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Ratings as appeared in Beacon Journal fi...
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Captains announced
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Peek blows out his knee
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Indians lose 4-2 to White Sox
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Bowie evens series 1-1; Hafner to play with Aeros Friday at Canal Park
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Singletary suspended and other notes
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OSU v. YSU - Third Quarter
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Conventions Over; Race Begins Anew
All Da King's Men:
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Palin: "Future" of GOP
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Request for Publications - Fire, Police, & Job Analysis
Akrocentric:
"Sunflower," a poem by Frank Steele
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Rhythm game info bonanza
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Pitbull Moose Party
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Michelle is looking for a cabin or B & B off I-75 in Northwest Ohio.
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LeRoi Moore, Dave Matthews Band saxophonist dies
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ICSC Columbus
Published on Friday, Jul 25, 2008
Ratings as appeared in Beacon Journal film critic and wire-service reviews:
♥=Weak
♥♥=Mediocre
♥♥♥=Worth Seeing
♥♥♥♥=Shouldn't Be Missed
Opening today
FUGITIVE PIECES — ♥♥♥1/2
(R — violence and some nudity) A lovely film that glides seamlessly between past and present, linking a little Polish boy who sees his family destroyed by the Nazis, with the same character (Stephen Dillane) now an adult in Toronto and obsessed with his memories. With a warm performance by Rade Sherbedgia, as a Greek who rescues him and shares his obsession with the past. But, the film argues, we must somehow seek healing or we cannot be happy. Based on the novel by Anne Michaels. In English, German, Yiddish and Greek with subtitles. 1 hour, 44 minutes.
Cedar Lee
STEP BROTHERS — ♥1/2
(R — crude and sexual content, and pervasive language) Two adult men (Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly) are pulled into a new sibling rivalry after their respective single parents get hitched. 1 hour, 52 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Shaker Square Cinemas, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10, Magic City Drive-In, Midway Twin Drive-In
THE WACKNESS — ♥♥♥
(R — pervasive drug use, language and some sexuality) Wall-to-wall drugs supply the background music for a recent high school graduate (Josh Peck) and his psychiatrist (Ben Kingsley), who accepts payment in grams. There's complication when the kid falls in love with his shrink's stepdaughter (Olivia Thirlby), and another when the doc's wife (Famke Janssen) wants a divorce, and third when the kid's family gets evicted, all in the course of a lazy, crazy 1994 summer. 1 hour, 35 minutes.
Cedar Lee
THE X-FILES: I WANT TO BELIEVE — ♥♥
(PG-13 — violent and disturbing content and thematic material) When an FBI agent goes missing and a priest claims to have visions about the disappearance, disgraced Mulder is called out of hiding and reteamed with skeptical Scully to find the truth. The plot line is flat and predictable, but fans will be happy to see their favorite agents working together again. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Wooster Movies 10, Blue Sky Drive-In
Playing through
next week
BABY MAMA — ♥♥
(PG-13 — crude and sexual humor, language and a drug reference) A career-driven single woman (Tina Fey) hires a surrogate (Amy Poehler) to carry her child to term. 1 hour, 36 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
BRICK LANE — ♥♥♥1/2
(PG-13 — some sexuality, brief strong language) — Monica Ali's best-seller about a 17-year-old Bangladeshi woman (Tannishtha Chatterjee) who leaves her village for an arranged marriage to a fat, balding man at least 20 years older (Satish Kaushik). After another 17 years, true love enters her life through an affair with a younger man, but the usual formulas don't apply, and the husband is not the conventional oppressive beast. Dreamy photography, carefully thought dialogue, a political kick near the end. 1 hour, 41 minutes.
Cedar Lee
THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN — ♥♥♥
(PG — epic battle action, violence) The Pevensie siblings return to Narnia, where they are enlisted to help ward off an evil king and restore the rightful heir to the land's throne, Prince Caspian. 2 hours, 17 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10, Linda Theatre
THE DARK KNIGHT — ♥♥♥3/4
(PG-13 — intense sequences of violence and some menace) Batman isn't a comic book anymore. Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight is a big, thoughtful, pain-laced, violence-streaked, unsettling movie in which the late Heath Ledger's performance as the Joker is one of many virtues. 2 hours, 32 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Great Oaks Cinema, Highland Theatre, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Rolling Acres Cinema, Shaker Square Cinemas, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10, Magic City Drive-In, Midway Twin Drive-In
GET SMART — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — some rude humor, action violence and language) Classic sitcom that cleverly satirized Cold War espionage has been transformed for the big screen into an even smarter vehicle. Steve Carell is in the lead role with Anne Hathaway as Agent 99. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Cinemark Aurora 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Tinseltown USA, Valley View 24
GONZO: THE LIFE AND WORK OF DR. HUNTER S. THOMPSON — ♥♥♥1/2
(R — drug and sexual content, language, some nudity) Documentary about the hell-raising journalist who stood astride the '70s, staggered through the '80s, crawled through the '90s and killed himself in 2005. He was first a legend and then a captive of the legend. This doc by Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side) is all you could wish for in a film about Thompson, except information about how he ingested so many controlled substances, and what he was like when he woke up the next day. 2 hours, 1 minute.
Cedar Lee
HANCOCK — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — some intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, and language) An apathetic, hard-living superhero (Will Smith) hooks up with a public-relations professional who wants to improve the superhero's image. 1 hour, 32 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Rolling Acres Cinema, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Wooster Movies 10, Blue Sky Drive-In, Magic City Drive-In, Midway Drive-In
THE HAPPENING — ♥♥♥
(R — violent and disturbing images) One day in New York people start killing themselves. The survivors flee the city, and Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel find themselves trekking through Pennsylvania farmlands, while the thought develops that the planet's vegetation might be taking its revenge on man. Thoughtful, oddly compelling; too uneventful for some, but it can weave a spell. 1 hour, 31 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
HELLBOY II: THE GOLDEN ARMY — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — sequences of sci-fi action, violence, some language) Guillermo del Toro's Hellboy II: The Golden Army is in every way the equal of his original Hellboy (2004). It's another celebration of his love for bizarre fantasy and diabolical machines. Ron Perlman is strong again in the title role, and del Toro's imagination provides a new array of fantastical creatures. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Cinemark Aurora 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10, Magic City Drive-In
THE INCREDIBLE HULK — ♥♥
(PG-13 — sequences of intense action violence, some frightening sci-fi images, and brief suggestive content) Bruce Banner (Edward Norton) works at controlling the anger that unleashes the Hulk while he tries to find a cure. And he pines over old love Betty Ross (Liv Tyler). But Betty's father, General ''Thunderbolt'' Ross (William Hurt), dreams of using Banner's powers as the basis for a human weapon. While the action sequences are impressive at times, the film is far more dependent on audience nostalgia than creativity. 1 hour, 54 minutes.
Great Oaks Cinema, Jackson Township Movies 10
INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL — ♥♥1/2
(PG-13 — adventure violence, scary images) Harrison Ford returns as the iconic adventurer who picks up a new sidekick (Shia La Beouf) and an old flame (Karen Allen) for this ride. 2 hours, 4 minutes.
Big Picture, Montrose 12
IRON MAN — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — some intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, and brief suggestive content) Robert Downey Jr. dons a metal suit to fight evil in this Marvel comic adaptation directed by Jon Favreau (Elf). With Jeff Bridges, Gwyneth Paltrow and Terrence Howard. 2 hours, 6 minutes.
Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Montrose 12
JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH — ♥♥1/2
(PG — intense adventure action and some scary moments) There is a world inside our own, populated by glowing birds, man-eating plants, giant-fanged fish and a T-Rex. Reaching it via a series of dizzying falls, a geologist and his nephew realize Jules Verne must have seen it before writing his novel. With Brendan Fraser, Josh Hutcherson and Anita Briem. Three-dimensional effects are amazing.
1 hour, 33 minutes. Cinemark Aurora 10, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10
KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL — ♥♥♥1/2
(G) Inspired by one of the American Girl dolls, and just about perfect for its target audience, with a great look, engaging performances, real substance and even a few whispers of political ideas, all surrounding the freshness and charm of Abigail Breslin. Cast has Julia Ormond, Stanley Tucci, Max Thieriot, Chris O'Donnell, Willow Smith, Glenne Headley, Joan Cusack and Wallace Shawn as the snarly local newspaper editor. 1 hour, 44 minutes.
Great Oaks Cinema, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Montrose 12, West Market Plaza 7
KUNG FU PANDA — ♥♥♥
(PG — sequences of martial arts action) Po (Jack Black), a reluctant panda bear, is recruited by a team of kung fu masters and trained in the ways of the ancient martial art to protect the Valley of Peace from an evil snow leopard. 1 hour, 26 minutes.
Big Picture, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Linda Theatre, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill
MADE OF HONOR — ♥1/2
(PG-13 — sexual content and language) Patrick Dempsey discovers he's in love with his best friend (Michelle Monaghan), but it's too late. She's getting ready to marry another man and move overseas. 1 hour, 39 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
MAMMA MIA! — ♥♥1/4
(PG-13 — some sex-related comments) — Movie version of the hit stage musical, with Meryl Streep as the villa owner on a Greek isle and Amanda Seyfried as her about-to-be married daughter. The girl doesn't know who her father is, but finds an old diary and invites three likely candidates to her wedding: Pierce Brosnan, Colin Firth and Stellan Skarsgard. Wall-to-wall ABBA songs. 1 hour, 38 minutes.
Cinemark Aurora 10, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Shaker Square Cinemas, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Wooster Movies 10
MEET DAVE — ♥1/2
(PG — bawdy and suggestive humor, action and some language) A crew of miniature aliens operate a spaceship that has a human form. While trying to save their planet, the aliens encounter a new problem, as their ship becomes smitten with an Earth woman. With Eddie Murphy, Elizabeth Banks and Gabrielle Union. 1 hour, 30 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10, Rolling Acres Cinema, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24
MONGOL — ♥♥♥1/2
(R — sequences of bloody warfare) A ferocious film, blood-soaked, pausing occasionally for passionate romance and more frequently for torture. As a visual spectacle, it is all but overwhelming, putting to shame some of the recent historical epics from Hollywood. If it has a flaw, and it does, it is expressed succinctly by the wife of its hero: ''All Mongols do is kill and steal.'' At the end of two hours, its hero, not yet known as Genghis Khan, has two more movies to go. 2 hours, 6 minutes.
Cedar Lee
MY WINNIPEG — ♥♥♥♥
(No industry rating) A hallucinatory documentary about his hometown by Guy Maddin, ''the mad poet of Manitoba.'' The facts may not all be true, but they're not boring. Starring Ann Savage, the star of the noir classic Detour, in the thankless role of mother. A film like no other — even itself. 1 hour, 20 minutes.
Cedar Lee
NIM'S ISLAND — ♥♥♥
(PG — mild adventure action, brief language) A popular author (Jodie Foster) teams up with the adventure-loving Alex Rover (Gerald Butler) to help a young girl (Abigail Breslin), who lives on an island where her father has gone missing. Two problems the author faces: her crippling fear of leaving her house, and Alex is merely the main character in her best-selling novels. 1 hour, 35 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
PRICELESS — ♥♥
(PG-13 — sexual content, including nudity) An ultimately tasteless, empty story about people who do degrading things to themselves and others. That said, it's all done with clear-eyed insight and a light touch that makes it a palatable comedy with a delightful adult sensibility. With Audrey Tautou and Gad Elmaleh. In French with subtitles. 1 hour, 44 minutes.
Cedar Lee
SEX AND THE CITY: THE MOVIE — ♥♥♥
(R — strong sexual content, graphic nudity, language) Set four years after we last saw the ladies, Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker), Samantha (Kim Cattrall), Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), and Charlotte (Kristin Davis) negotiate their friendships, romances and careers in New York City. At the center of it all is Carrie's pending nuptials to Mr. Big (Chris Noth). 2 hours, 15 minutes.
Montrose 12
SPACE CHIMPS — ♥♥♥
(G) Space Chimps is a goofy animated space opera that sends three U.S. chimpanzee astronauts rocketing to a galaxy, as they say, far, far away. There they encounter strange life forms and the evil Zartog, who has captured an earlier space probe. Not in the same science fiction league as Wall-E, but successful, with lots of whiz-bang action and some witty dialogue. 1 hour, 20 minutes.
Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Wooster Movies 10
THE VISITOR — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — brief strong language) Walter Vale (Richard Jenkins) gets caught up in the lives of a couple of foreigners, who are in the country illegally. The film carries a harsh statement about post-9/11 immigration procedures, and while timely, relevant and compelling, it doesn't overshadow the heart of the story, which is about the human connection. 1 hour, 46 minutes.
Cedar Lee
WALL-E — ♥♥♥1/2
(G) Delightful animated story of a robot, in a world so filled with garbage that humans have escaped into orbiting spaceships. Directed by Andrew Stanton, it is a story that is intelligent and sweet. 1 hour, 38 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Shaker Square Cinemas, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10
WANTED — ♥♥♥
(R — strong bloody violence throughout, pervasive language and some sexuality) Stars James McAvoy as a meek office worker initiated into a secret society of assassins. Mindless, heartless, preposterous, and very well done as a high-tech action thriller. With Angelina Jolie, Morgan Freeman, Common, Terence Stamp. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Big Pictrue, Cinemark Aurora 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Jackson Township Movies 10, Kent Plaza Theatre, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Midway Twin Drive-In
WHAT HAPPENS IN VEGAS — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — some sexual and crude content, language, including a drug reference) A formulaic romantic comedy that would be nothing more than a lame laugher, except for the skill of Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher, who milk this story for all it's worth. This tale of opposites attracting — and finding themselves accidentally hitched in Vegas — is an amusing tale of love and loss, with a $3 million payday. 1 hour, 39 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
Ratings as appeared in Beacon Journal film critic and wire-service reviews:
♥=Weak
♥♥=Mediocre
♥♥♥=Worth Seeing
♥♥♥♥=Shouldn't Be Missed
Opening today
FUGITIVE PIECES — ♥♥♥1/2
(R — violence and some nudity) A lovely film that glides seamlessly between past and present, linking a little Polish boy who sees his family destroyed by the Nazis, with the same character (Stephen Dillane) now an adult in Toronto and obsessed with his memories. With a warm performance by Rade Sherbedgia, as a Greek who rescues him and shares his obsession with the past. But, the film argues, we must somehow seek healing or we cannot be happy. Based on the novel by Anne Michaels. In English, German, Yiddish and Greek with subtitles. 1 hour, 44 minutes.
Cedar Lee
STEP BROTHERS — ♥1/2
(R — crude and sexual content, and pervasive language) Two adult men (Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly) are pulled into a new sibling rivalry after their respective single parents get hitched. 1 hour, 52 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Shaker Square Cinemas, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10, Magic City Drive-In, Midway Twin Drive-In
THE WACKNESS — ♥♥♥
(R — pervasive drug use, language and some sexuality) Wall-to-wall drugs supply the background music for a recent high school graduate (Josh Peck) and his psychiatrist (Ben Kingsley), who accepts payment in grams. There's complication when the kid falls in love with his shrink's stepdaughter (Olivia Thirlby), and another when the doc's wife (Famke Janssen) wants a divorce, and third when the kid's family gets evicted, all in the course of a lazy, crazy 1994 summer. 1 hour, 35 minutes.
Cedar Lee
THE X-FILES: I WANT TO BELIEVE — ♥♥
(PG-13 — violent and disturbing content and thematic material) When an FBI agent goes missing and a priest claims to have visions about the disappearance, disgraced Mulder is called out of hiding and reteamed with skeptical Scully to find the truth. The plot line is flat and predictable, but fans will be happy to see their favorite agents working together again. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Wooster Movies 10, Blue Sky Drive-In
Playing through
next week
BABY MAMA — ♥♥
(PG-13 — crude and sexual humor, language and a drug reference) A career-driven single woman (Tina Fey) hires a surrogate (Amy Poehler) to carry her child to term. 1 hour, 36 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
BRICK LANE — ♥♥♥1/2
(PG-13 — some sexuality, brief strong language) — Monica Ali's best-seller about a 17-year-old Bangladeshi woman (Tannishtha Chatterjee) who leaves her village for an arranged marriage to a fat, balding man at least 20 years older (Satish Kaushik). After another 17 years, true love enters her life through an affair with a younger man, but the usual formulas don't apply, and the husband is not the conventional oppressive beast. Dreamy photography, carefully thought dialogue, a political kick near the end. 1 hour, 41 minutes.
Cedar Lee
THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN — ♥♥♥
(PG — epic battle action, violence) The Pevensie siblings return to Narnia, where they are enlisted to help ward off an evil king and restore the rightful heir to the land's throne, Prince Caspian. 2 hours, 17 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10, Linda Theatre
THE DARK KNIGHT — ♥♥♥3/4
(PG-13 — intense sequences of violence and some menace) Batman isn't a comic book anymore. Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight is a big, thoughtful, pain-laced, violence-streaked, unsettling movie in which the late Heath Ledger's performance as the Joker is one of many virtues. 2 hours, 32 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Great Oaks Cinema, Highland Theatre, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Rolling Acres Cinema, Shaker Square Cinemas, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10, Magic City Drive-In, Midway Twin Drive-In
GET SMART — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — some rude humor, action violence and language) Classic sitcom that cleverly satirized Cold War espionage has been transformed for the big screen into an even smarter vehicle. Steve Carell is in the lead role with Anne Hathaway as Agent 99. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Cinemark Aurora 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Tinseltown USA, Valley View 24
GONZO: THE LIFE AND WORK OF DR. HUNTER S. THOMPSON — ♥♥♥1/2
(R — drug and sexual content, language, some nudity) Documentary about the hell-raising journalist who stood astride the '70s, staggered through the '80s, crawled through the '90s and killed himself in 2005. He was first a legend and then a captive of the legend. This doc by Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side) is all you could wish for in a film about Thompson, except information about how he ingested so many controlled substances, and what he was like when he woke up the next day. 2 hours, 1 minute.
Cedar Lee
HANCOCK — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — some intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, and language) An apathetic, hard-living superhero (Will Smith) hooks up with a public-relations professional who wants to improve the superhero's image. 1 hour, 32 minutes.
Carnation Cinema, Cinemark Aurora 10, Garrettsville Cinemas, Hudson Cinema 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Montrose 12, Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill, Rolling Acres Cinema, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, Wooster Movies 10, Blue Sky Drive-In, Magic City Drive-In, Midway Drive-In
THE HAPPENING — ♥♥♥
(R — violent and disturbing images) One day in New York people start killing themselves. The survivors flee the city, and Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel find themselves trekking through Pennsylvania farmlands, while the thought develops that the planet's vegetation might be taking its revenge on man. Thoughtful, oddly compelling; too uneventful for some, but it can weave a spell. 1 hour, 31 minutes.
Jackson Township Movies 10
HELLBOY II: THE GOLDEN ARMY — ♥♥♥
(PG-13 — sequences of sci-fi action, violence, some language) Guillermo del Toro's Hellboy II: The Golden Army is in every way the equal of his original Hellboy (2004). It's another celebration of his love for bizarre fantasy and diabolical machines. Ron Perlman is strong again in the title role, and del Toro's imagination provides a new array of fantastical creatures. 1 hour, 50 minutes.
Cinemark Aurora 10, Huntington Street Cinema 16, Independence 10, Interstate Park Cinemas 18, Kent Plaza Theatre, Lake Cinemas 8, Macedonia Cinemark 15, Massillon 12, Tinseltown USA, Tower City Cinemas, Valley View 24, West Market Plaza 7, Wooster Movies 10, Magic City Drive-In

