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MGOLD MICROSOFT WORD ART MOVIE
★ ‘HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE’ (PG-13, 1:41) In this charming, funny movie about a lost kid and a crusty geezer (a perfect Sam Neill), the New Zealander director Taika Waititi takes some familiar story types and strips them of cliché. Teeming with demons and images of hell, the phantasmagoric paintings seen in the film are remarkably powerful, but too much of the movie shows prim archivists equipped with the latest technology poring over his works to determine their authenticity. ‘HIERONYMUS BOSCH: TOUCHED BY THE DEVIL’ (No rating, 1:29, in English, Dutch and Spanish) In Pieter van Huystee’s documentary there is a bizarre, almost comical disconnect between the artworks assembled for a historic exhibition and the fuss surrounding its preparation.
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With Leslie Jones, Melissa McCarthy and Kristen Wiig. ‘GHOSTBUSTERS’ (PG-13, 1:36) Kate McKinnon’s magnificent, eccentric turn embodies Paul Feig’s reboot at its best. Ed O’Neill almost runs away with it as a grumpy, helpful seven-armed octopus named Hank. ★ ‘FINDING DORY’ (PG, 1:43) While it lacks the technical dazzle and emotional sweep of “Finding Nemo” and other Pixar masterpieces, this sequel, with Ellen DeGeneres as the voice of an absent-minded blue tang, is a warm, lively and inclusive piece of summer entertainment. Anna Gunn is excellent as an investment banker bumping her head on the glass ceiling as a younger colleague (Sarah Meghan Thomas) and an old friend (Alysia Reiner) pursue their own complicated career agendas. ★ ‘EQUITY’ (R, 1:40) This tightly wound boardroom thriller, directed by Meera Menon from a script by Amy Fox, casts a furious, unsentimental eye on the challenges facing women in and around the financial industry. But its portraits of disappointed show business hopefuls dreading their expiration dates make no bones about their insecurities, and the ensemble acting is first-rate. ★ ‘DON’T THINK TWICE’ (R, 1:32) Mike Birbiglia’s acutely observed study of a struggling six-member New York improv group that has to come to terms with the ascent of one of its members to television stardom could have been a much nastier movie. The writer and director Matt Ross takes both his characters and his audience seriously. ★ ‘CAPTAIN FANTASTIC’ (R, 1:59) Viggo Mortensen stars in this pleasurably freewheeling movie about a young family who leave the radical isolation of their Oregon home and go back on the grid. She’s too good for either one of them, and also for this tired movie. Steve Carell is a powerful movie agent, Jesse Eisenberg is his ambitious nephew from the Bronx, and Kristen Stewart is the young woman they both love.
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‘CAFÉ SOCIETY’ (PG-13, 1:36) Woody Allen wanders back into the worlds of 1930s Hollywood and New York, patching together an intermittently amusing, visually elegant collage of familiar themes. To run with a tough crowd, you’ve got to make a statement. Federico Castelluccio’s minor entry in the genre employs several alumni of “The Sopranos” in a slight film that also pays homage to “Mean Streets” but fails to make much of an impression. At least until his father-in-law takes him to the boss (David Proval), who needs a favor. ‘THE BROOKLYN BANKER’ (R, 1:35) It’s 1973, and Santo (Troy Garity), a young man with a head for numbers, has managed to evade the mob ties that entangle the neighborhood. And you might go bazodee over the contagious soca beat set by the singer and heartthrob Machel Montano in this fluffy, candy-colored romance directed by Todd Kessler. ‘BAZODEE’ (PG-13 1:41) “Bazodee” is Trinidadian slang for being disoriented or dizzy, possibly because of romance.