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Movies With The Word Money In The Title

Titles leaving U.S. Netflix this month include a cult comedy hit, a hilarious game show and solid offerings from Steven Spielberg and Oliver Stone.

Not settling for a raw deal: Brie Larson in “Free Fire.”

Credit... A24

This month, subscribers to Netflix in the United States will have one more chance to watch an uproariously funny game show, a beloved girl-power comedy, a family film that adults may love more than kids and two wild cult comedies.

All of those, along with some good stuff from Steven Spielberg and Oliver Stone, are among the best films and TV shows leaving Netflix in October. Learn more about them below. (Dates reflect the final day a title is available.)

If you don't like shootouts, then move along, nothing to see here. But if you do love shoot-outs, or if you love inventive gunplay and threatening gun-cocking and artful reloads and the films of John Woo, boy is this the movie for you. This action extravaganza from the writer and director Ben Wheatley ("Kill List") is essentially a feature-length gunfight, in which various parties assemble in an isolated warehouse for a gun buy before turning on one another. Wheatley finds ingenious variations throughout, keeping the action energetic and fresh, while his first-rate cast (including Armie Hammer, Brie Larson, Cillian Murphy and Jack Reynor), resplendent in '70s duds, squeeze in as much characterization as they can between shots.

Stream it here.

Plenty of filmmakers have livened up family movies by sliding in winking gags and pop culture references for the grown-ups. But few have done it as unapologetically (and successfully) as the "Pirates of the Caribbean" director Gore Verbinski, who livens up this story of a desert lizard's adventure in several surprising ways. First, he constructs it as a kiddie "Chinatown," with our hero stumbling into a Western town where the battle over water rights is getting ugly. And he apparently instructed his leading man, Johnny Depp, to voice the role as a riff on his turn as Hunter S. Thompson in "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," even throwing in visual and verbal nods to that very R-rated adaptation. But Verbinski also doesn't alienate the target audience: Kids will likewise delight in this visually inventive and frequently funny treat.

Stream it here.

Rarely has a title been so accurate in its description as it is here, and the writer and director Kevin Smith ("Clerks") tells the tale of two longtime friends (Seth Rogen and Elizabeth Banks), desperate for cash, who turn to the seemingly lucrative world of adult entertainment. The leering title and premise don't tell the entire story, however. This isn't just some silly, gross-out sex comedy (though, to be sure, there's plenty of that). As in his indie hit "Chasing Amy," Smith knows that there's no such thing as "just sex," and, with the help of his charismatic leads, thoughtfully explores what happens when platonic pals decide to take that big leap.

Stream it here.

Few contemporary comedians have a persona as distinctive as Billy Eichner's. A frenzied, impatient pop culture connoisseur, he is quick with a quip and so sly with his insults that they often fly past their targets. Eichner is an unabashedly 21st century personality, which makes it especially amusing that he is best known for the "man on the street" interview — a comedic device that stretches back to Steve Allen and the earliest days of television comedy. "Billy on the Street" is, on paper at least, a game show; he and his celebrity guests offer passers-by the opportunity to win cash and prizes for answering questions and participating in their reindeer games. But the stakes are low and the games are silly; the show exists primarily as a vehicle for his unique sensibility and wit.

Stream it here.

Leonardo DiCaprio's apparent agelessness is one of his most fascinating features — we all still think of him as a matinee heartthrob, even in middle age — and Steven Spielberg puts it to fine use in this dashing 2002 comedy-drama, based on the memoir of the con artist and fabulist Frank Abagnale Jr. (which may, itself, have been fabricated). DiCaprio's Abagnale is a born swindler, masquerading as a doctor, lawyer and airline pilot while kiting checks across the country; the actor's sensitive portrayal captures gee-whiz likability that made him so successful, while subtly conveying the pain underneath. Tom Hanks is in top form as the by-the-books treasury agent on his tail, but the M.V.P. is Christopher Walken, Oscar-nominated for an atypically understated turn as Abagnale's absentee father.

Stream it here.

When this Reese Witherspoon vehicle hit theaters in 2001, a fair number of critics dismissed it as lightweight, disposable fluff — a reaction strangely appropriate to this story of a young woman whose peers underestimate her based on looks and impressions. But just as Elle Woods thrived, against all odds, at Harvard Law School, this summer comedy has become a cultural touchstone thanks to its quotable dialogue, masterfully modulated lead performance and timeless message about self-determination in the face of adversity.

Stream it here.

The term "living legend" has been bandied about so freely that it doesn't seem a grand enough descriptor for Norman Lear, the now 99-year-old writer, producer and philanthropist behind some of the most popular (and groundbreaking) television programs of the 1970s, including "All in the Family," "The Jeffersons" and "One Day at a Time." This energetic bio-documentary from the directors Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady tells his story with the appropriate gusto and showmanship, taking a thematic rather than chronological approach that separates it from the standard biographical showcase.

Stream it here.

There's a real "back to basics" feeling to this 2016 based-on-a-true-story drama, for which the director Oliver Stone returned to his wheelhouse with this story of government malfeasance, fear and paranoia, framed by one man's dedication to what he believes is right. Here, that man is Edward Snowden (played with quiet dignity by Joseph Gordon-Levitt), the National Security Agency contractor who became the whistle-blower for one of the largest illegal surveillance operations in history. Stone tells the tale with his trademark bristling intelligence and righteous indignation, and he marshals an impressive supporting cast, including Nicolas Cage, Shailene Woodley, Melissa Leo, Zachary Quinto and Tom Wilkinson.

Stream it here.

Casual moviegoers assumed Jack Black just fell out of the sky when he stole scenes by the handful in "High Fidelity" and became one of Hollywood's most valuable comic supporting players. But fans of indie comedy had been watching him for years, primarily as one-half (alongside Kyle Gass) of the comical music duo Tenacious D, a kind of Smothers Brothers for former metal heads. In 2006, the duo made a play for mainstream popularity with this movie, which chronicles their epic quest for a magic guitar pick. It didn't quite land (box office was middling and reviews were mostly negative), but that's OK: Tenacious D was always a cult act, so it's appropriate that they made what has become a cult movie — and a wickedly, weirdly funny one at that.

Stream it here.

Also leaving: "Beowulf," "Ferris Bueller's Day Off," "Inception" (all Oct. 31).

Movies With The Word Money In The Title

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/06/arts/television/netflix-expiring-october.html

Posted by: biondohuriturnar.blogspot.com

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