This week in trailers: Tom Hanks pitches to the King of Saudi Arabia; Elijah Wood and Nicolas Cage’s cops go dirty after stumbling after a bank vault; and Oscar-winning director Hany Abu-Assad retells the life of Arab Idol and Palestinian artist Mohammad Assaf.
Here are the past week’s trailers of films we think should be in your radar.
A Hologram For The King
Tom Tykwer directs the Tom Hanks-starring film adaptation of Dave Eggers’ novel A Hologram For The King. Three names in one sentence that peak your interest. Check out the trailer:
The Idol
The story of Palestinian singer Mohammad Assaf, as captured in a film by Omer-director Hany Abu-Assad. This trailer brims with both hope and cynicism; with both a false sense of triumph and defeat.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xF0Fh3WU5LI
Hardcore Henry
Not sure what to feel about this, which I guess is not at all reassuring. If anything with enough traction, Hardcore Henry will potentially foster discussions of first-person perspectives in cinema, which in large part thanks to the advent of found-footage as well.
Presenting Princess Shaw
Ido Haar’s documentary on YouTuber Princess Shaw looks promising; in mere minutes through the trailer you recognize from where the woman’s ideals and dreams root. Take a look:
Adam Green’s Alladin
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Captain America: Civil War
In which “hey, guys” will no longer be just “hey, guys.” Not anymore.
The Trust
In Alex and Benjamin Brewer’s The Trust, Elijah Wood and Nicolas Cage are baddies in blue who stumble “at the heart of the American Dream”―a vague movie line yet again by ol’ Cage. Does he mean stealing from your fellow Americans-American Dream? I don’t know, but he does look fun in this.
The Corpse Of Anna Fritz
Hèctor Hernández Vicens’ horror drama about what seems to be a band of necrophiles looking to have a night of fun with The Corpse Of Anna Fritz. Looks intense. Looks wierd. Looks deranged. I’m in.
Kubo and the Two Strings
Laika’s latest effort is a coming-of-age samurai movie directed by resident lead animator Trevor Knight (Coraline, The Boxtrolls). The hook? It looks Laika-gorgeous, which is one reason to see it, but there’s Kubo’s story, too: after being whirled away from his hometown, Kubo (Art Parkinson) journeys to find his father’s legendary armor. The young samurai is accompanied by an irascible chimp (Charlize Theron) and a bow-and-arrow-wielding bug (Matthew McConaughey―yes, this Matt. I myself can’t place this one just yet). So…The Wizard Of Oz, from a young boy’s perspective? I don’t know. But this looks good.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMmrKORgNFc