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15 Films to See in April (what are you watching?)

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This month brings Amazonian exploration, shoot-'em-ups, boundary-pushing documentaries, kaiju battles, and more. Before the summer genuinely kicks off, and with it the Cannes Film Festival, there's also a handful of films from last year's outing. Check out our picks for what to see this month and chime in with what you're most looking forward to.

Matinees to See: Win it All (4/7), Gifted (4/7), Mine (4/7), Their Finest (4/7), The Void (4/7), Aftermath (4/7), Salt and Fire (4/7), The Assignment (4/7), Queen of the Desert (4/7), The Student (4/14), By the Time it Gets Dark (4/14), Little Boxes (4/14), The Fate of the Furious (4/14), The Promise (4/21), Tramps (4/21), One Week and a Day (4/28), Obit (4/26),  Buster's Mal Heart (4/28), and Sleight (4/28)

15. The Circle (James Ponsoldt; April 28)

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Synopsis: A woman lands a dream job at a powerful tech company called the Circle, only to uncover a nefarious agenda that will affect the lives of her friends, family and that of humanity.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: With Smashed, The Spectacular Now, and The End of the TourJames Ponsoldt has crafted a number of commendable dramas in his relatively brief career thus far, and his latest will find him stepping up his scope. Starring Emma Watson, Tom Hanks, John Boyega, Karen Gillan, Ellar Coltrane, Patton Oswalt, and Bill Paxton in one his last roles, we hope The Circle isn't as on-the-nose as its marketing suggests.

14. The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki (Juho Kuosmanen; April 21)

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Synopsis: The true story of Olli Mäki, the famous Finnish boxer who had a shot at the 1962 World Featherweight title.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: After premiering at Cannes, where it won the Un Certain Regard Prize, Juho Kuosmanen's debut feature went on to become Finland's Oscar entry, and it'll now arrive this month. As we said in our review, "The Happiest Day In the Life of Olli Mäki is a boxing biopic that has no interest in the sport of boxing. Juho Kuosmanen’s dryly funny, blissfully sweet, and deceptively absorbing work revels in Olli Mäki’s psychological surroundings as he contends with the strangeness of national promotion, the accruing pressures of competing, and a burgeoning romance that’s feeling more permanent than he expected."

13. Casting JonBenet (Kitty Green; April 28)

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Synopsis: After two decades of media speculation and public fascination, filmmakers explore the macabre legacy of the world's most famous child-murder case.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: In 1996, the six-year-old JonBenét Patricia Ramsey was murdered in Boulder, Colorado, and in the 20-plus years since, the perpetrator has yet to be found. It's a story that has captivated the world; now, a new documentary takes an intriguing angle with exploring the infamous unsolved murder. Looking to take a meta approach in forming a recreation of the surrounding events and those involved, it promises to be a powerful, dark experience.

12. My Entire High School Sinking Into The Sea (Dash Shaw; April 14)

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Synopsis: An earthquake causes a high school to float into the sea, where it slowly sinks like a shipwreck.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: If you've become numb to various boss babies and talking cars that studio animation has to offer, the surrealist debut of Dash Shaw might be more up your alley. Following a group of students (including those voiced by Jason SchwartzmanLena Dunham, and Reggie Watts), we said in our review, "Writer-director Dash Shaw’s hand-drawn picture is fun and slight without overstaying its welcome. It never runs out of energy and is constantly in a state of innovation and surprise, parodying pop-culture references as vast as Deep Blue Sea and Peanuts."

11. Small Crimes (E.L. Katz; April 28)

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Synopsis: A disgraced former cop, fresh off a six-year prison sentence for attempted murder - returns home looking for redemption but winds up trapped in the mess he left behind.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: After producing and distributing his Sundance-winning drama I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore, Netflix is staying in the Macon Blair business. Their next collaboration isn't one he directed, but rather wrote with E.L. Katz, who is making his directorial follow-up from the humorously brutal Cheap Thrills. Starring Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Robert Forster, Gary Cole, Jacki Weaver, Larry Fessenden, Pat Healy, and Blair himself, the SXSW premiere will hit Netflix this month.

10. Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer (Joseph Cedar; April 14)

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Synopsis: Norman Oppenheimer is a small time operator who befriends a young politician at a low point in his life. Three years later, when the politician becomes an influential world leader, Norman's life dramatically changes for better and worse.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Joseph Cedar (Footnote, Beaufort) makes his English-language debut with Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer, and while it seemed to get lost in the shuffle during a fall-festival debut, it'll now arrive this month. Led by Richard Gere, it looks to be a uniquely crafted, witty drama with perhaps shades of A Serious Man. There's also the impressive supporting cast of Charlotte Gainsbourg, Josh Charles, Michael Sheen, Lior Ashkenazi, Dan Stevens, Steve Buscemi and Hank Azaria.

9. Graduation (Cristian Mungiu; April 7)

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Synopsis: A film about compromises and the implications of the parent's role.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Romanian director Cristian Mungiu, who won the Palme d'Or back in 2007 for 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, returned to Cannes last year with Graduation and now it'll finally get a release. As we said in our review, "Neither blackly comic like his debut, Occident, nor as searingly incisive as his Palme d’Or-winning masterpiece 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days, Graduation is a well-acted and efficiently directed but schematic rehash of themes that Mungiu and his fellow new-wavers have expounded time and again over the last decade."

8. Mimosas (Oliver Laxe; Apri 14)

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Synopsis: A dying Sheikh travels across the Moroccan Atlas in a caravan escorted by two rogues.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: One of the highlights of last year's Cannes Film Festival, we said in our review, "A "religious western" is how Moroccan-based Spanish director Oliver Laxe describes his second film, Mimosas. It's a spiritual, ambiguously plotted journey through the Atlas Mountains, and those willing to give in to its mystical embrace and gorgeous visuals should find it a sensual, engrossing watch."

7. Your Name (Makoto Shinkai; April 7)

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Synopsis: Two strangers find themselves linked in a bizarre way. When a connection forms, will distance be the only thing to keep them apart?

Trailer

Why You Should See It: The highest-grossing anime film of all-time is making its U.S. debut this month, and despite the attention its accrued thus far, I've largely avoided learning more about the plot beyond its body-switching conceit. So I'll make this short and say I'm seeking it out, and will be curious if it makes a similar splash here in the states.

6. Free Fire (Ben Wheatley; April 21)

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Synopsis: Set in Boston in 1978, a meeting in a deserted warehouse between two gangs turns into a shootout and a game of survival.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: His ambitious Ballard adaptation High-Rise was perhaps even more divisive than past films, but now Ben Wheatley is getting down and dirty with his follow-up. We said in our review, "The gunfire alone risks perforating your eardrums as John Denver blares from a 1978-era van’s eight-track, but I think it’s the surprising wealth of comedy that ultimately gets the blood pumping and synapses triggering. Wheatley and wife/writer Amy Jump’s latest isn’t for everyone -- fair warning to Hardcore Henry detractors, Sharlto Copley refuses to quit his shtick -- but those willing to break free from a desire for plot complexity will undoubtedly be entertained. This is low-brow Reservoir Dogs, extreme genre action meant to energize you with an insane cast of characters hell-bent on killing each other on principle. Although that briefcase of money is appealing too.

5. Slack Bay (Bruno Dumont; April 28)

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Synopsis: Inspectors Machin and Malfoy investigate after tourists vanish from beaches on the Channel Coast.

Trailer

Why You Should See It:  Following his epic drama Li'l Quinquin -- which he is currently prepping a sequel to -- director Bruno Dumont returned to Cannes last year with Slack Bay, a dark period comedy following an investigation into a series of mysterious disappearances on the beaches of northern France. Led by his Camille Claudel star Juliette BinocheFabrice Luchini, and Valeria Bruni Tedeschiour review from Cannes last year was mixed, but entering the world of Dumont is an experience to cherish.

4. All These Sleepless Nights (Michal Marczak; April 7)

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Synopsis: Two art students roam the streets of Warsaw, exploring a city torn between its past and future.

Trailer

Why You Should See It:  A beautiful journey as we float through the music-filled lives of youth in Warsaw, I said in my review, "Blurring the line between documentary and fiction like few films before it, Michal Marczak's All These Sleepless Nights is a music-filled ode to the ever-shifting bliss and angst of youth set mostly in the wee hours of the day in Warsaw, Poland. Marczak himself, who also plays cinematographer, is wary to delineate the line between narrative and nonfiction, and part of the film's joy is forgoing one's grasp on this altering perspective, rather simply getting wrapped up in the immaculately-shot allure of its location."

3. Colossal (Nacho Vigalondo; April 7)

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Synopsis: A woman discovers that severe catastrophic events are somehow connected to the mental breakdown from which she's suffering.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: An impressive feat of large-scale-meets-small-scale storytelling, with a stellar, unexpected performance from Jason Sudeikis, Colossal is Nacho Vigalondo's best work since Timecrimes. Led by Anne Hathaway, we said of the film, "The climax prevails in its thematic resonance, moral quandary, and righteous hope. The monster may kill nameless hundreds, but its ability to save one could make everything worthwhile. Great power forever brings great responsibility, but we aren't all as pure as Peter Parker."

2. A Quiet Passion (Terence Davies; April 14)

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Synopsis: The story of American poet Emily Dickinson from her early days as a young schoolgirl to her later years as a reclusive, unrecognized artist.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Considering how delicate and carefully articulated his films are, it doesn't seem like we deserve another excellent Terence Davies feature so soon after last summer's Sunset Song. However, A Quiet Passion delivers, as we said in our review, "That sense of empathy and understanding with his subject is rife throughout this quietly cleansing and exquisitely considered film, which shows the writer from her late teens (portrayed by Emma Bell) through to adulthood (Cynthia Nixon) and old age."

1. The Lost City of Z (James Gray; April 14)

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Synopsis: A true-life drama, centering on British explorer Col. Percival Fawcett, who disappeared while searching for a mysterious city in the Amazon in the 1920s.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: We're only a quarter into 2017, but there will surely be no film this year that looks, feels, and moves like The Lost City of Z. As in his previous films, the souls within the characters of James Gray's drama are laid bare as they venture into the treacherous unknown. Speaking on the experience of seeing it in 35mm, we said in our review, "Let it be stated upfront that this is most likely the best (only?) way to experience what Gray and cinematographer Darius Khondji, reuniting from The Immigrant, have achieved: a film that will often truly and totally appear to have been made in decades past and just discovered today."

All Releases

• Alive and Kicking (Magn.) - 4/7
• The Case for Christ (PFR) - 4/7
• Colossal (Neon) - 4/7
• The Eyes (PDF) - 4/7
• Gifted (FoxS) - 4/7
• Going in Style (2017) (WB (NL)) - 4/7
• Graduation (IFC) - 4/7
• A Kind of Loving (2017 re-release) (Rialto) - 4/7
• Mine (WGUSA) - 4/7
• Smurfs: The Lost Village (Sony) - 4/7
• Their Finest (STX) - 4/7
• The Ticket (Shout!) - 4/7
• Truman (FR) - 4/7
• The Void (Scre.) - 4/7
• Your Name. (FUN) - 4/7
• 7 Witches (Indic.) - 4/14
• Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary (Abr.) - 4/14
• The Fate of the Furious (Uni.) - 4/14
• Jeremiah Tower (Orch.) - 4/14
• The Lost City of Z (BST) - 4/14
• Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer (SPC) - 4/14
• A Quiet Passion (MBox) - 4/14
• Spark (ORF) - 4/14
• The Student (UTMW) - 4/14
• Tommy's Honour (RAtt.) - 4/14
• Born in China (BV) - 4/21
• Citizen Jane (IFC) - 4/21
• Free Fire (A24) - 4/21
• The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Maki (MUBI) - 4/21
• Phoenix Forgotten (CLF) - 4/21
• The Promise (2017) (ORF) - 4/21
• Unforgettable (2017) (WB) - 4/21
• Bang! The Bert Berns Story (Abr.) - 4/26
• The Circle (2017) (STX) - 4/28
• Grey Lady (Grey Lady) - 4/28
• How to be a Latin Lover (PNT) - 4/28
• One Week and a Day (Osci.) - 4/28
• Sleight (BH Tilt) - 4/28

What are you watching this month?
 
While I really liked the book The Circle is based on it is a little bit too much on the nose. So I have a feeling the movie will be too.

For some reason I missed that The Lost City of Z was going to be a movie. That trailer looks good.
 

Pachimari

Member
No superheroes movie?
Well, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 is out in Scandinavia on April 27.

So I'm gonna watch that, and Ghost in the Shell which premieres tomorrow.

I'm also gonna see Lost City of Z someday and Your Name but that premieres next month.
 
Fast 8 is the only guarantee. The other movies I want to see like Colossal aren't playing near me.

Edit: forgot about The Circle, I might watch that.
 

KodaRuss

Member
Lost City of Z looks interesting. Not sure if I will see anything this month though (no time anymore it seems with my two year old running around).

EDIT: Maybe Small Crimes. I like watching the Kingslayer I guess but the movie looks cool and its on Netflix!
 

Monocle

Member
For Sure:

The Fate of the Furious - I lost interest in the series after seeing Furious 7 too many times, but I know that various friends and family members will drag me into this one at least twice. I hope I enjoy it much more than the seventh entry of this improbable franchise.

The Lost City of Z - I like adventure stories with elements of mystery and discovery. Hopefully there's a cool payoff.

Your Name - I know next to nothing about this, other than its critical acclaim and record setting success. Excited to go in blind.

Probably:

The Circle - The trailer was intriguing and I like the cast.

Free Fire - Looks fun.

Maybe:

Colossal

A Quiet Passion

Norman

Mimosas

Slack Bay

All These Sleepless Nights
 
Nothing from the new in April list for me in a cinema this month. May is so loaded with stuff that I'll blow a car payment worth of cinema trips.
 
Maybe Free Fire. I might be interested in the Fate of the Furious, but I've yet to see any of the FatF movies.

But I'm so damned booked with traveling this month, that I'll likely see nothing until Guardians 2 weekend.
 

BioHazard

Member
New James Gray and Davies, April is saved. Also, very surprised E.L. Katz's new film is coming out already. Can't wait.
 
Lost City of Z sounds so dope. I thought the immigrant was boring but I loved Grays other films. Reviews make this sound fantastic too

Gonna see that, free fire and fast and furiosa in theaters

A lot of the other interesting stuff in the list I'll check out later on vod
 
The anime film "Your Name" seems really intriguing. I will probably take a look. Fate of the Furious is a guarantee due to it being just pure popcorn fun.
 
Looking forward to:

Your Name. (FUN) - 4/7
The Fate of the Furious (Uni.) - 4/14
The Lost City of Z (BST) - 4/14
The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Maki (MUBI) - 4/21
The Circle (2017) (STX) - 4/28

Will probably miss out on Z, Your Name, and Olli due to my small town and being super busy when Your Name comes out this weekend.

Mimosas might be interesting as well.
 
Lost City of Z looks pretty interesting, I hope it's solid at least.

Didn't know Lost City of Z was being adapted. Maybe I'll finally get around to reading it.

The lost city of Z sounds interesting never heard of it

Lost City of Z sounds so dope. I thought the immigrant was boring but I loved Grays other films. Reviews make this sound fantastic too

Gonna see that, free fire and fast and furiosa in theaters

A lot of the other interesting stuff in the list I'll check out later on vod

Maybe Lost City of Z. Don't think anything else interests me.

It's good. Very old fashioned though, if you enjoy that sort of thing. Supposedly there's a 35mm print of it available.
 
Throwing Fate of the Furious in the matinee section:

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Eh, I think the series reached its peak with Fast Five. The last few have been too overblown to really enjoy after the first hour or so. It becomes more exhausting than thrilling. Hoping I'm wrong!

It's good. Very old fashioned though, if you enjoy that sort of thing. Supposedly there's a 35mm print of it available.

I know Metrograph is doing a 1-time 35mm screening, but it's sold out. Hopefully another theater screens it in that form.
 
Eh, I think the series reached its peak with Fast Five. The last few have been too overblown to really enjoy after the first hour or so. It becomes more exhausting than thrilling. Hoping I'm wrong!



I know Metrograph is doing a 1-time 35mm screening, but it's sold out. Hopefully another theater screens it in that form.

Looks superb as is, just that the 35mm looks amazing so I've heard.

The Lost City Of Z really is almost like a time capsule of a film. It's a film that feels like it was made for an audience with the sensibilities of the 1960s/1970s, just been released in 2017 with a few of the currently big name actors.

I don't mean that as a criticism, cos The Lost City is a really good film, its just a bit jarring when you first consider after watching it. It's interesting to watch rather than exciting and gripping, so take that as you will.

The story of Percy Fawcett charting uncharted amazon territory looking for a lost city whilst abandoning his family back home is a pretty interesting premise on its own, so arguably half the work is done for them, its just unfortunate the story never reaches its full potential, since they've cherry picked certain parts of the story to tell and left out others. There's a hugely unnecessary and silly part involving the first world war which feels really out of place and in there for dramatic licence. The story is at its best when its in the jungle, and at its worst when its in England and during the war, which feels pedestrian by contrast.

Some of the character beats involving Fawcett and his children feel a bit off. There's a bit with a fortune teller that feels like a scene from Blackadder for all the sense it makes, and the ending feels like it doesn't know exactly what it wants to be.

But, its a really good watch. The costume design is superb particularly on the natives of the amazon, and the look of the early 20th century jungle, and the white characters gets to be almost entrancing, more so than the narrative. It looks absolutely amazing with superb cinematography, wish I'd seen the 35mm version.

There's also some superb acting in place, paticularly from Robert Pattison and Sienna Miller, while Charlie Hunnam is a fair bit weaker as our lead character. While he plays a stiff upper lipped English men extremely well, he's somewhat unsympathetic and unengaging, which contributes to the story falling a bit flat, specially towards the end.

So overall, a good decent watch, a film out of its time for sure, but not unwelcome.
 

jcutner

Member
Hey, awesome. Thanks for the reminder about Your Name! I didn't realize this would get distribution in North America. Just grabbed some tickets for the first non-sold out show next Monday after work!
 
Should I see "Your Name" dubbed or subbed?

I generally don't mind dubbed but after hearing One Punch Man dubbed I've started thinking about it more before going dubbed
 

overcast

Member
Terrific month.

Your Name, Lost City of Z, Colossal, Free Fire, and of course Fate of the Furious.

Also still need to see Personal Shopper, Trainspotting 2 and Raw from last month
 
If I see anything, it'll be Fast and the Furious because I'll be dragged to it with friends.

I'll wait until digital for Lost City of Z.
 
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