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Boxing Day movies: Sydney Sweeney’s silly thriller, Brendan Fraser returns, Anaconda reboot and more

Jake Wilson and Sandra Hall
Updated ,first published

Movies to watch this week

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Hello and welcome to this week’s film review wrap – the big movies landing in cinemas this week.

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Even Mark Hamill can’t save this sinking script as SpongeBob becomes a pirate

By Jake Wilson

The SpongeBob Movie: The Search For Squarepants
(PG) 95 minutes ★★

How old is SpongeBob SquarePants? As often with beloved cartoon characters, it’s hard to tell (his late creator Stephen Hillenburg originally named him “Spongeboy,” but this was changed for legal reasons before his 1999 TV debut).

He lives alone with his pet sea snail Gary, in a hollowed-out pineapple that somehow drifted down to the ocean floor, and he manages to support himself through his job flipping burgers at the Krusty Krab diner.

Patrick Star (Bill Fagerbakke) and SpongeBob SquarePants (Tom Kenny) in The SpongeBob Movie: Search For SquarePants.

In other respects, he has roughly the level of worldly wisdom that might be expected of a four-year-old, while his high, nasal voice, supplied by the versatile Tom Kenny, recalls fellow excitable man-child Pee-wee Herman.

Jack Black and Paul Rudd get meta in reboot of 1990s schlock-horror Anaconda

By Sandra Hall

Anaconda ★★★
(M), 99 minutes

There’s a ready-made audience for this comic reboot of the 1997 creature feature Anaconda.

The original has become a cult classic treasured among movies that are so bad they’re good, which means fans are watching the new one with an affectionate appreciation of its parodic nods to the original. If you’re among the unconverted, however, you may be less susceptible.

Jack Black in Anaconda, which riffs on the cult-favourite original.

The adventure begins when Griff Griffin (Paul Rudd), an out-of-work actor, tells a few of his old friends that he’s managed to acquire the rights to Anaconda, a picture they’ve all loved since adolescence. Eager to produce a remake, he suggests he and his former girlfriend, Claire (Thandiwe Newton) play the leads, their camera-mad friend Doug (Jack Black) directs and Kenny (Steve Zahn), the fourth member of the group, fills the role of cinematographer.

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Stellan Skarsgård’s family drama attracting awards buzz for good reason

By Sandra Hall

Sentimental Value
★★★★
(M), 135 minutes

In the history of stage fright scenes on screen it would be hard to beat the explosion which ignites the opening of Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value.

Nora Borg (Renate Reinsve) is about to appear in the lead role of a Chekhov play at Oslo’s National Theatre. The house is full and the lights are down when she’s struck with a panic attack so acute that she starts tearing off her costume. After being chased through the backstage corridors by a distraught production staff, she finally gets herself together, the dress is taped up, she strides onstage and after the curtain goes down, she’s rewarded with a standing ovation.

Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in Sentimental Value.Kasper Tuxen / MUBI

Trier and his co-writer, Eskil Vogt, slow things down after that to treat us to another of their discursive but compelling sagas about love, ambition and the melancholy effects of time’s passing. And in the telling, they eventually come up with a complex but satisfying set of reasons for Nora’s spectacular meltdown.

Pretty people do horrible things but Sydney Sweeney’s thriller drifts into parody

By Jake Wilson

The Housemaid
★★½
(MA) 131 minutes

In The Housemaid, Sydney Sweeney is the Cool Girl in jeans who breezes her way into a job at a mansion on the outskirts of New York, and Amanda Seyfried is her chic employer. But neither woman is entirely what she seems, and perhaps the man of the house (Brandon Sklenar), who looks like a daytime soap star, isn’t either.

Freida McFadden’s 2022 novel was a bestseller for a reason, with all the required elements for a stylish battle of wits. But the film adaptation, directed by Paul Feig from a screenplay by Rebecca Sonnenshine, is less a psychological thriller than a heavy parody of one, in the vein of Feig’s 2018 A Simple Favor but with the antic tone less under control.

Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried in The Housemaid: pretty people doing horrible things.Lionsgate via AP

Sweeney is here as a movie star rather than doing stylised character work, but Seyfried mugs as she rarely has since Mean Girls, in make-up that suggests a permanent case of pink-eye – and even she is upstaged by Elizabeth Perkins as her mother-in-law, who looks and acts like Cruella De Ville.

Perfectly cast Brendan Fraser delivers the feels in story of fatherhood

By Sandra Hall

Rental Family ★★★½
(M) 103 minutes

Phillip Vanderploeg (Brendan Fraser), an out-of-work actor living alone in Tokyo, is running out of options when his agent calls with a job offer.

He’s to play one of the mourners at a funeral. He hurries off, arriving late only to see “the corpse” rise from his coffin to smile appreciatively at one particularly heartfelt eulogy.

Shannon Mahina Gorman and Brendan Fraser in Rental Family.Searchlight Pictures

After it’s over, Phillip learns that he’s just witnessed a mock funeral staged by Rental Family, a company catering to people desperate to fill some gap in their lives. The “corpse”, it seems, wanted something to make him feel better and the funeral rehearsal, with its cast of actors delivering fulsome tributes and producing copious crocodile tears, has been a great cheer-up.

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Delightful brass band drama puts a smile on the face

By Stephanie Bunbury

My Brother’s Band ★★★★
(M) 103 minutes

What a sheer delight this film is. It won’t change the world, for sure. Maybe its story of separated brothers reconnecting through music is all a bit too feelgood to feel true. Whatever! Emmanuel Courcol’s Gallic charmer is nevertheless the film we need right now: a story in which people learn to be their best selves; that pays respect to working communities torn apart by the global economy; a story, moreover, centred on a brass band. Because who can resist an oompah-ing trombone, after all? They exist to make us smile.

Pierre Lottin and Benjamin Lavernhe in The Marching Band: separated brothers reconnect through music.© Thibault Grabherr

Benjamin Lavernhe plays Thibaut, a successful conductor in his 40s who suddenly collapses on the podium. He has leukaemia. The only thing that might save him is a bone marrow transplant from a sibling, but Thibaut is adopted. In a series of revelations, snappily conveyed, Thibaut learns he is unrelated to his beloved sister, but that he does have a blood brother out there somewhere, placed in infancy with another family.

By contrast with Thibaut’s comfortable, cultivated upbringing, Jimmy (Pierre Lottin) has grown up in one of the most depressed areas of France, scene of a year-long strike against factory closures ignored by the rest of France. Jimmy is habitually angry with the world; he knows he will soon be out of his own minimum-wage job. His one happy place is the local brass band, where he is the star trombonist.

The discovery of their common love of jazz, the bond that develops between the brothers, an inevitable rift and reconciliation, Jimmy’s growing confidence as a musician and as a man, which allows him to fall in love again: you can see it all coming, but Courcol still manages to surprise us with a stupendous grande finale that makes your heart roll over.

None of this would work without these actors: Lavernhe has a beautiful, mobile face that conveys a sense of mischief in the midst of tragedy, while Lottin’s twitchy machismo gives him a powerful presence. There is heightened emotion in spades here, of course, but no cheap sentiment. A fine Christmas cadeau, indeed.

Hot tip for James Bond turns to directing in gritty London story

By Stephanie Bunbury

Urchin ★★★½
(MA15+) 99 minutes

Harris Dickinson has been hovering on the edge of fame since his riveting turn as a model in Ruben Ostlund’s Triangle of Sadness in 2022; since then, he has romanced Nicole Kidman in Babygirl, been cast as John Lennon in Sam Mendes’ forthcoming Fab Four biopic and is currently the hot tip to be the next James Bond. In between, he has written and directed this very creditable debut feature about homeless Londoner Michael, who skims day to day across a sludge of addiction, jail time and missed human connections.

Harris Dickinson makes his directorial debut with Urchin.

We know nothing about Michael’s background. He makes a phone call when he is arrested, telling someone it’s happened again; we just hear a woman sigh in response. He says he barely went to school, but he is suspiciously articulate. As Michael, Frank Dillane is enigmatic, infuriating, charming, often vile and reliably watchable. An early scene, when he mugs a businessman for his wristwatch, is the story’s anchor; everything else floats free.

What he couldn’t believe, says his victim in a reconciliation meeting a year later, was the violence. Michael doesn’t want to believe it himself, but the memory lurks in him like a poison spring, erupting at random. There are, in fact, a lot of cracks in Michael’s armour of street-smart indifference; a cheesy karaoke song can reduce him to something near tears. Dickinson’s treatment is sympathetic but also clear-eyed; Michael’s humanity includes an inflated sense of grievance that would make anyone sigh.

This back and forth, tick-tocking between episodes of hope and defeat, doesn’t amount to a conventional story arc, but Dickinson – who also appears in the film, playing Michael’s fellow addict Nathan – maintains an unerring pace, kicked along by unpredictable bursts of Alan Myson’s electronic score. Of course, Urchin owes a debt to the British social realist tradition, but there is something altogether stranger going on under its surface. Michael is plagued by visions of sinister violinists and caves where his drugged mind gets lost. Actually, that is when he looks happiest: chemically sated, curled in a foetal position, helplessly waiting to be picked up and loved.

Orwell’s words illuminate new threats to freedom

By Stephanie Bunbury

Orwell: 2+2=5 ★★★½
(M) 119 minutes

“How many fingers am I holding up?” demands Winston Smith’s interrogator in a 1956 film version of 1984. There are four, as on most hands. Under torture, Smith tries to agree to five, but it’s not good enough; his tormentor insists he must truly believe the lie as he says it.

Haitian filmmaker Raoul Peck, whose earlier documentary I Am Not Your Negro about writer James Baldwin earned him an Oscar nomination in 2016, draws on George Orwell’s diaries and texts from his novels Animal Farm and 1984, along with images from film adaptations of the two books, to illuminate current threats to life and liberty. One tyranny – real or imaginary – very much resembles another; bonfires of books, whether in 1930s Germany or Trump’s America, burn the same way in any language.

Orwell: 2+2=5, directed and produced by Raoul Peck, about the life of author George Orwell.Neon

Juxtapositions like these are Peck’s building blocks. The rubble and bodies of civil war Spain cut to similar scenes in Gaza; cinematic renditions of Big Brother dissolve into a discussion of China’s “social credit” surveillance system; Orwell’s recollections – voiced by Damian Lewis – of Eton and his beginnings as “an odious little snob” are placed alongside scenes from a billionaire’s space joyride and a society ball snipped from Lauren Greenfield’s film Generation Wealth. As political critique goes, it’s a mere skim over the obviously bumpy surface of things, but the accumulation of images and excerpts does gather force over two hours to become a convincing roar of protest.

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