😍 2022-09-24 14:00:00 – Paris/France.
Fall has finally arrived, and with it comes a whole season of movies to choose from. Before we can get to that, though, we need to pick the best of what's airing in September before it flies away like so many leaves.
We have a fantastic selection of movies to choose from in the form of David Prior's 2020 Horror Movie The empty manby Quentin Tarantino Kill Bill: Volume 1 et 2and Michael Bay's action thriller Ambulancewithout forgetting classics such as the avant-garde masterpiece by Alain Resnais Last year in Marienbad1999 The momieand more.
Without further ado, here are 19 of the best movies to watch before they go to Streaming in September.
Ambulance
Photo: Andrew Cooper/Universal Pictures
One of the best movies of 2022 is leaving the Streaming, so grab it while you can. Michael Bay is back at his leanest and meanest, with a well-contained car chase thriller, groundbreaking drone camera work, and a deliciously messy performance from Jake Gyllenhaal. —Pete Volk
In our opinion:
AmbulanceThe greatest strength of is the speed with which it creates tension. The plot and main characters are put together with rapid efficiency to get us into the action as quickly as possible, and the pacing and pressure builds steadily from there. The film's structure has an inherent momentum that Bay supercharges with his relentless cinematic energy. The middle third of the film, as the first leg of the chase and the tensions inside the ambulance reach a simultaneous climax, is truly breathless. But it's just not possible to sustain that level of excitement for such a long duration, and the tune drops out of the film towards the end, especially after some over-developed plot mechanics force the ambulance to stop. and start over more than once. Bay and screenwriter Chris Fedak didn't learn The rapidityThe lesson of: Never stop riding.
Ambulance leaves Peacock on September 30.
Batman Begins and The Dark Knight
Picture: Warner Bros.
The first two entries in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy are generally considered the best, and they're the ones leaving Hulu at the end of this month. For my money Batman begins is the best of the three: a rare superhero origin story that actually works. The scene where a young Bruce Wayne trains with the League of Shadows, hiding among a mass of ninja bodies, is a record. The black Knight is also quite memorable, but you probably don't need me to tell you that. —PV
Batman begins et The black Knight leaving Hulu on September 30.
boogie nights
Picture: New Line Cinema, Warner Home Video
Paul Thomas Anderson's 1997 comedy-drama boogie nights traces the rise and fall of the "golden age" of pornography through the story of Eddie Adams (Mark Wahlberg), a young porn star who rises in the industry under the alias "Dirk Diggler” to be defeated by drugs and selfishness. Blending real historical tales with fiction, Anderson's riveting period film catapulted her career into stardom and earned three Oscar nominations. With stunning performances from Burt Reynolds, Don Cheadle and longtime collaborator Philip Seymour Hoffman, boogie nights unquestionably ranks among Anderson's finest films to date. —Toussaint Egan
boogie nights quits Netflix the September 30.
Constantin
Image: Warner Bros. Pictures
John Constantine would be back in the cinema. Deadline reported earlier this week that star Keanu Reeves and director Francis Lawrence will return to do a Constantin sequel, with a screenplay written by Akiva Goldsman. The first film is a deliciously cheesy fun time, and Reeves' belated reassessment as a leading man benefits his performance in Constantin pretty good. But don't overlook the supporting cast: Peter Stormare absolutely reigns supreme as Lucifer Morningstar, and Tilda Swinton, Djimon Hounsou, and Rachel Weisz build a stellar ensemble. —PV
Constantin quits Netflix the September 30.
Doom 2
Image: First video
Doom 2sequel to the smash hit of 2004 Doom, is one of the most exciting cinematic experiences you could afford. Breaking Bollywood box office records upon release, it's a motorbike-centric heist film with terrific action sets, jaw-dropping musical numbers, stunning motorbike stunts and a little something special. for everyone.
A Sneak Peek: The film opens with a train heist, as Mr. A (Hrithik Roshan, incredibly attractive and charming as always), dresses up as Queen Elizabeth steal the queen's crown in the middle of the Namib desert. Doom 2 then immediately cuts to one of the most electric musical numbers of this century, with Roshan showing why he is one of the great movie stars and dancers of his generation. —PV
Doom 2 leaves Prime Video on September 30.
The empty man
Image: Walt Disney Studios Films
Director David Prior's feature debut is the scariest movie of 2020 and one of the best. The film's main story follows a man named James Lasombra (James Badge Dale) as he searches for a missing girl. During the case, he hears of a legend of a dark figure called the Empty Man, who stalks anyone who sees him for three days before he strikes. While that premise alone might be good for a pretty creepy movie, Prior blasts the concept into something truly special, spanning the world - in an outstanding 15-minute prologue - and finally bringing in a cult whose leader could have supernatural powers. Despite none of these elements making sense together on paper, Prior feels like all three are part of a cohesive and terrifying story. —Austen Goslin
The empty man leaves HBO Max on September 30.
groundhog day
Picture: Columbia Pictures
A pioneer of time loop films, groundhog day is equally fun and influential. Although it has spawned many pleasing imitations, such as Palm Springs and the Happy Death Day franchise, it's hard to beat the Bill Murray-led original. Although it's primarily a comedy (and it's certainly funny), this movie works in large part because of how it works with other genres: the situation Phil finds himself in from Bill Murray is truly terrifying, and the film acknowledges him, capable of playing him through tension, laughs and ultimately, tender romance. —PV
groundhog day leaves Hulu on September 30.
Kill Bill: volumes 1 and 2
Photo: Andrew Cooper/Miramax Films
Quentin Tarantino's neo-Western martial arts revenge thriller broke into action cinema when it premiered in 2003. Heavily inspired by the 1973s Lady Snowblood, the film stars frequent Tarantino collaborator Uma Thurman as the Bride, a former killer who wakes from a coma four years after being mercilessly attacked by her castmates on her wedding day. Vowing revenge, she embarks on a worldwide manhunt to hunt down and kill her attackers before exacting revenge on her ultimate target: Bill (David Carradine), her former mentor and lover.
Inimitably elegant and ruthlessly violent, Kill Bill combines influences as far-flung as Hong Kong kung fu films, Western revenge dramas and cartoons to create a film that is confidently among Tarantino's finest. -YOU
Kill Bill: Volume 1 et 2nd volume leaving HBO Max on September 30.
Last year in Marienbad
Image: Criteria Collection
Alain Resnais' 1961 avant-garde romance mystery stars Giorgio Albertazzi and Delphine Seyrig as a man and woman who, upon meeting in a mysterious and isolated castle somewhere in the French countryside, retrace their memories in order to discern the truth. met years ago and fell in love. Bold in its non-sequential experiments and dreamlike visuals, Last year in Marienbad is a complex cinematic mystery about the unreliability of objective truth when it comes to matters of the heart and a dazzling cinematic mystery of ornate beauty. -YOU
Last year in Marienbad leaves Criterion Channel on September 30.
Michael Clayton
Image: Warner Bros. Pictures
Excited for Andor? Showrunner Tony Gilroy, who co-wrote A thug, wrote and directed one of the best legal thrillers of the 21st century in his directorial debut. George Clooney is Michael Clayton, a corporate fixer who is sent to straighten out a lawyer suffering from an episode. When Clayton uncovers a much deeper scheme at play, it threatens everything he knows.
One of Clooney's best performances, the film also features excellent supporting roles from Tom Wilkinson (playing the aforementioned troubled lawyer), Tilda Swinton, and the great Sydney Pollack. It's a tight, tense conspiracy thriller, reminiscent of the work of Alan J. Pakula and other titans of the genre. —PV
Michael Clayton leaves HBO Max on September 30.
The momie
Image: Universal Images
Oh, The Mummy, The momie — how can I even begin to proclaim my love for The momie? The Mummy is lovely. It's a romantic (and fictionalized) getaway that begins as a period piece before morphing into a fantasy adventure (much like my other beloved, Pirates of the Caribbean). Brendan Fraser plays dashing thug Rick O'Connell and Rachel Weisz plays plucky librarian Evelyn Carnahan, with John Hannah as her clumsy brother. It's simply fun, even if the historical aspect is not super accurate and even if a lot of things don't really make sense. Fend off a scary mummy with a cat? Classic! Creepy flesh-eating beetles? Surprising! Evelyn is drunk and passionate “I am a librarian! " Trek? Tremendous! —Petrana Radulovic
The momie leaves Peacock on September 30.
The outpost
Picture: Screen Media Films
Based on a true story, this well-crafted war thriller follows soldiers in a US Army outpost in Afghanistan that is essentially a death trap, surrounded on all sides by mountains, with little strategic reason to be. the. The film is as much about the futility of war and the recklessness of those who make the decisions as it is about camaraderie and tense action. With excellent performances from Scott Eastwood and Caleb Landry Jones (and even Orlando Bloom!), and a moving moral focus on people placed in an unjustifiable position (like, literally,…
SOURCE: Reviews News
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