This Week In Trailers: ‘The B.F.G.’, ‘Just The 3 Of Us’; ‘Rogue One’; and more!

This Week In Trailers: ‘The B.F.G.’, ‘Just The 3 Of Us’; ‘Rogue One’; and more!

O.K., we have much to cover. This week in trailers is an interesting mix of stories of fatherhood: John Lloyd Cruz fathers Jennylyn Mercado’s child in the rom-com Just The 3 Of Us; Mel Gibson, in Jean-Francois Richet’s Blood Father, pours out his aggressions at his daughter’s captors; and Billy Burke’s rising television host becomes an instant cult patriarch in the independent sleeper Divine Access.

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Here are all the trailers we want to keep you up to speed on…

The B.F.G.

The freshly released trailer for Steven Spielberg’s The B.F.G. (that’s short  for “Big Friendly Giant” in case you’re wondering) assert one of many assumptions about the new, gargantuan Disney spectacle. No filmmaker seems more fit to direct it, than the one who makes films that are, for better or for worse, “populist” after a fashion. The said trailer is a perfect package a film and a filmmaker perfect for one another. Take a look:

Kill Zone 2

If you haven’t seen the first Kill Zone movie—a project bred on the heydays of Korean action, and also the forthcoming migration of action stars to Hollywood—Pou-Soi Cheang’s flashy sequel seems to offer enough reasons to look back. A caveat, though: Donnie Yen is nowhere to be found in the film, but then there’s Tony Jaa at the forefront. You’re not exactly missing out.

Here’s the trailer:

The Golden Age

“I think he wanted to be vehemently loathed,” tells one of the talk-heads in Justin Connor’s The Golden Age, a mockumentary about a spiritual musician dropped by his label due to his subversive comments on religion, vegetarianism, and corporate greed. It’s intriguing stuff, at least with how the trailer presents it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUDqrSJuZuE

Just The 3 Of Us

There’s little comfort in seeing a woman going the extremes to get child support, and even less in seeing a man actively dismissing said woman. Yet, somehow, this is the story in which Star Cinema has John Lloyd Cruz and Jennylyn Mercado team together. If anything, though, I believe in Cruz’s ability to deliver enough spark, and Mercado enough snark into the new Cathy Garcia-Molina film to call it a good day for rom-coms.

Check out the trailer:

Manhattan Night

Yet another thriller from yet another child of Brian De Palma cinema. I’m not complaining, obviously. This one, directed by Brian DeCubellis and starring Adrien Brody and Jennifer Beals, looks immensely riveting.

Blood Father

At the center of Jean-Francois Richet’s Blood Father is an angry Mel Gibson; and he’s out for blood. There’s your reason to buy a ticket. There’s Richet, too—a skilled filmmaker behind the terrific Mesrine films and the (let’s be honest) decent 2005 Assault on Precinct 13 remake that starred Laurence Fishburne and Ethan Hawke. But yeah, you’ll probably come in because of Mel Gibson and his outpouring of aggression. Nothing’s more meta than that.

Unlocking the Cage

The documentary pivots around a group of nonprofit lawyers who take nonhuman clients to advocate “person-hood” of select animals in the United States. Pretty bold stuff.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKHheefCWMU

Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising

This should have been just titled Dirty Dancing with Zac Efron and drive a bajillion times larger box office.

Divine Access

Billy Burke stars as a television personality turned cult patriarch in Steven Chester Prince’s directorial debut Divine Access. Indeed some intriguing material, aided by promising performances from Burke, Gary Cole, and Patrick Warburton.

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

This looks good, I’m not even going to lie.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wji-BZ0oCwg

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