Win 4 Passes To The St. Louis SMURF-Tastic Advance Screening of SMURFS This Saturday

When Papa Smurf (John Goodman) is mysteriously taken by evil wizards, Razamel and Gargamel, Smurfette (Rihanna) leads the Smurfs on a mission into the real world to save him. With the help of new friends, the Smurfs must discover what defines their destiny to save the universe.

SMURFS features an all-star voice cast including Rihanna, James Corden, Nick Offerman, JP Karliak, Daniel Levy, Amy Sedaris, Natasha Lyonne, Sandra Oh, Octavia Spencer, Nick Kroll, Hannah Waddingham, Alex Winter, Maya Erskine, Billie Lourd, Xolo Maridueña, Marshmello, with Kurt Russell and John Goodman.

Directed by Chris Miller, SMURFS opens in theaters on July 18.

Based on the Characters and Works of Peyo.

https://www.smurfs.movie

WAMG is giving away to our St. Louis area readers eight (8) family 4-packs of passes.

The special SMURF-Tastic advance screening is on B&B West Olive Creve Coeur 10 this Saturday, July 12th at 11:00 AM. (tons of free activities and prizes for the kids)

EMAIL michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com to enter.
WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

Rated PG.

SMURFS Movie Announces Full Soundtrack Featuring Music From Rihanna, Tyla, DJ Khaled, Cardi B, Shenseea,

SMURFS Movie announces the full soundtrack to the film featuring music from Rihanna, Tyla, DJ Khaled, Cardi B, Shenseea, James Corden and more. The soundtrack is available for Pre-Order/Pre-Save HERE and will officially release June 13th via Roc Nation Distribution.

The reveal of the soundtrack follows the release of Rihanna’s “Friend Of Mine” off the soundtrack as well as “Higher Love” by DESI TRILL featuring DJ Khaled, Cardi B, Natania and Subhi. “Higher Love” also saw an official music video.

See the full soundtrack tracklisting below.

SMURFS MOVIE SOUNDTRACK TRACKLIST

1. Milenge by Natania

2. Celebrate by Natania

3. Friend Of Mine by Rihanna

4. Higher Love by DESI TRILL feat. DJ Khaled, Cardi B, Natania and Subhi

5. Liar For A Living by Natania

6. It Takes A Village by Natania and The Indian Connect

7. Big Dreams by James Fauntleroy

8. To Me by Lous and the Yakuza

9. Did We by Natania

10. Balle Balouza by Natania, Subhi and The Indian Connect

11. Everything Goes With Blue by Tyla

12. It’s My Party by Shenseea

13. Always On The Outside by James Corden

14. Higher Calling by The Indian Connect

When Papa Smurf (John Goodman) is mysteriously taken by evil wizards, Razamel and Gargamel, Smurfette (Rihanna) leads the Smurfs on a mission into the real world to save him. With the help of new friends, the Smurfs must discover what defines their destiny to save the universe. SMURFS features an all-star voice cast including Rihanna, James Corden, Nick Offerman, JP Karliak, Daniel Levy, Amy Sedaris, Natasha Lyonne, Sandra Oh, Jimmy Kimmel,  Octavia Spencer, Nick Kroll, Hannah Waddingham, Alex Winter, Maya Erskine, Billie Lourd, Xolo Maridueña, Marshmello, with Kurt Russell and John Goodman. 

SMURFS In Theatres July 18, 2025.

Paramount Animation Presents In Association with Domain Entertainment. A Ty Ty and Jay Brown Production

Rihanna Is Smurfette In First Trailer For This Summer’s SMURFS!

No Name (James Corden) and Smurfette (Rihanna) in Smurfs from Paramount Animation.

When Papa Smurf (John Goodman) is mysteriously taken by evil wizards, Razamel and Gargamel, Smurfette (Rihanna) leads the Smurfs on a mission into the real world to save him. With the help of new friends, the Smurfs must discover what defines their destiny to save the universe.

SMURFS features an all-star voice cast including Rihanna, James Corden, Nick Offerman, JP Karliak, Daniel Levy, Amy Sedaris, Natasha Lyonne, Sandra Oh, Octavia Spencer, Nick Kroll, Hannah Waddingham, Alex Winter, Maya Erskine, Billie Lourd, Xolo Maridueña with Kurt Russell and John Goodman.

The Smurf movies have been a hit with audiences. The first Smurfs movie was the most commercially successful, grossing over half a billion dollars worldwide. The totals for the live-action films are, The Smurfs (2011) $563,749,323 and The Smurfs 2 (2013): $347,434,178, while the animated films brought in respectively The Smurfs and the Magic Flute (1975): $19,000,000 and Smurfs: The Lost Village (2017): $197,183,546. The total box office gross stands at $1,127,367,047.

PRE-SAVE THE NEW SONG HERE!

SMURFS will be in theaters on July 18.

THE LAST SHOWGIRL – Review

This weekend’s new film release builds on an interesting trend from 2024. Though it’s not something embraced by major studios, like the deep dive into movie riffs on popular toys and video games, it’s proving to be an awards showcase for the “indie upstarts”. I’m writing of the new venues for the often neglected (by studio execs) bombshell superstar actresses from a few decades ago. Often they’re banished to straight-to-video (now streaming) sex or horror “potboilers”, or sent to be supporting players on series TV. Just a few months ago, cinephiles were stunned by the outrageous satire of THE SUBSTANCE and embraced the courageous, and meta (spoofing lots of old tabloid “fodder”) performance of its lead, Demi Moore (who is now a big Oscar “front-runner” after her Golden Globe win and touching acceptance speech). Historians can point to the brief spate of mature actress thrillers from the early 1960s (WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE and its ilk) as an inspiration for that film. Well, the other actress getting some awards love for a much more restrained story, but with a similar modern-day “pathos” and drama, is Pamela Anderson, who could very well claim the title of THE LAST SHOWGIRL.

The story opens up (after a brief “flash forward”) on Anderson as Shelly, the reigning “queen” of the long-running casino show “Razzle Dazzle”, as she hurries through a quick costume change and tries to trudge up the stairs to the stage without damaging all the sequins and feathers of her towering tiara. As the show’s producer, Eddie (Dave Bautista) bids goodnight over the intercom speakers, Shelly invites her younger co-stars, Mary-Anne (Brenda Song) and Jodie (Kiernan Shipka) over to her modest home for a BBQ Lunch on their “off” day. Joining them, along with Eddie, is a former showgirl now casino waitress, the acerbic Annette (Jamie Lee Curtis). Their high spirits are dampened by the mention of a rumor that the new owners of the casino will close the RD show and replace it with something younger and “edgier”. Shelly dismisses this as nonsense until the formal notices come down from “on high”. Only a dozen or so shows remain before the dwindling audiences. While Mary-Anne and Jodie scramble to find a new “gig”, Shelly wonders if she can stay relevant while also reflecting on her past glories. This prompts her to reach out to the daughter that she gave up for adoption many years ago, Hannah (Billie Lourd). Though the relationship is strained, they finally reconnect. As the final show looms, Shelly tries to repair that parental bond, while pondering her future in a world that doesn’t seem to have any need of her style of glamour and glitz anymore.

After being largely absent from view, aside from some cameos and a stint on Broadway in “Chicago”, Ms. Anderson commands the big screen with a remarkable nuanced performance as the sweet on the outside but hauntingly sad inside Shelly. At first glance, she may seem a bit ditzy and distracted, but as the story progresses we realize that she’s emotionally floundering, searching for any life preserver, as the vessel that is her existence is slowly sinking (and picking up speed into the depths of despair). As she nears her final “runway walk” she blocks any feelings of regret, proudly defending her choices to continue her “craft”. It all culminates in a heart-wrenching audition sequence in which Anderson summons her inner strength, demanding to be seen and not dismissed into the shadows of yesteryear. At times Shelly frustrates, but Anderson compels us to root for her, even as her reality cracks and crumbles. She gets great support in another mesmerizing turn from Curtis as her BFF Annette who has escaped the “stage game”, though she secretly yearns for the adoration of the audience, while also trying to shake up Shelly to face the choices still left to her. Song is solid as the more aggressive and world-weary “show sister” while Shipka is full of wide-eyed hope and hustle as the newbie will land on her “high heels” and conform to any demands of the market. Also well cast is Lourd as the estranged daughter who mixes her anger at her mother for being “cast off” with a general snarky disdain for the family “business”. The other big casting “against type” surprise is Bautista as the soft-spoken, brusque but still concerned Eddie, who hides a history with his girls and wants to help but is also looking to serve and please his new casino masters. And big kudos go to the small, almost a cameo, role of the shadowy audition director who is given a condescending venomous bite by Jason Schwartzman, as he delivers a “wake up” call with the violence of a swift “gut punch”.

Director Gia Coppola is a terrific addition to her family’s filmmaking dynasty by giving us a very tough, unflinching profile of a woman clinging to past glory as the world around her undergoes a seismic cultural shift. Working from the well-researched, emotionally intimate screenplay by Kate Gersten, Ms. Coppola gives us a “fly on the wall” look at the showier aspect of the service biz in Sin City. Full disclosure: I lived and worked in Vegas thirty years ago just as they were shifting from “family fun” to “adults-only playground”, so I recognized that air of sunbaked desperation that wafts over the street “buskers” and casino crews wondering if they can survive the next corporate “facelift” of the strip. Coppola and Gersten captured that panic to stay trendy and relevant as the tour groups and high-rolling “whales” were tiring of the traditional “main room” sparkly “t&a” two-drink minimum extravaganzas. The bonding of Shelly and her castmates feels almost like those of soldiers in the trenches awaiting the final charge (but here it’s a last show). My only complaint is that there are too many stretches and montage sequences of Shelly wandering past the employee casino entrances, perhaps as she recalls past encounters, but it’s unneeded “padding”. That’s a slight qualm as this is a most engaging look at a quickly disappearing legacy (Vegas cares little about its history), and s stellar acting triumph from Anderson, who dazzles in and out of the sequins and feathers, as THE LAST SHOWGIRL. “Places please, places…”

3.5 Out of 4

THE LAST SHOWGIRL opens in select theatres on Friday, January 10, 2025

TICKET TO PARADISE – Review

Still Photography on the set of “Ticket To Paradise”

Hmmm, now this is something pretty rare. The two films I’m reviewing for this weekend have a few things in common, “subject-wise” (y’know, aside from being in color, being a “talkie”, etc.). This too concerns an estranged couple reuniting for a non-holiday event. With RAYMOND & RAY, it’s about two stepbrothers having to travel to their dad’s funeral, while this new release is about an estranged (long-divorced) parents having to travel to their daughter’s wedding. And it’s not a two-hour car trip, but a rather long flight to an exotic island. Oh, and the former marrieds are played by Oscar-winning Hollywood royalty, or about as close as you can get to that. Plus it’s their fourth flick acting opposite each other (fifth if you count when he directed her). So lots of moviegoers are hoping that their chemistry is still potent as they go to their multiplex box office, or more likely its website, to purchase a TICKET TO PARADISE.

In a bit of a switcheroo, the story begins with the main couple still apart. Each is telling their best buddy about how impossible it was to live with the other (with widely different riffs on their meeting, courtship, etc.). This all leads back to them being “pulled back in” by their only child Lily (Kaitlyn Dever). She wants them both in attendance for her law school graduation ceremony and assures them that their reserved seats will be in distant sections of the auditorium. So the big day arrives and …David (George Clooney) begrudgingly takes his place right next to his ex Georgia (Julia Roberts). Then the duo takes their daughter, along with her best pal/college roomie Wren (Billie Lourd) to the airport for her post-grad “vacay” to Bali. Her parents heave a sigh of relief as the ladies enter the gate, knowing they won’t have to endure each other for a loooong time (or so they hope). Lily and Wren have “tons o’ fun” until they get separated from their tour group while snorkeling. Luckily the long swim to shore is avoided when they spot a boat. And the luck keeps rolling along as Lily is immediately smitten by their rescuer, a hunky young seaweed farmer (there’s such a thing) Gede (Maxime Bouttier). Soon she’s contacting her folks again to invite them to her “destination wedding” to him. And, wouldn’t you know it, they get booked in the same section, on the next flight to the island. Plus (talk about a “co-inkee-dink”), the pilot is Georgia’s much-younger French “bae” Paul (Lucas Bravo). When the duo arrives they cease their bickering long enough to agree to join forces to stop this too-hasty nuptials (she’s throwing away her law career, darn it). But can these former feuding lovers really work together, or can true love really triumph against such formidable forces?

So the best description of the acting style of the two leads may seem like an insult, though it’s certainly not my intention. As the film progressed I feel as though Ms. Roberts and Mr. Clooney were, well, …coasting. It’s not that they weren’t making any effort, but rather they’re so confident and “at ease” with their screen personas that they were just going “with the flow” feeling that their audience will follow their path. This certainly was the case for many classic screen pairings of the “Golden Age” such as William Powell and Myrna Loy or Spencer Tracy and Kathryn Hepburn. It’s not just that their characters engage in playful sniping at one another. In a couple of sequences, they talk about the dissolution of their married union with remorse and regret. And their uneasy alliance results in some truly awful behavior. Yet somehow the screen personas of the two can elevate even the frothiest of premises. This audience goodwill carries over a bit to their screen sibling as Dever scores many laughs in the ingenue”second-gen” role. She’s engaging, but it feels like a bit of a “step back” after her “take charge” snarky smart turn last week in the Shakespearian farce ROSALINE, which far fewer people will see since it went straight to Hulu. Dever delivers, but the role is no challenge for her skills. Happily, she’s often paired with Lourd as Wren who brings some much-needed off-kilter energy as the rom-com cliche, the “hard-partying” frisky BFF. Speaking of another rom-com cliche, the very photogenic Bravo gives the thankless role of Paul, the “Baxter” who’s not much of a romantic threat, though his best efforts make him more sweet and endearing than this clueless doofus deserves. As for the groom Gede, Bouttier is the required gorgeous and way-too-understanding “dreamboat” who’s got a boat.


Another rom-com vet is at the helm, namely Ol Parker who last gave us the MAMMA MIA sequel. Oh and he co-wrote this with Daniel Pipski, it took a “tag team” to concoct this “lighter than air” trifle. Again, this is not meant as a “burn” as many will enjoy this while in their cushy multiplex recliner, but the plot specifics will probably evaporate from the brain during the ride home. Well, you may ponder a trip to Bali as it’s eye-poppingly beautiful here, though much of it was actually shot in Queensland, Australia (a good ad here for their own travel industry). This may be the best current example of an “auntie” or “grammy” movie as it’s a way to treat a relative to a matinee that won’t upset them (or tax the noggin), despite a blink and you’ll miss it “F-bomb”. The back-and-forth snipping between the leads gets tiresome, but it just goes to prove how powerful, and forgiving, the chemistry and charisma of these two movie icons are. They’re truly the reason why many fans will believe their theatre stub was a TICKET TO PARADISE.


2 Out of 4


TICKET TO PARADISE is now playing in theatres everywhere