This week's pick
Canyon
Lithuanian sniper Drasa (Anya Taylor Joy) and retired US Marine Sharpshooter Levi (Miles Terror) are separately selected for the same finest job. They are located on the other side – one run by Russia and another American – their remote meet cutes develop into romance beyond the gap. Scott Derrickson's sophisticated horror thriller features plenty of Tracer bullet gunfire and squeeze combat with the mystical creatures that live below, but Taylor Joy and Terror's chemistry happens to be a very skilled murder It's a sexy pair. .
Now Apple TV+
Compartment No. 6
The movie on the train set is a drama Slam Dunk. There is an enclosed space that forces the characters to interact, but in the bid film of Zhuhokousmanen, the ever-changing landscape of the journey is personal in a soft film from Moscow to Marmansk in the deep winter. It brings about change. In the case of Finnish archaeology student Laura (Sedi Haarla), it starts with ostensibly sharing a compartment with the young Russian ryoka (Yura Borisov of Anora), a young rose, in this case. A brief encounter leads her to the realization of another person's life and to the opportunity to reevaluate her. A first class story.
Saturday, February 15th, 10:45pm, BBC 4
Nurse Betty
In something like Neil Lovete's tasty dark comedy drama, she shows a range rarely seen on those Britcoms, so it's a shame that Rene Zelweger's career is defined solely by Bridget Jones is. Her Betty is a Kansas waitress obsessed with hospital soap. After the shocking incident, she enters a changed state that she considers the TV drama to be authentic and sets out for LA to “win” the main character (slim-slurped Greg Kinnear). A nods to the Wizard of Oz as Betty works through the mental breakdown of her fantasy.
Saturday, February 15th, 1:40am, Comedy Central
Take away peace
Written and co-starring with director Chiwetel Ejiofor, this drama “based on a true story” definitely qualifies as a labor of love for the actor. It traces the youth and young adulthood of the academically talented New Jersey child Rob (a charismatic turn from Jay Will of Tulsa King). It's tragic yet inspirational as Rob employs a variety of personas, including Yale students, real estate developers, teachers and even Protowalter's white drug chemist, while pursuing his father's lawsuit. Give it.
Wednesday, February 19th, Paramount+
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Shaida
Iranian-born filmmaker Nura Niasari has made this guaranteed debut feature a childhood experience living in a women's shelter in Australia. The heart-wrenching Zal Amir Ebrahimi escapes her abusive husband while studying in Melbourne, and shelters Iranian student Shaida with her daughter Mona (Selina Zahedonia) and other troubled souls. I'll play it. But that's not all trauma, as Sheida and Mona ignore the roots by maintaining their hometown traditions.
Wednesday, February 19th, 1:35am, Film 4
Vesper
Kristina Buožytė and Bruno Samper's adult sci-fi film combines imaginative design with an f-tale feel. It is a dystopian story set in a new dark age with genetically mutated ecosystems and fortresses that control a few viable crops. Teenager Vesper (Rafiera Chapman) survives in a country shed, a country shed, to keep out of the way of local big wigs. However, she has the scientific skills to provide hope for the future, especially after meeting the mysterious Citadel resident (Rosy McEwen).
Thursday, February 20th, 9pm, Film 4
Lady Killer
The final classic of Ealing Studios' Golden Age, Alexander McKendrick's pick-in comedy pits a gang of robbers against a sweet old man who lives near King's Cross Station in London. Alec Guinness is the most famous name, playing the leader Professor Marcus, but as Cecil Parker, Herbert Rom and Peter Sellers are also part of the crew of the theater, dramatically, the group's efforts is. Katie Johnson is the terrifying wife Wilberforce who rents a room to Marcus's “string quintet” while planning her next move, proving her unconscious nemesis. SW
Thursday, February 20th, 9pm, Sky Arts





