Buzz Blog | Salt Lake City Weekly

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Film Reviews: New Releases for March 28

A Working Man, The Woman in the Yard, The Penguin Lessons, Death of a Unicorn, Audrey's Children
Audrey’s Children *** A lot of little things can add up to a potentially formulaic biopic feeling just a notch above its kin, and this profile of pioneering pediatric oncologist and Ronald McDonald House co-founder Dr. Audrey Evans (Natalie Dormer) takes the edge of almost all of the possible clichés. It opens in 1969, with Dr. Evans joining the staff of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and beginning the research into combination chemotherapy that would revolutionize treatment of childhood cancer. Director Ami Canaan Mann and screenwriter Julia Fisher Farbman aren’t shy about focusing on the science involved; they refuse to dumb down their terminology, and the discoveries Dr. Evans and her colleagues make are treated as the process of hard work, rather than simplistic “a-ha” moments.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Film Reviews: New Releases for March 21

Snow White, The Alto Knights, Locked, The Assessment, On Becoming a Guinea Fowl and more
The Alto Knights ** All actors want a challenge, so maybe it sounded interesting in theory to Robert DeNiro to attempt a variation on GoodFellas where he played both his character and Joe Pesci’s character. He’s back working with writer Nicholas Pileggi in a biographical drama about 1950s New York gangsters Frank Costello and Vito Genovese (both played by DeNiro), childhood friends who come into conflict after Genovese returns from exile overseas after the war and expects to get control of his criminal empire back from Costello.

Thursday, March 13, 2025

Film Reviews: New Releases for March 14

Black Bag, Novocaine, The Electric State, The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie, Control Freak
Black Bag ***1/2 After a couple of underwhelming collaborations in Kimi and Presence, director Steven Soderbergh and writer David Koepp hit paydirt with a satisfying espionage caper that doubles as an effective portrait of relationship trust and fidelity. Michael Fassbender plays George Woodhouse, a British intelligence agent tasked with finding the mole who may have sold off a dangerous government technology—but when he’s handed the list of five prime suspects, it includes his wife and fellow government spook, Kathryn (Cate Blanchett).

Monday, March 10, 2025

Concert Review: Heart at Maverik Center

Even injury can't stop the veteran rockers from putting on a killer show
There’s nothing like the buzz of anticipation that builds up before a show.

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Film Reviews: New Releases for March 7

Mickey 17, The Rule of Jenny Pen, Queen of the Ring, CHAOS: The Manson Murders and more
CHAOS: The Manson Murders **1/2 Generally speaking, Errol Morris’s documentaries have been at their best when he’s able to turn his Interrotron camera on interesting (and sometimes awful) people and just let them talk—which is why it seems so odd that Morris chooses to sideline the person who inspired this movie for so long. The title comes from a 2019 book by writer Tom O’Neill, inspired by his research into the infamous 1969 Southern California murders by members of the “Manson family,” and his subsequent theory that Manson was somehow connected to U.S. government research into mind control, perhaps as a way to discredit the anti-war movement.

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