SLIFF 2015 Review – A RISING TIDE

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Review by Dana Jung. 

A RISING TIDE screens Saturday November 7th at 3:15pm and Sunday November 8th at 3:30 as part of The St. Louis International Film Festival. Both screenings are at The Hi-Pointe Backlot. Ticket information can be found HERE and HERE

Natural disasters have a way of bringing out both the best and the worst in people.  Recent weather-related catastrophes such as Hurricane Katrina, tornados in the Midwest, and the recent flooding in the South all test the limits of human endurance both emotionally and physically.  The new film A RISING TIDE examines the after-effects of Hurricane Sandy on one family and those they’re involved with as they try to rebuild and restart their lives.

Essentially a love story set against the backdrop of a family’s attempts to start over, A RISING TIDE shows that the pursuit of the dollar is not the only criteria by which success can be measured.  The bonds of family, the caring of friends both old and new, and the lasting comfort of a finely prepared meal are all treasures to be savored in their own way.  Sam (Hunter Parrish, TVs WEEDS) is a New-York trained chef who returns to his parents’ restaurant business after failing to launch his own eatery in the big city.  Sam’s father (Victor Slezak, President Grant on TVs HELL ON WHEELS) is constantly critical and seems to blame Sam for having to rebuild the family business after Hurricane Sandy.  Sam’s mother (Nana Visitor) is supportive and just happy to have her family back together.  Sam is basically coasting through life, resigned to personal disappoints and his father’s disapproval.  A chance meeting with Sarah (Ashley Hinshaw, TRUE BLOOD), a young woman in the process of breaking away from a troubled marriage, soon begins a series of life-changing events that will dramatically alter not only Sam’s life, but also the lives of many of those around him.

Director Ben Hickernell tells this story in a simple style, utilizing the Atlantic City backdrops to great advantage.  The post-Sandy remnants of destruction are still visible in nearby neighborhoods along the shore, and infuse the film’s atmosphere with an aura of melancholy.  These images are constant reminders of not only the loss of life, but also of the shattered hopes and dreams of so many people and families.  Parrish and Hinshaw have and a pleasant and easy chemistry together, as they slowly find common ground in their desires to begin fresh starts.  Though the romance is at times somewhat predictable (Sarah’s husband is a total jerk, while a momentary—and convenient—lapse of judgment drives Sarah away), we are rooting for them to find happiness throughout the film.  Veterans Slekak and Visitor (has it really been over twenty years since DS9?) also provide solid support.  Tim Weber, a veteran of many TV shows including WINGS and the current MADAM SECRETARY, is excellent as well in the pivotal role of Sam’s new friend and benefactor who also gives fatherly advice when Sam needs it most.

Though its love story is well-acted and involving , the lasting emotional impact of A RISING TIDE is the knowledge that life needs to be lived in the moment and occasionally chances taken.  In the next moment, it could all disappear at the whim of mother nature.  It’s the perseverance of the human spirit and the love of those around us that makes us able to face even the most insurmountable of obstacles.

MISS YOU ALREADY – The Review

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By Cate Marquis

MISS YOU ALREADY accomplishes a difficult feat: depicting a close friendship between two women without sinking into sentimentality and sappiness. It pulls this trick off mostly through the terrific performances of Toni Collette and Drew Barrymore, and thanks to a script by Morwenna Banks that is packed with humor as well as heart and firm, knowing direction by Catherine Hardwicke.

Collette and Barrymore create a completely believable friendship between gal pals Milly (Collette) and Jess (Barrymore), life-long best friends who have stayed close despite their different personalities and diverging lives in London. These friends tease and joke, which makes their relationship realistic and also makes them seem like people you would like to hang out with. Milly is the out-going one, a risk-taking Brit who is slightly older and definitely bolder. American Jess is more conventional and reserved than flamboyant Milly. Milly and her husband Kit (Dominic Cooper) are financially successful but Jess and her husband Jago (Paddy Constantine) are still struggling financially. Milly has kids but Jess is battling infertility. Still, Jess clearly adores Milly, and Milly feels the same about her. The friends often part by saying “miss you already.”

In this funny, appealing and believable portrait of friendship, the key are the well-drawn characters Collette and Barrymore create as well as a script that gives them the space to play. When Collette’s Milly is diagnosed with cancer and Barrymore’s Jess suddenly gets pregnant, the film runs the risk of dipping into melodrama. But the strong characters and their believable, fun-loving and supportive bond allows the film to avoid this pitfall while giving affecting, touching drama.

Hardwicke does a great job with making this an appealing story by focusing on the friendship, and giving the cast the room to make these relationships real. Even when the script goes a bit off the rails with a trip to Scotland, the strength of the characters and their bond holds the film together. The film also explores how a strong friendship might hold while marriages turn rocky.

MISS YOU ALREADY is not essential viewing but it is a warm-hearted and winning portrait of the bonds of true friendship without false notes, which makes it worth the ticket price.

OVERALL RATING: 3 1/2 OUT OF 5 STARS

MISS YOU ALREADY opens Friday, November 6, 2015

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SUFFRAGETTE – The Review

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By Cate Marquis

In the years just before World War I at the start of the 20th century, British women had been campaigning peacefully for the right to vote for about 50 years, to no avail. When aristocrat Emmeline Pankhurst, along with her daughters, joined this struggle and formed the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU), all that changed. The label “suffragettes” originated as an insult but the WSPU embraced the term as they took to the streets in violent protest to force government to give women the vote.

This nearly-forgotten struggle is the subject of SUFFRAGETTE. The bold, emotionally-raw and worthy drama focuses more narrowly on a particular moment in that movement for women’s suffrage in Britain. While Emmeline Pankhurst, played by Meryl Streep, is a character in this story, the real focus of SUFFRAGETTE is on some of her followers, “foot soldiers” in this fight – Maud (Carey Mulligan), a poor uneducated mother working in a factory laundry, Edith (Helena Bonham-Carter), a college-educated pharmacist/physician, and Maud’s radical co-worker Violet (Anne-Marie Duff). Ben Whishaw plays Maud’s husband Sonny and Brendon Gleeson plays Inspector Arthur Steed, tasked with stopping the suffragettes’ violent attacks.

“Suffrage” is such an odd word, sounding like suffering when it actually means the right to vote. There was plenty of suffering involved in this struggle, especially by the poor women who lacked the resources and connections that Pankhurst had. Inspired by real events, this story takes place in a pivotal historical moment, when the fight for women’s rights coincided in Britain with challenges to class divisions, the early labor movement and opposition to the coming war, the ultimate war of choice that transformed both Europe and warfare.

Directed by Sarah Gavron, written by Abi Morgan, and led by a top-notch female cast, SUFFRAGETTE is woman-power in action as well as being a gripping historical drama. Not surprisingly, the film has a decided pro-women’s rights slant. The very personal viewpoint from which it is told might cause the film to resonate more with women than men. While Maud, Edith and Violet are fictional, they are drawn from real people and real events are depicted in the film. The film also illustrates the class divide of the era, something Pankhurst’s organization crossed.

The acting is superb, particularly Mulligan as the central character, but all the cast are good. Mulligan gives a moving, touching performance as a woman gradually drawn into the fight by circumstances of her life. In her few scenes, Streep captures the energetic and larger-than-life impression Pankhurst must have given her followers. Bonham-Carter gives a strong performance, damping down her quirky-character style to play more restrained character as brainy Edith.

The attention to period detail adds realism, the photography is lavish and Gavron’s firm direction paired with Morgan’s human-focused script makes this a moving, involving drama.

If this worthy film has a flaw, it is that the focus is too narrow, and that it does not give a big enough picture of the fight for voting rights for women, or the political context in which it took place as war loomed and workers were organizing for rights. Instead, it portrays the hardships and  restrictions confronting ordinary women, and the personal costs they faced for their activism. At the time, women were expected to stay home and care for children but, for poor women, this was rarely an option. Maud works along side her husband (Ben Whishaw), raising their son George (Adam Michael Dodd) in a cramped apartment. The conditions in the factory are appalling, hours are long, and girls as young as nine work under bullying boss Mr. Taylor (Geoff Bell). Edith is better educated than her supportive husband but she can only treat her patients under his authority as the male owner of a family pharmacy.

As the film shows, these women organized protest marches, petitioned Parliament, and even bombed mailboxes and broke shop windows. Many were jailed repeatedly, including Pankhurst, and the government responded to hunger strikes with brutal force-feeding. Emily Wilding Davison (Natalie Press) was a real person, as was the climatic event shown near the film’s end, and its pivotal role in the women’s votes movement.

The suffragettes’ actions contrasted with how their formal Edwardian dress, particularly the fashionable upper classes, appear to our modern eyes. By focusing on the more informally dressed working class women, it is easier to connect emotionally with the characters. One of the film’s strengths is its willingness to show men who supported this cause as well as those who opposed it. However, one of the film’s most startling moments comes at the very end, as a list of the dates when women won the vote in various country is a shocking reminder of how much remains to be done.

The story has links to the present, as women are still fighting for equal pay nearly a century later, a topic particularly being talked about in the film industry now. SUFFRAGETTE is a moving historical drama told from a human level, a worthy film that hopefully will prompt interest in this overlooked history, and one likely to garner some Oscar nods come awards season.

OVERALL RATING: 4 OUT OF 5 STARS

SUFFRAGETTE is playing in theaters now

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THE PEANUTS MOVIE – The Review

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Review by Dane Marti

Finally, a new Peanuts movie has arrived to add another choice for viewers that look forward to seeing James Bond and Star Wars, but want something they can take their kids to right now!  Of course, for people who might disparage this film as childish, old or uncool in the present modern age of cartoons such as American Dad, Pixar and The Simpsons, I must remind people that there were a number of Peanuts films through the years and at least the first two were fantastic, receiving sterling reviews. And they were highly entertaining during the dark, revolutionary 1960’s.

When I was a little dude, back in grade school, I was obsessed with ‘Peanuts’ by Charles M. Schultz! Was this the first signs of mental illness? I don’t know. However, the cartoons greatly improved my childhood. Literally. Of course, there have been other great comic strips: Recently Calvin and Hobbs’s was first-rate on all levels, as was The Far Side. Pearls Before Swine makes me laugh, sometimes. In the past, Pogo was amazingly interesting and unique. So was Little Abner. Still, Peanuts has always Rocked! Like Joe Cool—it was cool in more ways than one.  It was—and still is— the greatest comic strip ‘world.’

To me, these little people were not just cute, two- dimensional drawings–they literally existed. 
And, in some respects, I understood and appreciated these cartoon ‘little folks’ more than the actual humans moving around me, although the cartoons also dramatically highlighted the cool moments in a kid’s life. Snoopy, Charlie Brown, Linus: They ALL Rocked. I collected all the paperback books; saw all the TV specials and movies.

This legendary cartoon had the universal ability to communicate with everyone. Of course, Peanuts had brilliant writing (humorous insights!) coupled with clever, yet beguiling drawings: images that I consider easily some of the best Art of the 20th Century. I loved Peanuts and still do. 
So, in my middle age, it was a blast viewing the upcoming Peanuts movie for WAMG movie website. As with all my previous reviews, I reviewed it with aesthetic honesty, all the while valiantly attempting to leave preconceptions at the theater door. Ha.

THE PEANUTS MOVIE is super: The film could have gone overboard, adding elements that Schultz and Peanuts devotees would have been shocked by. For instance, the new filmmakers/animators could have added snarky, mean-spirited humor and satire.

However, since much of the cartoonist’s family had a hand in the film, the movie is definitely well made on all levels. It isn’t perfect, but for me, it came close. It’s entertaining for grade school kids, of course, but I heard adults laughing throughout the theater.

The plot cleverly utilizes many old stories from the comic strip’s past, but brings a fresh perspective to the famous and legendary comic strip’s timeless story lines.

As for the animation: While I viewed the movie in 3D, and there is a subtle element of C.G. to the characters, backgrounds and action, it never strays too far from the original animated /comics/TV/Movies.

The moviemakers create a well-fused balance between old and new styles. Basically, this is a quality Animated film for all ages that doesn’t destroy our memories of the classic cartoon! I loved watching it. Actually, it made me want to start collecting Peanuts Memorabilia once again. Any parent interested in taking there kids to this flick will definitely not be making a mistake, no ‘good grief’ about it!

3 1/2 of 5 Stars

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SLIFF 2015 Review – THE KEEPING ROOM

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Review by Dana Jung

THE KEEPING ROOM screens Friday, November 6th at 4:45pm and Sunday, November 8th at 9:15pm as part of The St. Louis International Film Festival. Both screenings are at The Plaza Frontenac Theater. Ticket information can be found HERE and HERE

During the last days of the War Between the States, Augusta (Brit Marling, I ORIGINS, ANOTHER EARTH) and her younger sister Louise (Hailee Steinfeld, TRUE GRIT), along with the former slave Mad (Muna Otaru), are etching out a meager existence in the deep South, surviving one day at a time on sparse vegetables they grow in a barren garden, and little meat.  Their time is spent working all day, or longing for the days of old when they wore fine dresses and men came calling.  The sheer monotony of their isolated lives is slowly wearing the women down, but things change one afternoon when Louise is bitten by a raccoon and needs some medicine to fight the fever from the infection.  On a trip to a nearby saloon to find help, Augusta encounters two murderous Yankees, and soon the three women are fighting to survive when the renegade soldiers lay siege to their homestead, in the suspenseful new film THE KEEPING ROOM.

Stories depicting the women of the South left to fend for themselves when their fathers and brothers all went to war are certainly nothing new.  From the classic GONE WITH THE WIND to THE BEGUILED to COLD MOUNTAIN, several films have examined different aspects of these fascinating characters.  One thing most of these movies have in common is their portrayal of smart and strong-willed females who ultimately survive every physical and emotional tragedy that is thrown at them.   THE KEEPING ROOM adds its own twist to these tales, as it navigates a fairly simple story with excellent performances, a sense of historical realism, and themes of who really survives when a war is over.

Director Daniel Barber tells this story with a spare, almost elegaic style, accompanied by a lightly discordant string musical score.  The evil nature of the film’s main villains (Kyle Soller and a nearly unrecognizable Sam Worthington) is established in a brutal and shocking opening scene.  The mundane daily life of the women is shown as a series of chores, eating, and sleeping.  Both of these sequences have almost no dialogue, as Barber lets the camera reveal this information with visual details.  The first half of the film slowly builds the tension surrounding the women, as we know nearly from the beginning that they are on a collision course when the violence of the war comes knocking (literally) at their door.

Marling is wonderful as the solid and unflinching Augusta, never yielding one iota (as mama used to say) even as she worries that she’ll end up alone, not ever being with a man.  But Marling also shows the depth of her character in a heartrending scene in which she tells a version of the 1001 Arabian Nights to her deathly ill sister.  Steinfeld is at first a petulant and stereotypical Southern belle, but soon becomes the focal point of the plot as both older women attempt to protect her.  Otaru as the slave Mad is the most sympathetic character, as she relates her own experiences which are just as horrifying as the war.

In one of the most sadly beautiful scenes in the film, Sherman’s march to the sea is referenced as the women realize that war really is hell, even more so to those left behind than the soldiers who fight them.  In the end, these survivors have a plan that just might see them to safety, and on the evidence depicted in THE KEEPING ROOM, we understand how such strong and resourceful women truly won their war.

B&B Theatres Announces Opening Of The Wentzville Tower 12

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B&B Theatres has announced the November 5th grand opening of the Wentzville Tower 12, located at 100 Wentzville Bluffs Drive. The 48,000 square foot, 12-screen facility boasts a massive 60-foot spire and overlooks the surrounding area from atop a bluff off of I-70. The Wentzville location will be the theater company’s 50th location and third in the Greater St. Louis area.

The beautifully finished exterior opens to a cavernous lobby and box office where guests are greeted with an elegant and modern design sprinkled with a dash of classic Hollywood style. But the Wentzville Tower 12 will offer all the latest in technology, entertainment, and design, with Christie Vive Dolby 7.1 surround sound, 28-inch stadium seating, digital-projection, and leather-style electric recliner seating in every auditorium. The theatre will also feature four 3D auditoriums, allowing customers to enjoy traditional and 3D content in comfort and style!

Tickets in hand, guests will proceed to the expansive concession stand which will feature extended menu options including burgers, chicken tenders, french fries, onion rings, mozzarella sticks, and ravioli bites as well as traditional concession fare. To add flair and function, the building will also feature over 30 LED televisions including interactive video walls and showtime displays. The butter and soda bar will include self-serve soda, seasonings, condiments and butter where patrons can customize their movie-eating experience at no additional cost (so don’t be shy!)

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Proceeding down the wide hallways on their way to the auditoriums, guests will see movie themed art, posters, and custom Hollywood design work tastefully displayed. The largest two auditoriums will feature monstrous B&B GRAND SCREENS that will house two massive wall-to-wall curved screens, large leather-style VIP electric recliners, 28-inch stadium seating, RealD 3D and High Frame Rate (on select films), 10000 watts of sound, and digital projection. These screens will be home to two of the biggest screens in the nation, each over six stories wide and three stories tall and serving over 200 reclining seats. No matter what’s on the screen, no other venue in the St. Louis area will compare to the comfort, scope, and experience of the B&B Grand Screen!

Guests to the Wentzville 12 will be pleased to participate in the Backstage Pass, a loyalty program designed to enhance the customer experience and offer rewards for frequent visits (you can sign up for free at bbtheatres.com!). The Backstage Pass will help customers score great deals on concessions and tickets, including admissions to the Retro Night series, where classic films of yesteryear are thrown back on the big screen where they belong!

As if all that weren’t enough, the theater will feature a Marquee Bar and Grille off the main lobby that will include a full bar, lounge seating, an expanded menu, and an outdoor patio. All food and cocktails can be taken to all twelve luxury seating auditoriums. Guests can enjoy the Marquee Bar and Grill before, during, or after their movie experience and are encouraged to EAT, DRINK, and ESCAPE to the magic of the movies!

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The opening night film will be SPECTRE at 7PM.

To celebrate the grand opening of the B&B Wentzville Tower 12, B&B Theatres is offering customers to PAY WHAT YOU WANT FOR POPCORN all weekend long!

Everyone with a paid movie ticket beginning Thursday evening through Sunday evening will receive a free small popcorn or have the option of making a donation that supports the Wentzville School District Foundation!

Visit the theater’s official site: www.bbtheatres.com/wentzville-12

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Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of LOVE THE COOPERS In St. Louis

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LOVE THE COOPERS follows the Cooper clan as four generations of extended family come together for their annual Christmas Eve celebration. As the evening unfolds, a series of unexpected visitors and unlikely events turn the night upside down, leading them all toward a surprising rediscovery of family bonds and the spirit of the holiday.

From CBS Films, the movie stars Alan Arkin, John Goodman, Ed Helms, Diane Keaton, Jake Lacy, Anthony Mackie, Amanda Seyfried, June Squibb, Marisa Tomei & Olivia Wilde.

Directed by Jessie Nelson, LOVE THE COOPERS opens in theaters nationwide on November 13, 2015.

WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win a pass (Good for 2) to the advance screening of LOVE THE COOPERS on Tuesday, November 10 at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

We will contact the winners by email.

Answer the following:

Some holiday themed movies originally had different titles or were based on various stories. What are the “Christmas films” listed below better known as?

  1. “Big Heart”
  2. “The Greatest Gift”
  3. “Black Christmas”
  4. “Nothing Lasts Forever”

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWERS AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.

3. No purchase necessary.

PG-13 for thematic elements, language and some sexuality.

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LOVE THE COOPERS

EXPERIMENTER – The Review

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By Sam Moffitt

If you were asked to participate in a behavioral science study, and got paid for it, and the study involved torturing and possibly killing another human being, would you see the study through to its end? Would you continue to administer electric shocks to a complete stranger, a person who has already said they have a heart condition?

Now, you cannot see the other person, as you administer the electric shocks from another room, but you can hear them beg for mercy, hear them ask to stop the experiment, and then finally grow silent, possibly unconscious or maybe even dead.

Would you continue the experiment? Especially if there were an ”authority figure” wearing a gray lab coat who insisted that you had to continue the experiment, no matter what. Especially that you had to continue even if you thought you were killing the other test subject, another human being.

Most people would say no, most people if asked straight up if they would do such a thing would claim they could not consider it. Yet, a series of tests administered by Stanley Milgram in 1961 proved that most people will go ahead and give what they think are ever increasing electric shocks to a perfect stranger, if someone in authority tells them they have to.

EXPERIMENTER tells the fascinating story of how Milgram came to run these tests and the fire storm of controversy they created, shock waves from which are still being felt to this day.

I can recall taking a class in psychiatry at Jefferson Junior College in Hillsboro, Missouri in the early 80s and reading about Milgram’s experiments.  Many in the fields of psychiatry, psychology and sociology were quick to denounce Milgram’s tests and what they seemed to prove.  That people can be ordered to do anything, as long as someone in authority gives them the go ahead.

Milgram’s experiments were not created in a political vacuum.  World War II was still recent news in 1961.  Milgram was Jewish, his parents were both lucky enough to leave Europe before the Nazi’s came to power and started the Holocaust which cost the lives of 9 million people, most of them Jewish.

Milgram’s primary focus was “why would otherwise sane, rational, moral people participate in mass murder ?”  Milgram and his team of researchers were shocked and saddened to see that most people, against their own moral code and conscience, if told to do so would go ahead and keep administering the electric shocks to an unseen but heard victim.  The cries for help were tape recorded by the way, no one was ever really shocked in these experiments.

EXPERIMENTER is quite simply an astonishing movie with a message that really needs to be seen by every man, woman and child on this planet.  The Nazi Holocaust was just one incident of mass murder that continues to happen all over our world.  People in every nation on Earth have proven over and over that they will pull the trigger on innocent people, if someone in “Authority” tells them they are obligated to do so.  Milgram’s research was denounced because the truth hurts.

Peter Sarsgaard gives an incredible performance, somewhat similar to Oscar Issac in A Most Violent Year.  Milgram speaks in well modulated, precise sentences.  He appears to be what he is, a well educated, thoughtful academic committed to his research and insistent on telling his results to the world.

Winona Ryder (and how nice to see her in a lead performance again) is very good as Milgram’s wife but the script really doesn’t give her much to do except be a dutiful wife defending her husband’s work.

We see how even in the 60s the media would pounce on any new “scandal” and distort the original intent of a new piece of work.  Milgram appeared on Dick Cavett, among other talk shows.  His research was dramatized on television.  He was both denounced and praised.  He and his team conducted other tests, most notably a test involving letters left on car windshields that needed to be mailed, to a fictitious person, to test how honest people might be.

His own students did not believe him the day he announced that President John Kennedy had been shot; they assumed it was another test.

EXPERIMENTER was filmed in a highly stylized manner.  Most of the sets are not only obviously sets but some appear to be painted flats only, much like Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, only minus the expressionist styles.  In the driving scenes old fashioned rear projection is used, highlighting the unreality of the film itself.  In a couple of scenes we even, literally, see “the elephant in the room.”  Of course none of the characters take note.

I have written of this before, Experimenter is the kind of movie that deserves a wide audience; it needs to be exhibited in theaters.  But I doubt that it will, it is not a blockbuster type of film, EXPERIMENTER is wise, thoughtful, intelligent and has something serious to say about the human condition, in all of us.  Pretty much the kiss of death at the multiplex. Please don’t pass this one up.

OVERALL RATING: 5 OUT OF 5 STARS

EXPERIMENTER is playing in theaters now

For a list of theaters and On Demand, visit:
http://www.magpictures.com/experimenter/

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This Week’s WAMG Podcast – SLIFF 2015, BURNT, SUFFRAGETTE and More!

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This week’s episode of our podcast WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is up! Hear WAMG’s  Michelle McCue, Cate Marquis and Tom Stockman discuss the weekend box office, and next weekend’s releases. We’ll review BURNT, OUR BRAND IS CRISIS, I MISS YOU ALREADY, and SUFFRAGETTE. We’ll also preview PEANUTS and SPECTRE. We will discuss Tim Burton’s ED WOOD and talk about many of the events featured at this year’s St. Louis International Film Festival. WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is a weekly podcast and can be heard streaming at ONStl.com Online Radio.

Win SCOUTS GUIDE TO THE ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE Run-Of-Engagement Passes In St. Louis

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Playing in theaters now is the horror comedy SCOUTS GUIDE TO THE ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE

WAMG has your free passes to see the movie for the first time or to see it again!

Three scouts and lifelong friends join forces with one badass cocktail waitress to become the world’s most unlikely team of heroes. When their peaceful town is ravaged by a zombie invasion, they’ll fight for the badge of a lifetime and put their scouting skills to the test to save mankind from the undead.

From director Christopher Landon, the film stars Tye Sheridan, David Koechner, Halston Sage, Logan Miller, Joey Morgan, Sarah Dumont Nude and Cloris Leachman.

For your chance to win RUN-OF-ENGAGEMENT passes to see the film in the St. Louis area, enter:

YOUR NAME AND E-MAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW. WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

OFFICIAL RULES:

  1. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.
  2. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

The film is rated R for Zombie violence and gore, sexual material, graphic nudity, and language throughout.

Visit the official site: www.scoutsandzombiesmovie.com

SCOUTS GUIDE TO THE ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE