Some reviews originate at newspapers that do not award star ratings; some movies are not screened in advance for critics. Ratings range from zero to four stars.
OPENING THIS WEEK
“Pina” * * * ½
Reviewed online at
“Big Miracle” * * *
Reviewed online at
“The Woman in Black” * * *
Reviewed online at
“Sing Your Song”
Reviewed online at
“Innkeepers” * Reviewed online at
“Chronicle” * * *
Reviewed online at
“Addiction Incorporated”
Reviewed online at
CONTINUING
Here are selected mini-reviews of films in theaters, listed alphabetically.
“Albert Nobbs”
Costume drama. * * * R.
“Albert Nobbs” has been a passion project for Glenn Close since she won an Obie in the role back in 1982. As star, producer and co-writer — and lyricist for the film’s theme song — she has poured her heart and soul into this film. What Close accomplishes is something deeper than surface imitation. Jettisoning all of the mawkish sentimentality that might have sabotaged the film, director Rodrigo Garcia and his star (Close) make this withdrawn, near-asexual creature both fascinating and emotionally captivating. (Colin Covert, Minneapolis Star Tribune) 113 minutes
“The Artist”
Silent movie. * * * ½ PG-13.
There is vigorous praise for this tale of a silent-era star struggling against the tide of the talkies. Stars include Jean Dujardin, Bérénice Bejo, John Goodman and Penelope Ann Miller. (Lisa Kennedy, The Denver Post) 100 minutes
“Contraband”
Thriller. * * * R.
Mark Wahlberg delivers the goods in this B-movie about smuggling in boozy, corrupt New Orleans. He plays a smuggler who has gone legit selling household alarm systems. His wife (Kate Beckinsale) runs a beauty salon. They have two kids. He’s wised up and left “the life” behind. But his wife’s younger brother (Caleb Jones) hasn’t. (Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune News Service) 99 minutes
“Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close”
Drama. * * * ½ PG-13.
Director Stephen Daldry and screenwriter Eric Roth made sacrifices in adapting Jonathan Safron Foer’s 9/11 novel for the big screen. Yet they’ve made a balm of a movie. The film is less concerned with national trauma than it is with communal healing. It tightens the focus on Oskar Schell (Thomas Horn), a grieving child on a search for a lock that fits the key his father left him. Sandra Bullock plays Oskar’s mother, and Tom Hanks the father killed in the attacks on the World Trade Center. (Kennedy) 129 minutes
“The Grey”
Action. * * * ½ PG.
Ottway (Liam Neeson) and a small planeload of oil company workers set out for a job on an airplane that crashes somewhere in Alaska. Most are killed or die quickly. Seven are left alive. They hope they’ll be found by rescuers, but their plane is rapidly being covered with snow. They set off in bitter cold, slogging through snow, eating a little food from the plane, starting fires at night, intensely aware that they have attracted a large following of wolves. Frank Grillo and Dermot Mulroney also star. (Roger Ebert, Univeral UClick) 117 minutes
“Haywire”
Action. * * ½ R. Steven Soderbergh cast Gina Carano, a mixed-martial-arts star/model, in this film and surrounded her with experienced actors because he wanted to see an action movie starring a woman who could credibly beat the living daylights out of legions of guys who got in her way. (Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune News Service) 93 minutes
“Joyful Noise”
Comedy. * * ½ PG-13. There’ s plenty of corn and Christ in this music-infused comedy about two women who square off over the fate of a church choir in a Georgia town. Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton bring their respective talents for ferocity and Southern charms. While they’re bumping heads, the teens in their lives share a spark. (Kennedy) 118 minutes
“The Iron Lady”
Biopic. * * ½ PG-13. See this drama about Margaret Thatcher, Britain’s Prime Minister and the first female leader of a western nation, not because it’s an incisive history lesson. It’s too rushed to serve that purpose. Instead see it for Meryl Streep. Streep is impressive portraying the conservative maverick’s rise in Britain’s political establisment. But she is astoundingly touching as the octogenarian whose once-great intellectual powers are flickering. (Kennedy) 105 minutes
“Man on a Ledge”
Thriller. PG-13.
David Englander (Ed Harris) is in collusion with corrupt, coke-dealing cops and has railroaded the justice system into convicting Nick Cassidy (Sam Worthington), a former police officer who accompanied him as a guard on a short trip during which a $40 million diamond was stolen. Nick, found guilty of the theft because of trumped-up evidence given by his corrupted colleagues, faces 25 years in prison after his appeal is turned down. He uses his father’s funeral to escape and climbs to the 21st floor of a hotel and pretends to be a suicidal jumper and stall for time while his brother tries to find the diamond. (Stephen Holden, The New York Times) 112 minutes
“Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol”
Action. * * * PG-13.
Director Brad Bird and screenwriters André Nemec and Josh Appelbaum tell a simple, good-guys-against-bad-guys story complete with a bullet train of action and an arsenal of cool gadgets. The movie starts with a clever jailbreak by Tom Cruise’s Ethan Hunt, stuck in a Moscow prison. He is dispatched to infiltrate the Kremlin along with agents Jane Carter (Paula Patton) and Benji Dunn (Simon Pegg). It’s all a setup by madman Kurt Hendricks (Michael Nyqvist), who is trying to cover his theft of a Russian nuclear launch device. (David Germain, The Associated Press) 132 minutes
“My Week With Marilyn” Drama. * * * R.
In 1956, a young and eager Colin Clark was third assistant editor on the London set of “The Prince and the Showgirl.” Based on Clark’s memoirs, this well-acted drama, starring Michelle Williams, doesn’t illuminate the mystery of Monroe so much as remind us how complicated, demanding and intimate the role of spectator can be. (Kennedy) 99 minutes
“One for the Money” Comedy drama. PG-13.
The latest Katherine Heigl vehicle finds her in the role of Stephanie Plum, a divorced and recently unemployed Jersey girl. She takes a job working for her cousin’s bail bond company and leaps at the chance to track down Joe Morelli (Jason O’Mara), a cop gone bad — though he may be innocent — and also a man who long ago did Stephanie wrong. (A.O. Scott, The New York Times) 106 minutes
“Pariah”
Drama. * * * R.
Adepero Oduye gives a subtly natural performance as a 17-year-old Brooklyn girl struggling to come out as a lesbian. At school, she dresses the way that makes her comfortable — in baggy T-shirts and baseball caps, and she pals around with her brash best friend, Laura (Pernell Walker), who’s already happily out. But on the bus ride home, she must transform herself into the young lady her mother approves of and loves. (Christy Lemire, The Associated Press)86 minutes
“Red Tails”
Action. * * ½ PG-13.
Despite stunning aerial scenes and good intentions, the George Lucas-produced film is grounded by clumsy dialogue, a meandering plot and the occasional jarring anachronism. It’s an inspired-by tale of the Tuskegee Airmen that wanders from wildly entertaining to schoolroom instructive to one-note flatness. Cuba Gooding Jr. and Terrence Howard star. (Tish Wells, McClatchy Newspapers) 120 minutes
“Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”
Suspense. * * * * R. An expertly crafted rendering of the classic John le Carré espionage novel about trickery in the lofty upper reaches of British intelligence, with Gary Oldman in the title role. (Amy Biancolli, Houston Chronicle) 127 minutes
“War Horse”
Friendship saga. * * * ½ PG-13.
Robustly entertaining, “War Horse” brings to the big screen Michael Morpurgo’s 1982 children’s novel about a young man named Albert, his horse, Joey, and the war that separates them and rends Europe. (Kennedy)140 minutes
GIANT SCREEN
IMAX — Denver Museum of Nature & Science
“Tornado Alley 3D” and “Flying Monsters 3D.” Dates, times and tickets vary. 2001 Colorado Blvd., 303-322-2009,
IWERKS — The Wildlife Experience “Turtle Vision 3D,” “Sharks 3D,” “The Alps” and “Heli Skiing: Living the Dream.” Dates, times and tickets vary. 10035 S. Peoria St., Parker, 720-488-3300,



