
“The Last Song”
** | A troubled girl (Miley Cyrus) is sent to spend the summer with her father (Greg Kinnear). Thus, Veronica “Ronnie” Miller may pout like a teen, dress like a New York tart headed for trouble and already have a police record. But she’s still one of Nicholas Sparks’ “good girls,” with a generous heart, a sense of right and wrong and a gift for bringing out the best in that boy whose eye she catches the day she wanders the Georgia beach where Dad lives. PG. 1 hour, 45 minutes. Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel
“Me and Orson Welles”
*** | “Me and Orson Welles” is a coming-of-age comedy built around the “Me,” a star-struck theater lover winningly played by Zac Efron. But it’s a movie dominated by Orson Welles. Efron is Richard, a would-be thespian going to high school in the greater New York of the 1930s. He stumbles into the Great Orson (Christian McKay) as the actor is on his way to rehearse his legendary production of “Julius Caesar.” PG-13. 1 hour, 50 minutes. Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel
“The Good, The Bad, The Weird”
*** | A giddy mashup of Sergio Leone’s spaghetti Westerns and Lucas and Spielberg’s Indiana Jones romps, this guns-a- blazing Korean hit offers a nuttily staged, beautifully filmed, but kind of brainless homage to old-school Hollywood. Not rated, but with new-school violence. Not rated. 2 hours. Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer
More Releases
Available today
Black Orpheus
Cemetery Junction
Cougar Town: The Complete First Season
Dark and Stormy Night
Dexter: The Fourth Season
Four Seasons Lodge
Furry Vengeance
Friday Night Lights: The Fourth Season
L’enfance nue
The Lost Skeleton Returns Again
Me and Orson Welles
One Tree Hill: The Complete Seventh Season
Orlando Special Edition
Prodigy: An Unauthorized Story on Tiger Woods
Sorority Wars
Spring Fever
Ugly Betty: The Complete Fourth and Final Season



