Skip to content
  • The Predator in 'The Predator.' (Kimbery French/Twentieth Century Fox)

    The Predator in 'The Predator.' (Kimbery French/Twentieth Century Fox)

  • (L-R) Olivia Munn and Jacob Tremblay in 'The Predator.' (Kimbery...

    (L-R) Olivia Munn and Jacob Tremblay in 'The Predator.' (Kimbery French/Twentieth Century Fox)

  • Actor Jake Busey (L), Sterling K. Brown (2nd from L),...

    Actor Jake Busey (L), Sterling K. Brown (2nd from L), Thomas Jane (3rd from L), Keegan-Michael Kay (4th from L), Trevante Rhodes (3rd from R), Augusto Aguilera (4th from R), Olivia Munn, and director Shane Black (R) on stage for "The Predator" Comic Con panel at the Convention Center in San Diego, July 19, 2018. (CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Images)

  • This image released by Sony Pictures shows Bruce Dern, from...

    Sony Pictures

    This image released by Sony Pictures shows Bruce Dern, from left, Matthew McConaughey, Bel Powley, Richie Merritt and Piper Laurie in a scene from "White Boy Rick." (Scott Garfield/Sony/Columbia Pictures and Studio 8 via AP)

  • This image released by Sony Pictures shows Jonathan Majors, from...

    Sony Pictures

    This image released by Sony Pictures shows Jonathan Majors, from left, Taylour Paige, Richie Merritt, RJ Cyler and YG in a scene from "White Boy Rick." (Scott Garfield/Sony/Columbia Pictures and Studio 8 via AP)

  • This image released by Sony Pictures shows Jonathan Majors, from...

    This image released by Sony Pictures shows Jonathan Majors, from left, Taylour Paige, Richie Merritt, RJ Cyler and YG in a scene from "White Boy Rick." (Scott Garfield/Sony/Columbia Pictures and Studio 8 via AP)

  • This image released by Lionsgate shows Anna Kendrick, left, and...

    Lionsgate

    This image released by Lionsgate shows Anna Kendrick, left, and Blake Lively in a scene from "A Simple Favor." (Peter Iovino/Lionsgate via AP)

  • This image released by Lionsgate shows Anna Kendrick, left, and...

    Lionsgate

    This image released by Lionsgate shows Anna Kendrick, left, and Blake Lively in a scene from "A Simple Favor." (Peter Iovino/Lionsgate via AP)

  • Magnolia Pictures

  • Fishbowl Films

of

Expand
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

CLICK HERE if you are having trouble viewing these photos on a mobile device
A reboot in September? After a bouncing date and 20th Century Fox’s last-minute deletion of a scene featuring an actor who is a sex offender, “The Predator” finally lands in theaters.

Shane Black — the “Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang” and “Nice Guys” writer/director — helms the latest add-on. What’s the plot? A kid unwittingly beckons those alien critters with nasty dental work back to earth, where they mess things (and people) up. Boyd Holbrook, Olivia Munn, Trevante Rhodes and Jacob Tremblay get in on the action. Is it any good? Well, its crazy antics divided critics when it premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.

White Boy Rick” finds Matthew McConaughey messing around with his good looks again in another based-on-a-true story. He plays pops to a teen-aged drug dealer, hustler and later informant. There’s an ’80s soundtrack, so that’s a bonus.

The other big release has a “Gone Girl”/”Girl on a Train” vibe. “A Simple Favor” brings us the always-welcome Anna Kendrick as a blogger who gets chummy with an enigmatic, sinfully rich beauty (Blake Lively), who suddenly vanishes. Henry (“Crazy Rich Asians”) Golding costars as the husband wondering where the dickens she went.  Paul (“Spy”) Feig directs.

That’s it for the bigger releases. But here’s a rundown of movies playing in more limited release:

“American Chaos”: In this politically outraged and outrageous nation, a question that often gets lobbed around is why and how Donald Trump became president. Director James D. Stern attempts to get a bead on that by visiting red states six months prior to the 2016 presidential election.

“Unbroken: Path to Redemption”: Left disappointed by Angelina Jolie’s torturous adaptation of WWII veteran Louis Zamperini’s heroic story about a former Olympian’s steely prison-camp perseverance? This second part explores Zamperini’s faith and forgiveness, adding more textured layers. It’s a sincere and very earnest movie, but it lacks the technical polish and acting punch of Jolie’s very flawed adaptation of Laura Hillenbrand’s book.

“Kusama: Infinity”: In this film bio, director Heather Lenz captures best-selling Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama’s struggle to be taken seriously in a male-dominated profession, and showcases her art and early life.

“Don’t Leave Home”: If you prefer creepy, original horror stories over the variety with buckets of blood and jump shocks, then the luck of the Irish is on your side. An American diorama maker is invited to an Irish estate, where she hangs out with a reclusive, fallen priest involved in a weird missing-child scandal. Her assignment? Create a new work. But that’s just the beginning of the weirdness in writer/director Michael Tully’s effective slow-burner.

“Inventing Tomorrow”: Need to feel better about the future? Laura Nix’s hopeful doc will do the trick. It shadows committed teen inventors trying to make the world a better, more sustainable place to live. The film has not received much fanfare, but it’s a winner. Take your kids and prepare to be inspired.

Netflix continues to champion original content, with two titles worth considering this week and even more ahead.  In the tense drama “The Angel,” which drops Sept. 14, the son-in-law of an Egyptian president leads a double life as an Israeli spy. Sounds like the stuff of a thriller, right? But it’s a true story told by “The Iceman” director Ariel Vromen.

And talk about topical: The documentary “Reversing Roe,” which debuted at the Telluride Film Festival, revisits the landmark 1973 Supreme Court ruling and plunges into the abortion-rights debate at the moment a new high-court appointment hangs in the balance. Annie Sundberg and Ricki Stern direct, with Eva Longoria, producer, director and actor (“Desperate Housewives”), as executive producer. Available to stream Sept. 13.