Sami Kuokkanen Juno Films
Finland’s official Oscar submission, the biopic “Tove” tells the story of the early years in the career and love life of Tove Jansson, artist and writer of beloved children’s books about creatures called Moomins. We first meet Tove (an elfin, appealing Alma Poysti) in 1944 Helsinki, when the first doodles of the characters that would come to define her appear in her notebook while she’s in a fallout shelter. The movie then jumps to the postwar years, during which the free-spirited bohemian struggled as a painter, fighting to come out of the shadow of her father, a well-known sculptor, and pushing against bourgeois convention. Tove takes a lover, married progressive journalist Atos Wirtanen (Shanti Roney), but is unwilling to marry him when he divorces his wife. Meanwhile, she falls even harder for the theater director Vivica Bandler (Krista Kosonen), also married and also unable to be monogamous. “Tove” mostly concerns these relationships and their formative influence on Tove’s art: Atos is said to have given her the inspiration for Snufkin, the philosophical, pipe-smoking vagabond; and Vivica and Tove are Thingumy and Bob, inseparable identical twins who speak their own private language. But “Tove” is not a kids’ movie. There’s just enough Moomin content to keep adult fans happy — Jansson went on to become a global publishing phenomenon, spawning Moomin merchandise and TV shows — but it’s really the story of someone growing into her own as an artist and a woman. Tove doesn’t even meet Tuulikki Pietila (Joanna Haartti), the woman who would become Tove’s life partner, until near the end of the film. Whether you’re a die-hard Moomin fan or never heard of them, “Tove” tells a beautiful tale — not of being, but becoming, yourself. Unrated. Available at afisilver.afi.com. Contains, nudity, sensuality and smoking. In English, Swedish, Finnish and French with subtitles. 1o0 minutes.
— Michael O’Sullivan
Also streaming
Strand Releasing
Pepito Produzioni
Justin Korovkin, left, and Giulia Melillo in “Bad Tales.”
The Italian drama “Bad Tales” is ultimately a thriller, structured as a loose collection of interconnected vignettes about working- and middle-class families in the suburbs of Rome. Slant magazine calls a “slippery excavation of suburban Italian disaffection.” Unrated. Available at afisilver.afi.com and virtualavalon.org. In Italian with subtitles. 98 minutes.
Netflix
Johan Rockstrom in “Breaking Boundaries: The Science of Our Planet.”
Netflix’s third collaboration with natural historian and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough, the documentary “Breaking Boundaries: The Science of Our Planet” focuses on Swedish environmental scientist Johan Rockstrom, whose work posits that there are limits to the Earth’s ecological systems that should not be crossed. TV-PG. Available on Netflix. 73 minutes.
Chris Westlund
Hulu
Transgender student track star Andraya Yearwood is featured in the documentary “Changing the Game.”
The documentary “Changing the Game” profiles three transgender teen athletes, going beyond the dehumanizing headlines, according to IndieWire, to “show the real people affected by harmful anti-trans policies or lack of any meaningful legal protection.” TV-14. Available on Hulu. 91 minutes.
Samuel Goldwyn Films
Margate House Films
Jonathan Rhys Meyers in “Edge of the World.”
Jonathan Rhys Meyers stars in “Edge of the World,” a biopic about Englishman James Brooke, who, in 1839, left Victorian England to become, in a series of improbable events, the Rajah of Sarawak in Borneo. According to Movie Nation, the actor “makes the hero conflicted and riveting and maybe ahead of his time.” Unrated. Available on various streaming platforms. 104 minutes.
Lionsgate Home Entertainment
Dylan O'Brien in “Flashback.”
Dylan O’Brien (“The Maze Runner”) stars in “Flashback,” a Canadian sci-fi flick about a drug that enables the hero to simultaneously live in different time periods — all the better to unravel the truth about a girl who disappeared in high school (Maika Monroe of “It Follows”). The Guardian calls it “a confusing but compelling multiverse thriller.” R. Available on various streaming platforms. Contains drug use, strong language throughout, brief sexual material and nudity. 98 minutes.
Nagoya Broadcasting Network
Mountain Gate Productions
Win Morisaki, second from left, in “The Real Thing.”
Originally produced as a 10-part TV series and edited down to just under four hours for the movie theater, the comic book-inspired “The Real Thing” is a Japanese romantic drama about an office worker (Win Morisaki) whose life is upended by a femme fatale (Kaho Tsuchimura) he saves from being hit by a train. The characters, according to the Hollywood Reporter, “never let us forget their origins in comics and TV, always a bit on the side of stereotypes and stock characters, who are practically impossible to care about in any real sense.” Unrated. Available at afisilver.afi.com. In Japanese with subtitles. 232 minutes.
Erik Pütsep
Greenwich Entertainment
Professional skier and BASE jumper Matthias Giraud is the subject and namesake of the documentary “Super Frenchie.”
“Super Frenchie” is a documentary portrait of professional skier and BASE jumping daredevil Matthias Giraud, known as Super Frenchie. “This is an exciting, terrifying and incredibly inspiring film about being brave and living out your dream no matter the cost,” writes the Irish Film Critic. “If you love Sunshine Superman,’ ‘Waiting for Lightning’ or ‘Man on Wire,’ this film will definitely become one of your favorites.” Unrated. Available at afisilver.afi.com. 77 minutes.
Saban Films
A scene from “Under the Stadium Lights.”
“Under the Stadium Lights” stars Laurence Fishburne and Milo Gibson (son of Mel) in the true story of an underdog high school football team from Abilene, Tex., that, against the odds, went on to win the 2009 state championship. PG-13. Available on various streaming platforms. Contains some mature thematic elements, violence and bloody images, drug material and coarse language. 108 minutes.
IFC Films
Schramm Film
Paula Beer in “Undine.”
Taking its name from the water sprite of European folklore — who can transform into a human woman (Paula Beer) when she falls in love with a man — “Undine,” by German filmmaker Christian Petzold (“Transit”), sets the tale in contemporary Berlin. Variety call it an “overripe, female-centered romance.” Unrated. Available on various streaming platforms. In German with subtitles. 90 minutes.
"Movies" - Google News
June 02, 2021 at 02:00PM
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New movies to stream this week: ‘Tove,’ ‘Flashback’ and more - Washington Post
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