

Watch it: Munich: The Edge of War, on Netflix Even Hitler (Ulrich Matthes, Goebbels in Downfall) is a novel take - not a stale cliché but a canny operator. But it holds your interest, and it’s original. It’s a smart, uneven spy drama with oodles of historical atmosphere, good tense moments, and foregone-conclusion problems. Jeremy Irons (73) is marvelous as this revisionist Chamberlain, but the film’s heroes are fictional: his secretary Hugh (George MacKay) and Hugh’s best friend from Oxford (Jannis Niewöhner), now a German diplomat plotting to get war-averse German generals to stop Hitler. In this good old-fashioned film by The Crown director Christian Schwochow, Chamberlain knows he’s playing poker with a gangster but wants to prevent the war that was to kill 3 percent of the people on Earth, or buy time to beef up Britain’s armed forces (he did). Neville Chamberlain is usually portrayed as the British prime minister Hitler suckered by promising in 1938 not to invade Europe. Watch it: The Worst Person in the World, in theaters Now if only I could get my 22-year-old to watch it! -T.M.A. She discovers, like so many of us, that her mistakes define her as much as her successes. Empathetic director Joaquim Trier (Thelma) observes as Laura burns through a number of career and romantic identities while finally finding her feet in the world. Then she turns to a nice, unchallenging guy (Herbert Nordrum) that she meets while crashing a wedding reception. She launches a passionate affair with an ambitious older cartoonist ( Bergman Island’s Anders Danielsen Lie) despite his warning after their first hookup that their love is bound to fail. The movie follows the educated Laura (Cannes festival best-actress winner Renate Reinsve) over four critical years as she rounds 30. Perfectionism isn’t all that in this wry, wise, beautifully acted contemporary drama, a Norwegian Oscar hopeful that I repeatedly recommend to parents of daughters. Because, yes, trust is its own treasure - and their gold-digging partnership promises a sequel. All roads lead to a CGI duel between two helicopters, each carrying a vintage sailing vessel - while Nathan and Sully discover whether they can achieve mutual trust. Meanwhile, Antonio Banderas, 61, represents the last member of the wealthy family that once funded Magellan’s voyage of plunder. As Victor “Sully” Sullivan, the shadowy gold hunter who recruits Drake to hunt for the $5 billion bounty, Mark Wahlberg, 50, is on cruise control. The boyish Spider-Man star has bulked up so much for the role, it’s practically like risking an eating disorder. Tom Holland plays Nathan Drake, a sticky-fingered orphan seeking his missing brother, and the lost treasure of explorer Ferdinand Magellan’s sail around the globe. The PlayStation-video-based Uncharted is very much previously charted: Think Raiders of the Lost Ark, or National Treasure.
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The costumes from Oscar winner Sandy Powell, 61, are gorgeous - but can hardly compete with Jane’s Pre-Raphaelite silky skin gorgeously lit by award-winning cinematographer Jamie Ramsay. Colman spends most of the film traumatized beneath a stunning hat, while Firth stiffens his upper lip and soldiers on.

Niven, who lost both children in World War I. Mothering Sunday, celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent in parts of Europe, devastates Mrs. Based on the 2016 novel by Graham Swift, 72, it’s a gauzy, sexy between-the-wars British reverie that also pairs Colin Firth, 61, and Olivia Colman as Jane’s stolid, grieving employers, the Nivens. She passes her special day off romping with her posh neighbor Paul ( The Crown’s dashing Josh O’Connor) before he weds a suitable match. Like Downton Abbey with extra naughty bits, Eva Husson’s sensual period piece features sexy maid Jane (dewy Odessa Young).
