Each week we highlight the noteworthy titles that have recently hit streaming platforms in the United States. Check out this week’s selections below and past round-ups here.
Belle (Mamoru Hosoda)
If a name can trigger nostalgia, don’t be surprised when the occasional sense of deja vu sets in while watching Belle, a dazzling near-future tech fantasia wrapped around a tale, yes, as old as time. Directed by Mamoru Hosoda and mostly set in a vast online world of sweeping musical numbers and weightless action sequences, it tells of Suzu, an awkward teenager (as if there were any other kind) who finds quick fame performing as the pop-singer Belle: her avatar on a hugely popular social media platform called U that looks like a sugary cocktail of Tik Tok and “The Oasis” from Spielberg’s Ready Player One. – Rory O. (full review)
Where to Stream: HBO Max
Blue Island...
Belle (Mamoru Hosoda)
If a name can trigger nostalgia, don’t be surprised when the occasional sense of deja vu sets in while watching Belle, a dazzling near-future tech fantasia wrapped around a tale, yes, as old as time. Directed by Mamoru Hosoda and mostly set in a vast online world of sweeping musical numbers and weightless action sequences, it tells of Suzu, an awkward teenager (as if there were any other kind) who finds quick fame performing as the pop-singer Belle: her avatar on a hugely popular social media platform called U that looks like a sugary cocktail of Tik Tok and “The Oasis” from Spielberg’s Ready Player One. – Rory O. (full review)
Where to Stream: HBO Max
Blue Island...
- 8/5/2022
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Chan Tze Woon’s first documentary feature, “Yellowing” examined the Umbrella Movement, and particularly Hong Kong’s faulty relationship with mainland China. This time, he focuses on the fact that although the Chinese government promised that Hong Kong would retain separate status until 2047, in recent years the Chinese state has consolidated its power over the metropolis, with the Extradition Law being in the forefront, resulting in large scale protests that have been violently suppressed. To highlight both the current situation and the fact that Hong Kong has always been a turbulent area, Chan follows students engaged in the most recent protest movement and former activists now in their middle age, using the first in order to present the events the latter participated in, but also how the future may look like in Hk, in a hybrid of documentary and real-life fiction.
Blue Island is screening at Metrograph, as part of...
Blue Island is screening at Metrograph, as part of...
- 8/1/2022
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
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