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Movies

Highlights

  1. This Documentary About Brian Eno Is Never the Same Twice

    Thanks to a software program, the length, structure and contents of the movie are reconfigured each time it’s shown. It’s the only way the musician would agree to the project.

     By

    The director Gary Hustwit at a theater in Saugerties, N.Y. “This idea that a film has to be set in stone and always linear is obsolete, I think,” he said in an interview.
    The director Gary Hustwit at a theater in Saugerties, N.Y. “This idea that a film has to be set in stone and always linear is obsolete, I think,” he said in an interview.
    CreditBrandon Schulman for The New York Times
  1. ‘Eno’ Review: Creativity, 52 Billion Billion Ways

    A new documentary about the groundbreaking artist Brian Eno breaks its own ground, too.

     By

    The musician Brian Eno in “Eno,” a creative documentary by Gary Hustwit, which selects from a database of 30 hours of interviews.
    CreditFilm First
    Critic’s Pick
  2. Summer Horror Movies to Send a Chill Down Your Spine

    At the drive-in, under the stars or in your living room, there are plenty of frights to be had before fall arrives.

     By

    At Mahoning Drive-In Theater in Lehighton, Pa., there’s a screening of the indie trailblazer “The Blair Witch Project.”
    CreditArtisan Entertainment
  3. ‘Fly Me to the Moon’ Review: This NASA Rom-Com Stays Earthbound

    Greg Berlanti’s movie, starring Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum as only mildly mismatched lovers, is set against the backdrop of the Apollo 11 landing.

     By

    Kelly Jones (Scarlett Johansson) and Cole Davis (Channing Tatum) in “Fly Me to the Moon.”
    CreditDan McFadden/Sony Pictures
  4. ‘Sing Sing’ Review: Divine Interventions

    A deep-tissue turn by Colman Domingo and a breakout performance by Clarence Maclin lift this moving drama about a prison theater program.

     By

    Colman Domingo, left, and Clarence Maclin in “Sing Sing.”
    CreditA24
    Critic’s Pick
  5. ‘Longlegs’ Review: Daddy Danger

    Nicolas Cage plays the cheery evil entity behind multiple murders in this weakly plotted, strongly styled chiller.

     By

    Maika Monroe in “Longlegs.”
    CreditNeon

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  5. 10 Great Shelley Duvall Performances to Stream

    In “The Shining,” “Popeye” and more, her unusual presence jumps off the screen. That’s true even in small roles in “Annie Hall” and “Time Bandits.”

    By Esther Zuckerman

     
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