade. When the bouncers join in the bullying, Hutch needs to get the family out and use his favorite excuse.

“I forgot my phone.”

Let the mayhem of righteous wrath begin.

But that runs him afoul of the corrupt sheriff. In a world where dad-bod Bob Odenkirk is a badass to be reckoned with, Colin Hanks can be a tough, murderous sheriff. Even if John Ortiz is the park operator who “RUNS this town.”

Because the real power is the scariest archetype of all, the murderous dragon lady (Sharon Stone) running a casino and a smuggling network from Canada through Not the Wisconsin Dells.

Hutch finds out who she is. She’s about to find out who Hutch is.

The over-the-top violence is funny in the early scenes. But it turns more and more abrupt, more over-the-top and more sadistic the longer the story unfolds. Indonesian action director Timo Tjahjanto (“Headshot”) gets the tone right much of the time. But the lurching pace suggest cuts that interrupt the flow and the “family” stuff doesn’t land gracefully.

The picture still delivers some of the fun of the original. But the “Nobody National Lampoon’s Vacation” in suburban Winnepeg (Lilac Resort becomes a down-market “South of the Border meets Old Town”) means repetitive brawls on a tour boat ride and “escalation” when Hutch is advised to “de-escalate” and — you know — not slaughter minions and torch smuggling operations and the like.

And that lurch into “cute” was coming the moment you saw this picture’s trailers and knew Christopher Lloyd was returning.

Rating: R, graphic, bloody violence, profanity

Cast: Bob Odenkirk, Connie Nielsen, Colin Hanks, Colin Salmon, John Ortiz, RZA, Christopher Lloyd and Sharon Stone.

Credits: Directed by Timo Tjahjanto, scripted by Derek Kolstad and Aaron Rabin, based on characters created by Kolstad. A Universal release.

Running time: 1:29

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Movie Review: Murder, Double Dealing, a Lakota Ghost Shirt and Sydney Sweeney — “Americana”

There have been worse Tarantino rip-offs than “Americana,” a modern Northern Plains Western with hints of “Reservoir Dogs” and “Pulp Fiction” about it.

And hot starlet of the moment Sydney Sweeney’s not the worst thing in it.

Ok, maybe she is, not quite managing her best shot at playing a stammering shrinking violet waitress with Nashville dreams. But that’s still no reason to bury the film, which is ungainly and sloppily constructed but often watchable.

It’s got greed and big hats and bolo ties and big delusional dreams, cultural appropriation and a patriarchal cult compound and all sorts of armed people willing to kill to get what they want without fearing much in the way of consequences.

So yeah, the title’s on-the-money.

Lower the body count, raise the comic quotient and throw away the out-of-order “Pulp Fiction” story structure and it might have worked.

The writing-directing debut of Tony Tost, who wrote for TV’s “Longmire” and “Damnation,” the picture’s about an “artifact” — a Lakota Sioux “ghost shirt” — and a motley collection of South Dakota strivers who covet it.

There’s the hustler Western museum owner and dealer in “Native artifacts” Roy Lee Dean (Simon Rex of “Red Rocket”) who engages lowlife Fun Dave (Joe Adler) and lower-life Dillon (Eric Dane) to steal it.

A Native American militant group led by the Karl Marx-quoting Ghost Eye (Zahn McLarnon) get wind of that robbery.

And a shy, stammering waitress (Sweeney) enlists a lonesome, “slow” combat-vet pony rancher (Paul Walter Hauser of “Naked Gun”) to spy on the robbery plans with an eye towards grabbing that priceless shirt and selling it to make her dreams come true.

Thug Dillon’s Joan Jett-haired girlfriend (Halsey) has her own plans for the shirt and its payout.

But her delusional little boy (Gavin Maddox Bergman), besotted by old Westerns, has decided he’s Chief Sitting Bull reincarnated. What might he do to protect his mom and return that shirt “to my people?”

As the shirt skates off into the sunset in the trunk of Dillon’s rattle-can bright orange ’72 Monte Carlo, the chase is on, with everybody playing the hand they’re dealt and the angles that present themselves to them.

Speaking from experience, I’d say follow that Monte Carlo until it vapor locks, which it sure as shooting will as soon as the engine gets hot enough. But that’d make for a more boring, less bloody movie.

The lightest hearted scenes have McLarnon’s Ghost Shirt reveal that’s not his birth name while lecturing the “reincarnated” kid that “this isn’t exactly the golden age of ‘cultural appropriation'” and just where his “red-faced minstrel” show claims will get young Calvin if runs into less tolerant Lakota than himself.

Attempts to make fun of Hauser’s loneliness and passion for proposing to any single woman he meets fall flat.

And once the heist is on and the rich blowhard (Toby Huss) who has the shirt and his dinner party are interrupted by a home invasion, the picture turns irretrievably violent and whatever sentimental charm was possible vanishes.

The singer Halsey does a decent job with the most interesting character, a woman who’s spent years in classic rock T-shirts and hair, but whose past is a reminder of the sexist Christo-fascist cults all over the West.

Rex is properly vile, Dane his usual white-haired hardcase and Hauser adds another lumpy loser to his collection.

Sweeney doesn’t have to carry this picture, but carrying her weight isn’t easy with a character who starts out a caricature and then breaks from that so severely that we don’t really know who Penny Jo is, just that her mother’s (Harriet Sansom Harris) a generic and bitter dream killer.

The cold-bloodedness of it all suggests a harder-nosed thriller of the “Hell or High Water” school was what Tost had in mind. But he tries to soften that up with sentiment, and the plot and tone never coalesce around that compromise.

In the years since this picture’s premiere, Sweeney has become a hot property, which is why “Americana,” formerly titled “National Anthem,” is worth releasing.

But even Lionsgate knows what they’ve got here doesn’t quite play, which is why they dumped it onto the Island of Misfit Movies — a release date in mid-to-late August.

Rating: R, bloody violence, profanity

Cast: Sydney Sweeney, Halsey, Paul Walter Hauser, Zahn McLarnon, Simon Rex, Gavin Maddox Bergman and Eric Dane.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Tony Tost. A Lionsgate release.

Running time: 1:47

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Movie Review: Parenthood — “A Little Prayer” that Never Ends

“A Little Prayer” comes to theaters to add a grownup grace note to the end of the summer cinema of 2025.

It’s about parenting, the job that never ends and the parents who never stop second-guessing how they’re managing it. Beautifully cast, summery and bittersweet with moments of dry wit, “Prayer” is a small scale tragedy in light, deft strokes.

David Strathairn stars as Bill, near retirement age and still running the central North Carolina family’s sheet metal/HVAC business he joined after returning from the service, just as his father did. His son David (Will Pullen of TV’s “Dope Thief”) joined the company after his own service overseas. But something’s up with David.

He’s pulling late night hours “at work,” coming home drunk. Bill has started to notice, and to have suspicions.

He spends a lot of time with his daughter-in-law, Tammy (Jane Levy of “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist”), having long conversations with her, wandering the wooded neighborhood with her to figure out which local woman is waking everybody up with early morning hymn singing. He fixed up “the house out back” for her and David, a bungalow that he probably lived in as a newlywed with his wife Anita (Celia Weston) after he returned from Vietnam.

Tammy’s a Kentucky girl who pitches in around the house, defers to her in-law elders and revels in the life this marriage into this world has afforded her. She’s thinking about babies.

Bill’s raising an eyebrow at David’s insistent Wednesday “take the company out” drinking and dancing at the VFW, and the flirting with office manager Narcedalia (Dascha Polanco of “Orange is the New Black”).

But is he the only one who’s noticing? Is Tammy in the dark? How about Anita? She knows all about their other child’s problems. Daughter Patty (a wound-up Anna Camp from the “Pitch Perfect” movies) has just mini-vanned down from Virginia, with her young, acting-out daughter (Billie Roy) in tow — again.

Patty’s issues go WAY back.

“You used to say I was a’UGLY baby!” “Well,” Mamma Anita drawls, “You grew outta it.”

Bill, whom his family addresses as “Captain” when he’s in take-charge mode, struggles to get past “It’s not my business” to a “straighten up” lecture with David. Might David be able to go up and talk to Patty’s problematic husband, Cassius? Nope.

“Nobody knows what happens between two married people.”

Anita seems to know. Or says she does.

How do you know?”

“I pay attention.”

That’s what’s demanded of the viewer of “A Little Prayer.” Clues and courses of action are suggested in a pained look, what’s not said over coffee, a walk or sitting together on a swing.

Screen veterans Strathairn and Weston are masters of understatement, and she lets a little “Steel Magnolia” drawled sarcasm in, when the need arises.

Levy plays Tammy’s cards close to the vest, making us wonder what she thinks, believes, knows or hopes. Pullen’s David is less sketched-in, a combat veteran with “issues” that are accepted wisdom in domestic dramas like this.

All this questioning and interpersonal pondering has a lovely setting. “A Little Prayer” is awash in working class local color, from Winston-Salem’s Krispy Kreme donuts to the verdant treescape and Reynolda House Museum and gardens to the omnipresent Moravian church bells and funeral practices characters comment on — Anita leads tours through historic Old Salem (Weston attended Salem College there).

Whatever its intimate charms, “Prayer” is a refreshing reminder that “regional” indie filmmaking didn’t end with the retirements of Baltimore’s bard, John Waters and the Florida Panhandle’s Victor Nunez (“Ulee’s Gold,” “Ruby in Paradise”). Oklahoma has John Swab, (“Ida Red,””King Ivory”), the arid West has Chinese expat Chloe Zhao (“The Rider,” “Nomadland”) and Piedmont North Carolina has MacLachlan, who scripted “Junebug,” and who wrote and directed “Goodbye to All That” and “Abundant Acreage Available,” and “A Little Prayer,” all set in and around his hometown, Winston-Salem.

Parents have been known to joke about “being on suicide watch” the first 18 or so years of a child’s life. But “A Little Prayer” reminds us that the joke is on them. The worrying never stops, nor does the fretting about who might be to blame when children get lost along the way or never quite grow up in adulthood.

Sometimes, “We can’t do enough.” And sometimes, “A Little Prayer” is all you’ve got left to lean on.

Rating: R, profanity

Cast: David Strathairn, Jane Levy, Dascha Polanco, Anna Camp, Will Pullen and Celia Weston

Credits: Scripted and directed by Angus MacLachlan. A Music Box Films release.

Running time: 1:31

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