Netflix’s The Takedown, Hatching, and more new movies you can watch at home this weekend
Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/Netflix
This weekend take downFrench friend police action comedy starring Omar Sy (wolfish) and Laurent Lafite (L), Finally released on Netflix. Not everything streaming services have to offer, like an adaptation of Sarah Dessen’s 2009 romance novel YA. in travel, animated comedy Marmaduke Pete Davidson and the Hindi revenge thriller Thar will debut on Netflix this weekend, starring.
Dear Evan Hansen After being released on VOD last year, it’s finally streaming on HBO Max, and two Finnish horror films are hatching And Twins You can now stream on Hulu and Shudder respectively. In addition to streaming releases, Liam Neeson’s latest action films, black lightAnd historical gangster drama costume You can rent it on VOD with Mark Rylance.
You know what’s new and what’s available, so we’ve got some new movies to watch, both streaming and VOD this weekend.
take down
Where to see: Available to stream on Netflix
Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/Netflix
Omar city (wolfish) and Laurent Lafite (L) Team up again for a Netflix Buddy Cop action comedy. take down. Set after the events of 2012 on the other side of the trackMisfit cops Ousmane Diakité (Sy) and François Monge (Lafitte) reunite to investigate a criminal conspiracy that will sweep across France.
From the review:
As a director, Leterrier knows how to have fun. He showed his talent for intricate set pieces in his film Manic Magic Heist. now you see me and martial arts action movies Liberation, with Lee Yeon-ha, who was raised as a human attack dog, as the executioner. Leterrier spices up his work with vibrant tones of orange, red and blue, providing a palette that’s far more entertaining than the rough grunge aesthetic of modern action movies. Adam Project or 355. (Leterrier recently replaced Justin Lin as director of the series Fast & Furious. fast X.)
hatching
Where to see: Available for streaming on Hulu
Photo: Sundance Institute
Finnish horror film satirizing online culture, hatching Follow Tinja, a 12-year-old girl who has been the subject of her parents’ video blogs all her life. She finds that when Tinja stumbles upon her strange egg and brings it to her house, before the egg quickly grows… well, she hatches into a creature nicknamed “Alli”.
From the review:
But Alli is a seductive being that gives the film a heretical and trembling center. Bergholm told Polygon that he literally searched for the world’s best film animation experts and then contacted him about working on the film. This bold decision paid off. Animatronics director Gustav Hoegen led Lucasfilm’s real life effects team and was directly involved with the film. Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, solo, Last Jedi, villain circleAnd The Force Awakens. Her SFX makeup boss, Conor O’Sullivan, shares blood with half the Oscar-nominated effects duo who gave Heath Ledger a bizarre look as the Joker. dark knight. She and her team make Alli terribly instinctive with a familiar weight and conviction for pragmatic effects rather than CG effects. And Solalinna’s acting with a puppet is captivating and horrendous. Together they move through the film’s weaknesses and lead to a memorable ending.
Dear Evan Hansen
Where to see: Available for streaming on HBO Max
Photo courtesy of Erika Doss/Universal Pictures
An adult musical film by Stephen Chbosky, based on the musical of the same name, which won a Tony and Grammy Award. Dear Evan Hansen Ben Platt stars as a high school student with social anxiety disorder who embarks on a journey of self-discovery after the death of a classmate.
There’s been a lot of talk about this movie since its release last year. Most of it was about Platt’s questionable portrayal of uh, teenagers. Is this a “very good” musical or just bad? From the review:
Platt is technically proficient, but otherwise disastrous performance begins to make more sense as a rewarding act. His tense, breathtaking singing performance is the only way to convey his inner conflict, working against his posture and the wooden inertia of his blocking. Directed by Stephen ChboskyAdvantages of Wallflower) likewise, I try to make it large enough to fill the canvas. Most hilariously, he explains that Evan went viral, pouring smartphone video responses through a black vacuum until merged into an Instagram photo. While Evan finds hints of beauty in the everyday monotony of school, Chbosky’s aesthetic can aptly be described as “the ‘before’ part of a mood-altering drug ad”.
travel with me
Where to see: Available to stream on Netflix
Photo: Emily V. Aragones/Netflix
Based on Sarah Dessen’s 2009 teen romance novel, travel with me It tells the story of Auden (Emma Pasarow), a sheltered young woman who visits her father in Colby Beach, California during the summer before going to college. There, she meets Elly (Belmont Cameli), a mysterious boy with a sleepless personality. As they embark on a nighttime adventure around the city together, Auden is challenged to make her childhood dream come true, and she asks herself the hard question of what she wants out of her life and not her parents.
Marmaduke
Where to see: Available to stream on Netflix
Credit: One Cool Animation/Andrews McMe
Computer Animated Comedy of 2022 Marmaduke It tells the story of an unusually large dog (Pete Davidson) who engages in all sorts of messy pranks, stupidities, and odd pranks. After word-of-mouth and accusations of being unable to train, the world’s best dog trainer sets out to turn Marmaduke into an award-winning puppy. Will the lovable dog succeed in stealing gold, or will it be known forever?
tar
Where to see: Available to stream on Netflix
Image: Netflix
It stars father and son duo Anil Kapoor and the harsh Bardan Kapoor. tar, a Hindi revenge thriller set in the 1980s near the Indo-Pakistan border. The latter plays Siddharth, a handsome antiques dealer on a mysterious mission to avenge the past, and the former plays Sureka Singh, a local police officer investigating a recent murder in the area. When the paths of these two men cross, long-hidden secrets are revealed and justice is called into question.
Twins
Where to see: Available for streaming on Shudder
Image: tremble
The second Finnish horror film on this week’s list (the film is in English) tells the story of a couple who immigrate to Sweden after the death of one of their twins. But their new surroundings aren’t as idyllic as they’d like as they learn the creepy truths that could upset their families.
black light
Where to see: Available for $5.99 on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu
Image: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
latest in a long time long action film series led by Liam Neeson, black light Neeson plays Travis Block, a government “solver” with special abilities that include interrogation (ie, beating people) and infiltrating very safe areas. When Bullock discovers a conspiracy against an American citizen, his daughter and granddaughter are kidnapped, forcing him to cooperate. Instead, he tries to get her back at any cost to kill her FBI Director Gabriel Robinson (Aidan Quinn).
costume
Where to see: Available for $19.00 on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu
Image: Focus function
Crime Drama 2021 costume Star Mark Rylance (Spy’s Legs) British Master Tailor Leonard Burling, who serves clients throughout Chicago but above all a vicious gang family. When two killers knock on a corner store door and take him and his assistant Mabel (Joy Deutsch) hostage in exchange for a favor, Leonard reveals his longstanding threat as he enters into a deadly race of trickery and murder. buried past.
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Netflix’s The Takedown, Hatching, and more new movies you can watch at home this weekend
Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/Netflix
This weekend The Takedown, the French buddy cop action comedy starring Omar Sy (Lupin) and Laurent Lafitte (Elle), finally premieres on Netflix. That’s not all the streaming service has to offer, as the adaptation of Sarah Dessen’s 2009 YA romance book Along for the Ride, animated comedy Marmaduke starring Pete Davidson, and Hindi-language revenge thriller Thar are all debuting on Netflix this weekend.
Dear Evan Hansen is finally streaming on HBO Max after coming out on VOD last year, while two Finnish horror movies in the form of Hatching and The Twin are now available to stream on Hulu and Shudder, respectively. Aside from streaming releases, the latest Liam Neeson action film, Blacklight, and the period gangster drama The Outfit starring Mark Rylance are now available to rent on VOD.
To help you get a handle on what’s new and available, here are the new movies you can watch on streaming and VOD this weekend.
The Takedown
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/Netflix
Omar Sy (Lupin) and Laurent Lafitte (Elle) once again team up for the Netflix buddy cop action comedy The Takedown. Set after the events of 2012’s On the Other Side of the Tracks, misfit cops Ousmane Diakité (Sy) and François Monge ( Lafitte) are reunited to investigate a criminal conspiracy that will take them all across France.
From our review:
As a director, Leterrier knows how to have fun. He’s proven his flair for intricate setpieces in the manic magic heist movie Now You See Me and the martial-arts action movie Unleashed, which has Jet Li as an enforcer raised as a human attack dog. Leterrier blitzes his compositions with dynamic oranges, reds, and blues, giving his action a far more playful palette than the grunge-bleak aesthetics of modern action movies like The Adam Project or The 355. (Leterrier recently replaced Justin Lin as the director of the Fast & Furious franchise installment Fast X.)
Hatching
Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu
Photo: Sundance Institute
A Finnish horror movie that doubles as a satire of online culture, Hatching follows Tinja, a 12-year-old girl who has been the subject of her parents’ video blog for seemingly her entire life. When Tinja comes across a strange egg and brings it home, it quickly grows before … well, hatching into a creature nicknamed “Alli.”
From our review:
But Alli is a mesmerizing presence that gives the film a cultish shivery center. Bergholm tells Polygon that she literally Googled the world’s best specialist in movie animatronics, then reached out to him about working on the film. That bold choice paid off: Her animatronics supervisor, Gustav Hoegen, came directly to this film from running practical creature-effects teams for Lucasfilm, on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Solo, The Last Jedi, Rogue One, and The Force Awakens. Her SFX makeup head, Conor O’Sullivan, comes with a similar pedigree, as half of the Oscar-nominated effects duo who gave Heath Ledger his grotesque leer as the Joker in The Dark Knight. Together, they and their teams make Alli hideously visceral, with the familiar weight and conviction of a practical effect instead of a CG effect. And Solalinna’s performance with the puppet is convincing and distressing. Together, they carry the movie past its weaker points to a memorable ending.
Dear Evan Hansen
Where to watch: Available to stream on HBO Max
Photo: Erika Doss/Universal Pictures
Adapted from the Tony and Grammy Award-winning musical of the same name, Stephen Chbosky’s coming-of-age musical film Dear Evan Hansen stars Ben Platt as a high school senior with social anxiety disorder who embarks on a journey of self-discovery in the wake of the death of a classmate.
There’s been a lot of chatter about the film since it came out last year, most of which directed at Platt’s, uh, questionable portrayal of an adolescent youth. Is this a “so bad it’s good” kind of musical, or just plain bad? From our review:
Platt’s technically accomplished, otherwise disastrous performance starts to make more sense as an act of compensation. His veiny, strangulated delivery while singing is the only way he can convey his inner turmoil, working against the wooden inertia of his posture and blocking. Director Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower) similarly struggles to create a scale sufficient to fill the silver screen. At his corniest, he illustrates that Evan has gone viral by flinging a flurry of smartphone video responses through a black vacuum until they coalesce and form an Instagram photo. As Evan searches for hints of beauty in his school’s everyday drabness — Chbosky’s aesthetic could be fairly described as “the ‘before’ part of a commercial for mood-altering medication” — the film gets stuck in the banality he’s trying to escape.
Along for the Ride
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Photo: Emily V. Aragones/Netflix
Based on Sarah Dessen’s 2009 young adult romance novel, Along for the Ride follows Auden (Emma Pasarow), a sheltered young woman visiting her father in Colby Beach, California, the summer before attending college. There she meets Eli (Belmont Cameli), a mysterious boy who shares her insomniac nature. As they embark on nightly adventures around town together, Auden is challenged to live out her childhood dreams and forced to ask the tough question of what she, not her parents, wants out of her life.
Marmaduke
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Image: One Cool Animation/Andrews McMe
The 2022 computer-animated comedy Marmaduke tells the story of an abnormally large dog (Pete Davidson) who gets up to all kinds of messy mischief, tomfoolery, and comical hijinks. After going viral and being accused of being untrainable, the world’s greatest dog trainer endeavors to turn Marmaduke into a prize-winning pooch. Will the lovable hound manage to snatch the gold, or will he forever be known as a lost cause?
Thar
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Image: Netflix
Father-son duo Anil Kapoor and Harsh Varrdhan Kapoor star in Thar, a Hindi-language revenge thriller set near the India-Pakistan border during the 1980s. The latter plays Siddharth, a handsome antiques dealer on a mysterious mission to avenge his past, while the former plays Surekha Singh, a local cop investigating a recent string of killings in the region. When the paths of these two men intersect with one another, long-buried secrets will be unveiled and justice will be called into question.
The Twin
Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder
Image: Shudder
The second Finnish horror movie on the list this week (this one is in English, however) follows a couple who move to Sweden after the death of one of their twins. Their new setting is not as idyllic as they’d like, though, as they learn some startling truths that threaten to upend their family as they know it.
Blacklight
Where to watch: Available to rent for $5.99 on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu
Image: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
The latest in a long, long series of Liam Neeson-led action flicks, Blacklight stars Neeson as Travis Block, a government “fixer” with a particular set of skills that includes interrogating (i.e., beating people up) and infiltrating highly secured areas. When Block discovers a plot targeting U.S. citizens, his daughter and granddaughter are abducted in order to coerce him into cooperating. Instead, he goes on a one-man killing spree against FBI Director Gabriel Robinson (Aidan Quinn) to get them back at any cost.
The Outfit
Where to watch: Available to rent for $19.00 on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu
Image: Focus Features
The 2021 crime drama The Outfit stars Mark Rylance (Bridge of Spies) as Leonard Burling, a master English tailor who serves clientele from all across Chicago, though most notably a family of vicious gangsters. When two murderers knock on the door of his corner shop and take him and his assistant, Mable (Zoey Deutch), hostage in exchange for a favor, Leonard finds himself thrust into a deadly contest of deception and murder that threatens to shine a light on his own long-buried past.
#Netflixs #Takedown #Hatching #movies #watch #home #weekend
Netflix’s The Takedown, Hatching, and more new movies you can watch at home this weekend
Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/Netflix
This weekend The Takedown, the French buddy cop action comedy starring Omar Sy (Lupin) and Laurent Lafitte (Elle), finally premieres on Netflix. That’s not all the streaming service has to offer, as the adaptation of Sarah Dessen’s 2009 YA romance book Along for the Ride, animated comedy Marmaduke starring Pete Davidson, and Hindi-language revenge thriller Thar are all debuting on Netflix this weekend.
Dear Evan Hansen is finally streaming on HBO Max after coming out on VOD last year, while two Finnish horror movies in the form of Hatching and The Twin are now available to stream on Hulu and Shudder, respectively. Aside from streaming releases, the latest Liam Neeson action film, Blacklight, and the period gangster drama The Outfit starring Mark Rylance are now available to rent on VOD.
To help you get a handle on what’s new and available, here are the new movies you can watch on streaming and VOD this weekend.
The Takedown
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/Netflix
Omar Sy (Lupin) and Laurent Lafitte (Elle) once again team up for the Netflix buddy cop action comedy The Takedown. Set after the events of 2012’s On the Other Side of the Tracks, misfit cops Ousmane Diakité (Sy) and François Monge ( Lafitte) are reunited to investigate a criminal conspiracy that will take them all across France.
From our review:
As a director, Leterrier knows how to have fun. He’s proven his flair for intricate setpieces in the manic magic heist movie Now You See Me and the martial-arts action movie Unleashed, which has Jet Li as an enforcer raised as a human attack dog. Leterrier blitzes his compositions with dynamic oranges, reds, and blues, giving his action a far more playful palette than the grunge-bleak aesthetics of modern action movies like The Adam Project or The 355. (Leterrier recently replaced Justin Lin as the director of the Fast & Furious franchise installment Fast X.)
Hatching
Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu
Photo: Sundance Institute
A Finnish horror movie that doubles as a satire of online culture, Hatching follows Tinja, a 12-year-old girl who has been the subject of her parents’ video blog for seemingly her entire life. When Tinja comes across a strange egg and brings it home, it quickly grows before … well, hatching into a creature nicknamed “Alli.”
From our review:
But Alli is a mesmerizing presence that gives the film a cultish shivery center. Bergholm tells Polygon that she literally Googled the world’s best specialist in movie animatronics, then reached out to him about working on the film. That bold choice paid off: Her animatronics supervisor, Gustav Hoegen, came directly to this film from running practical creature-effects teams for Lucasfilm, on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Solo, The Last Jedi, Rogue One, and The Force Awakens. Her SFX makeup head, Conor O’Sullivan, comes with a similar pedigree, as half of the Oscar-nominated effects duo who gave Heath Ledger his grotesque leer as the Joker in The Dark Knight. Together, they and their teams make Alli hideously visceral, with the familiar weight and conviction of a practical effect instead of a CG effect. And Solalinna’s performance with the puppet is convincing and distressing. Together, they carry the movie past its weaker points to a memorable ending.
Dear Evan Hansen
Where to watch: Available to stream on HBO Max
Photo: Erika Doss/Universal Pictures
Adapted from the Tony and Grammy Award-winning musical of the same name, Stephen Chbosky’s coming-of-age musical film Dear Evan Hansen stars Ben Platt as a high school senior with social anxiety disorder who embarks on a journey of self-discovery in the wake of the death of a classmate.
There’s been a lot of chatter about the film since it came out last year, most of which directed at Platt’s, uh, questionable portrayal of an adolescent youth. Is this a “so bad it’s good” kind of musical, or just plain bad? From our review:
Platt’s technically accomplished, otherwise disastrous performance starts to make more sense as an act of compensation. His veiny, strangulated delivery while singing is the only way he can convey his inner turmoil, working against the wooden inertia of his posture and blocking. Director Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower) similarly struggles to create a scale sufficient to fill the silver screen. At his corniest, he illustrates that Evan has gone viral by flinging a flurry of smartphone video responses through a black vacuum until they coalesce and form an Instagram photo. As Evan searches for hints of beauty in his school’s everyday drabness — Chbosky’s aesthetic could be fairly described as “the ‘before’ part of a commercial for mood-altering medication” — the film gets stuck in the banality he’s trying to escape.
Along for the Ride
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Photo: Emily V. Aragones/Netflix
Based on Sarah Dessen’s 2009 young adult romance novel, Along for the Ride follows Auden (Emma Pasarow), a sheltered young woman visiting her father in Colby Beach, California, the summer before attending college. There she meets Eli (Belmont Cameli), a mysterious boy who shares her insomniac nature. As they embark on nightly adventures around town together, Auden is challenged to live out her childhood dreams and forced to ask the tough question of what she, not her parents, wants out of her life.
Marmaduke
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Image: One Cool Animation/Andrews McMe
The 2022 computer-animated comedy Marmaduke tells the story of an abnormally large dog (Pete Davidson) who gets up to all kinds of messy mischief, tomfoolery, and comical hijinks. After going viral and being accused of being untrainable, the world’s greatest dog trainer endeavors to turn Marmaduke into a prize-winning pooch. Will the lovable hound manage to snatch the gold, or will he forever be known as a lost cause?
Thar
Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix
Image: Netflix
Father-son duo Anil Kapoor and Harsh Varrdhan Kapoor star in Thar, a Hindi-language revenge thriller set near the India-Pakistan border during the 1980s. The latter plays Siddharth, a handsome antiques dealer on a mysterious mission to avenge his past, while the former plays Surekha Singh, a local cop investigating a recent string of killings in the region. When the paths of these two men intersect with one another, long-buried secrets will be unveiled and justice will be called into question.
The Twin
Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder
Image: Shudder
The second Finnish horror movie on the list this week (this one is in English, however) follows a couple who move to Sweden after the death of one of their twins. Their new setting is not as idyllic as they’d like, though, as they learn some startling truths that threaten to upend their family as they know it.
Blacklight
Where to watch: Available to rent for $5.99 on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu
Image: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
The latest in a long, long series of Liam Neeson-led action flicks, Blacklight stars Neeson as Travis Block, a government “fixer” with a particular set of skills that includes interrogating (i.e., beating people up) and infiltrating highly secured areas. When Block discovers a plot targeting U.S. citizens, his daughter and granddaughter are abducted in order to coerce him into cooperating. Instead, he goes on a one-man killing spree against FBI Director Gabriel Robinson (Aidan Quinn) to get them back at any cost.
The Outfit
Where to watch: Available to rent for $19.00 on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu
Image: Focus Features
The 2021 crime drama The Outfit stars Mark Rylance (Bridge of Spies) as Leonard Burling, a master English tailor who serves clientele from all across Chicago, though most notably a family of vicious gangsters. When two murderers knock on the door of his corner shop and take him and his assistant, Mable (Zoey Deutch), hostage in exchange for a favor, Leonard finds himself thrust into a deadly contest of deception and murder that threatens to shine a light on his own long-buried past.
#Netflixs #Takedown #Hatching #movies #watch #home #weekend
Synthetic: Vik News