What’s new to VOD and streaming this weekend: July 2 to 4, 2021

This week's roundup includes reviews of Summer Of Soul, No Sudden Move, Black Conflux, and Werewolves Within

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      Here are our picks for the best new movies coming out this week, plus everything new to VOD and streaming platforms for the weekend of July 2.

      Summer of Soul (… Or When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

      (Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson)

      As a musician, podcaster and author, the Roots drummer and main man Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson has a way of taking the intricacies of musicianship or seemingly obscure behind-the-music stories and finding something profound. His Sundance Grand Jury Prize-winning documentary debut Summer Of Soul, about the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival, essentially lets him do this at feature-length, resulting in a perfect equilibrium between stunning performance footage and insightful musical and social analysis.

      If you’ve never heard of the Harlem Cultural Festival, you’re not alone. Eclipsed by Woodstock in the same year, the multi-weekend event featuring a stylistically diverse lineup, including Nina Simone, Mahalia Jackson, Sly and the Family Stone, the Staple Singers, the Fifth Dimension, and Stevie Wonder. The performances were professionally shot by festival producer Hal Tulchin, but the footage languished in storage for 50 years thanks to disinterest in the “Black Woodstock”. In just under two hours, Thompson zooms both out and in, showing how the tense political climate, conceptions of Black identity and shifting social mores influenced the music and fashions of the era—and vice versa. 

      What makes Summer Of Soul so compelling is many of the attendees and artists interviewed react to seeing the footage for the first time, so the talking heads tap a direct, emotionally charged pulse that is very much in line with not only the performances, but conversations around reclamation and Black identity and artistry today. An essential movie for music fans. 117 min. Now available to stream on Disney+ Canada. (Kevin Ritchie)

       

      No Sudden Move

      (Steven Soderbergh)

      In 1950s Detroit, an ex-convict (Don Cheadle) looking for a quick score takes a job holding an accountant’s family hostage—but when things go sideways, he and another mug (Benicio Del Toro) have to figure out what went wrong…and who set them up to take the fall. Ed Solomon’s script feels like an adaptation of some long-lost collaboration between Elmore Leonard and James Ellroy, using a riff on the Humphrey Bogart thriller The Desperate Hours to launch into a more sophisticated thriller with strategies playing out across racial, political and socioeconomic lines. And in its execution Soderbergh (once again operating as his own cinematographer and editor) undercuts the playfulness of his heist movies with the life-and-death stakes of his crime dramas The Underneath and Traffic, tapping actors like David Harbour, Kieran Culkin, Brendan Fraser, Amy Seimetz, Jon Hamm, Ray Liotta, Bill Duke, and Uncut Gems’ Julia Fox to make sure every character has a life beyond their scenes. But it’s Cheadle’s picture from start to finish, his wary, electric presence perfectly suited to the role of a man trying to find an exploitable angle in a scheme he only barely understands. 115 min. Now available to stream on Crave. (Norman Wilner)

      Werewolves Within

      (Josh Ruben)

      Ruben follows his dazzling no-budget Scare Me with this somewhat more ambitious but equally eccentric horror-comedy about a handful of weirdos, isolated in a B&B during a snowstorm, trying to figure out if there’s a werewolf in their midst—and if so, who it is. Veep’s Sam Richardson and Other Space’s Milana Vayntrub are a delight as the ostensible authority figures, a timid but kind-hearted park ranger and a more free-spirited letter carrier who serves as his guide to the community; Michaela Watkins, Sarah Burns, Cheyenne Jackson, Harvey Guillén, and Catherine Curtin are among the colourful locals. Mishna Wolff’s script mashes up the '70s shut-in classic The Beast Must Die with the goofy spirit of Clue and Knives Out, mining the absurd conflicts that result when outsized personalities start pointing fingers (and firearms) at each other. And Ruben orchestrates the various discoveries, confrontations and betrayals with a genuine admiration for the clichés of this particular subgenre. Werewolves Within is more playful than brutal, so gorehounds might be disappointed at the lack of on-screen carnage. But hopefully they’ll be too caught up in the story to mind. 97 min. Now available to stream on IFC Films Unlimited and Apple TV(NW)

      Available on VOD

      Bonneville

      Jessica Lange, Kathy Bates, Joan Allen; directed by Christopher N. Rowley

      Apple TVGoogle Play

      The Enormity Of Life

      Breckin Meyer, Emily Kinney, Giselle Eisenberg; directed by Eric Swinderman

      Apple TVGoogle Play

      First Date

      Tyson Brown, Shelby Duclos, Jesse Janzen; directed by Manuel Crosby and Darren Knapp

      Apple TVCineplexGoogle Play

      The God Committee

      Kelsey Grammer, Julia Stiles, Janeane Garofalo; directed by Austin Stark

      Apple TVGoogle Play

      Let Us In

      Makenzie Moss, Siena Agudong, Tobin Bell; directed by Craig Moss

      Apple TVCineplexGoogle Play

      Limbo

      Amir El-Masry, Vikash Bhai, Ola Orebiyi; directed by Ben Sharrock

      Apple TVCineplexGoogle Play

      Long Story Short

      Rafe Spall, Zahra Newman, Ronny Chieng; directed by Josh Lawson

      Apple TVCineplexGoogle Play

      Sun Children

      Rouhollah Zamani, Abolfazl Shirzad, Shamila Shirzad; directed by Majid Majidi

      Apple TVCineplexGoogle Play

      Werewolves Within

      Sam Richardson, Milana Vayntrub, Harvey Guillén; directed by Josh Ruben

      IFC Films Unlimited on Amazon Prime Video CanadaApple TV

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