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The comic book series will star teen hero Kate Bishop.

With its relaunch of the core title less than a month old, Marvel Entertainment has already announced plans to expand the Avengers franchise into a second title. It’s one that is likely to thrill fans old and new alike, with the revived West Coast Avengers spinning out of the critically acclaimed recent Hawkeye run.
The new miniseries will be written by Hawkeye’s Kelly Thompson, with art by Stefano Caselli, and sees the titular star of the earlier series — Kate Bishop, teenage superhero turned Los Angeles-based private eye — gather a team of fan-favorite younger characters together for a very simple purpose: Keep L.A. in one piece.
“They all need and want something from being on that team together,” Thompson told Marvel.com. “Kate needs to help save L.A., and she needs help to do that because villains have taken notice that there are no Super Heroes out there. I think there’s part of her that misses [being on a team] too.”
Other members of the team include X-Men supporting character Quentin Quire, fourth-wall-breaking Gwenpool, dimension-hopping superstar America Chavez…and Bishop’s non-powered boyfriend Johnny, who might find that the superhero life isn’t what he expected. Clint Barton, the original Hawkeye, will also be a player in the series, with Thompson teasing that he “doesn’t want to admit how much it’s fun for him to mentor” the younger heroes.
The name of the new series is one that older fans will remember from the 1980s. The 1984 West Coast Avengersminiseries — which begat an ongoing series of the same name a year later — was the first time Marvel had successfully transformed the Avengers series into a franchise of its own. Before too long, it had been joined by Solo Avengers, with a multitude of other titles including New AvengersYoung Avengers and even Great Lakes Avengers.

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Marvel Relaunches 'West Coast Avengers' as Young Hero Team

Actor-director Nadine Labaki explores the poorest slums of Lebanon through the eyes of a child in this Cannes competition entry.



According to one definition found online, Capharnaum means a "disorderly accumulation of objects." Although that's a fantastically uncommercial title for a movie, the concept suits this latest work from actor-writer-director Nadine Labaki (CaramelWhere Do We Go Now?). She's made up a grab bag of ideas and plot elements that work surprisingly effectively as a melodrama with a message. Several messages, in fact, all illustrated through the ordeals suffered by 12-year-old Zain (Zain Al Rafeea), a child fighting to survive in the slums and shanty towns of Lebanon. Although the narrative is structured through a highly unbelievable instigating conceit — Zain is trying to sue his own parents in court for giving him life in the first place — Labaki lures such outstanding performances out of the almost entirely non-professional cast and sketches such a credible view of this wretchedly poor milieu that the flaws are mostly forgivable.
Labaki and casting director Jennifer Haddad have sought actors whose life stories track closely to the backstories of the characters they're playing. That means star Al Rafeea really is a kid who had until recently been working, per the press notes, as a delivery boy since the age of 10, while Cedra Izam, the girl who plays his 11-year-old sister, is a Syrian refugee who was discovered while selling chewing gum in the streets of Beirut, and so on.
But such parallels between life and art aren't enough on their own to account for the felt authenticity of the performances. It takes a director with genuine empathy, patience and rapport with performers, backed by enough budget to shoot hundreds of hours of footage (the film was made over six months) in order to make a work this emotionally persuasive.
Inevitably, there will be doubters who won't feel so won over, who will yawn and invoke parallels with films like Slumdog Millionaire and other works of so-called "poverty porn" and mock the pile-up of misfortune heaped upon the hero and his friends. Reactions will depend on each viewer's unique levels of compassion and cynicism. I do know that by the end, both I and the total stranger sitting next to me were sniffling and sharing a packet of tissues between us.
Structurally picaresque, the story starts in a courtroom into which Zain is led in handcuffs, having been arrested for stabbing "a son of bitch" as he describes him. It's revealed that, with support from his lawyer (Labaki herself, taking an onscreen backseat), he hopes to sue his parents — mother Souad (Kawthar Al Haddad) and father Selim (Fadi Kamel Youssef) — for giving him life in the first place when they couldn't offer him even a minimal level of care, safety and affection.
Zaid's parents are so poor they couldn't afford the fees to register his birth, which means he can't get a state I.D. card and is therefore effectively a non-person, unqualified to get a passport, attend a school or even get medical assistance at a hospital in case of an emergency. This lack of papers is a crucial theme in the film and an issue some audiences may fail to grasp the significance of, creating a potential messaging problem in some offshore markets.
Raised in a filthy hovel in a crumbling concrete high-rise, Zain, as one of the older kids in the family, is forced to work in order to feed himself and his siblings. He makes deliveries for a local grocer, a man with a sinister interest in Zain's little sister Sahar. When his desperate parents effectively sell Sahar off to the grocer, Zain runs away to a coastal town. A chance encounter on a bus with a slightly addled Armenian dotard dressed like Spider-Man, or Cockroach-Man as he prefers to call himself, leads to Zain sleeping at a beachside amusement park.
There he meets Ethiopian immigrant Rahil (Yordanos Shiferaw), a kindly soul who is barely better off than Zaid. Rahil is hiding the existence of her 1-year son Yonas (played by unbearably cute baby girl Boluwatife Treasure Bankole, whose own real-life parents were temporarily deported during filming) from both employers and the authorities (she keeps the kid in a shopping cart while at work). Living in a shack made of corrugated plastic, detritus and rust, she is trying to save up enough cash for a new forged I.D. card on offer from shifty souk trader Aspro (Alaa Chouchnieh). Rahil takes in Zaid who proves to be a surprisingly resourceful and adept babysitter for Yonas, whom he passes off as his brother.
The film detours away from Zain in order to follow Rahil and her travails for a while, only to swing back suddenly to Zain when Rahil inexplicably fails to return from work one day, forcing the prepubescent child into increasingly desperate measures to keep himself and Yonas from starving to death. But while the trajectory looks unrelentingly grim, Labaki punctuates the ordeal with moments of joy, warmth and humor, while her husband and producer Khaled Mouzanar's orchestral score offers sweet notes of optimistic promise among the often discordant strings and feedback.
Those who won't go along with the film's earnest exploration of the depths of despair won't be any more mollified by the last act's many collisions of coincidence and grandstanding speeches. But it's impossible not to appreciate the vigorous editing by Konstantin Bock and Laure Gardette that keeps things going at a clip that sweeps you up like a wave, and the way Christopher Aoun's cinematography, often interspersed with breathtaking drone footage, shows off Beirut in all its squalid splendor.
Venue: Cannes Film Festival (competiton)
Production: A Mooz Films presentation in association with Cedrus Invest Bank, with the participation of Sunnyland Film Cyprus, in association with Doha Film Institute, KNM Films, Boo Films, The Bridge Production, Synchronicity Production, Loverture Films, Open City Films, Les Films des Tournelles
Cast:Zain Al Rafeea, Yordanos Shiferaw, Boluwatife Treasure Bankole, Kawthar Al Haddad, Fadi Kamel Youssef, Cedra Izam, Alaa Chouchnieh, Nadine Labaki
Director: Nadine Labaki
Screenwriters: Nadine Labaki, Jihad Hojeily, Michelle Kesrouani, Georges Khabbaz, Khaled Mouzanar
Producers: Khaled Mouzanar, Michel Merkt
Executive producers: Akram Safa, Fouad Mikati, Candice Abela, Samer Rizk, Georges Sarraf, Sylvio Sharif Tabet, Ray Barakat, Chady Eli Mattar, Antoine Khalife, Joslyn Barnes, Danny Glover, Wissam Smayra
Co-producer: Pierre Sarraf
Director of photography: Christopher Aoun
Art director: Hussein Baydoun
Costume designer: Zeina Saab Demelero
Editors: Konstantin Bock, Laure Gardette
Music: Khaled Mouzanar
Casting: Jennifer Haddad
Sales:  Wild Bunch

'Capharnaum': Film Review | Cannes 2018



The girl with the dragon tattoo just can’t catch a break. This August, Titan Comics continues the story of Lisbeth Salander with the new comic book series The Girl Who Danced With Death - Millennium, and THR has an exclusive preview.
Written by Sylvain Runberg with art by Belen Ortega, The Girl Who Danced With Death continues Titan’s best-selling graphic novels based on Stieg Larsson’s Millennium series, with an all-new story in which Salander’s friend Trinity is kidnaped, leading her to recruit Mikael Blomkvist to investigate what happened, and discover the secret of a group known only as Sparta. The three-part series will be the first time the material, which was published in French in 2016, has been released in English.
2018 is clearly the year for new Millennium material; November sees the release of The Girl in the Spider’s Web, a movie adaptation of David Lagercrantz’s continuation of the Larsson novel trilogy. Claire Foy, of Netflix’s The Crown, will play Salander, replacing Rooney Mara, who played the character in David Fincher’s 2011 The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo adaptation.
The Girl Who Danced With Death - Millennium No. 1 (of 3) will be released Aug. 15 in comic book stores and digitally. Two pages from that issue, as well as the variant cover, are below.


Lisbeth Salander Returns in 'The Girl Who Danced With Death' Comic (Exclusive)



Elsewhere, 'Book Club' is exceeding expectations, thanks to strong interest among older moviegoers.


Avengers: Infinity War finally has some competition.
Ryan Reynolds and 20th Century Fox's summer event pic Deadpool 2 rocketed to a huge $53.3 million on Friday, the best opening day in history for an R-rated film. The previous champ was New Line's It ($50 million). Deadpool 2's Friday haul included $18.6 million in Thursday-evening previews.
The sequel has a shot at scoring the top opening of all time for an R-rated title if it bests the $132.4 million launch of Deadpool in February 2016. So far, it's pacing ahead of the first film, which grossed $47.4 million on its first Friday.
The Merc with the Mouth is now also a straight A student, with both films earning an A CinemaScore.
Playing in a total of 4,349 theaters in North America — the widest release in Fox history — Deadpool 2 will easily win the frame, ending Infinity War's three-week rule. Disney and Marvel's Infinity War is looking at a $28 million-$30 million weekend as it heads for the $1.8 billion mark at the worldwide box office. Infinity War grossed $7.2 million on Friday to come in at No. 2.

Overseas, Deadpool 2 is opening in most major markets timed to its U.S. launch — one major exception is China — for a projected foreign debut of $150 million-plus.
Reynolds reprises his role as the irreverant Deadpool in the follow-up. He produced the sequel and co-wrote the script with his Deadpool collaborators Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick.
Deadpool 2, directed by David Leitch, follows the irreverent superhero as he forms an X-Force posse in hopes of stopping the evil Cable (Josh Brolin). Morena Baccarin, Julian Dennison, Zazie Beetz, T.J. Miller, Brianna Hildebrand and Jack Kesy co-star.
A pair of smaller films also open nationwide: Paramount's female-fronted Book Club and Global Road's family offering Show Dogs.
Targeting older femmes, director Bill Holderman's Book Club stars Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburgen as four friends who decide to read Fifty Shades of Grey with unintended consequences. Craig T. Nelson, Andy Garcia and Don Johnson play the love interests.
Book Club is exceeding expectations, earning roughly $4.7 million on Friday from 2,781 theaters for a projected $14 million-$15 million debut.
Conversely, Show Dogs may only earn $5 million-$6 million for the weekend from 3,145 cinemas (Global Road had hoped for slightly more).
Rated PG, the pic chronicles the adventures of a Rottweiler police dog (voiced by Chris "Ludacris" Bridges) that infiltrates a prestigious dog show with the help of his human partner (Will Arnett). Other castmembers include Natasha Lyonne, Jordin Sparks, Gabriel Iglesias, Shaquille O'Neal and Alan Cumming.

Weekend Box Office: 'Deadpool 2' Earns Record $53.3M on Friday



"Ask me trivia on 'Sex and the City,' and I will know it," says John David Washington, who wishes he could vote in New York for gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon

John David Washington — star of Spike Lee's BlacKkKlansman, which is vying at Cannes for the Palme d'Or — boasts a hidden talent. The Ballers actor can quote verbatim from all 94 episodes of Sex and the City. "Ask me trivia on Sex and the City, and I will know it," dares Washington. "I rewatch it every year. Samantha? Charlotte? Those are my girls."
As for his other, more publicized talent, breaking tackles as a former St. Louis Rams running back, Washington says he learned all about acting rejection through football, recalling a general manager who "told me I'd never play in the NFL again, and he ended up being right. I sat waiting for almost an hour for him to tell me that.
"So when you get rejected from a casting agent or they don't want you for an audition, it doesn't compare to that feeling. I was ready. I was ready for rejection." When asked if, as Denzel's eldest son, he's auditioned for parts he hasn't gotten, Washington says: "All the time. I'm zero for about a hundred right now."
That could soon change as Lee's BlacKkKlansman debuted to a 6-minute standing ovation in Cannes on Sunday night, and Washington, in particular, was singled out for his lead role. 

'BlacKkKlansman' Star Reveals His Secret Love of 'Sex and the City'



The raunchy creatures also push the comedian to do ecstasy in the not-for-kids trailer for the dark comedy

Melissa McCarthy plays the lead detective in a world where humans and puppets coexist. When the puppet castmembers of a beloved puppet TV show, The Happytime Gang, begin turning up dead, she's forced to team up with a sex-crazed, alcoholic puppet.


Throughout the red-band trailer, McCarthy's character encounters puppets doing everything from propositioning sex to forcing her to snort ecstasy. "That is good shit!" she yells after seemingly coming back from the dead.




Elizabeth Banks, Joel McHale, Maya Rudolph and Leslie David Baker can also be seen in the sneak peek.


The Happytime Murders hits theaters August 17 from STX Entertainment.
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Melissa McCarthy Cavorts With Sex-Crazed, Alcoholic Puppets



Producer Michael Benaroya is fighting a contract and fraud claim over Willis' services for an aborted film
Yet another lesson in getting everyone's signature on a deal came on Thursday when a California appeals court reversed  Bruce Willis' $5.9 million win against producer Michael Benaroya over the aborted film, Wake.
As previously described here, Willis was to star in the movie about a sociopath who attempts to reconnect with his estranged family. The picture was being produced by Benaroya Pictures, run by Mr. Benaroya (Margin CallLawlessThe Words), which under an escrow agreement, was supposed to put up $8 million for the actor's services.  Only $3 million came into the escrow before production company ran into financing problems and the movie had to be shut down. Thereafter, Willis filed a demand for arbitration at JAMS claiming that Benaroya had breached contract and committed fraud and negligent misrepresentation. First, the arbitrator found in his favor, and then a Los Angeles Superior Court judge confirmed the judgment.
The big issue on appeal was the arbitrator's finding that Benaroya was the alter ego of his production company and had to submit to arbitration even though he didn't personally sign the agreement. As the arbitrator determined Benaroya was a proper party, he became jointly responsible for the judgment with the production company.
The core argument why Benaroya had to accept arbitration was that the escrow agreement stated that any dispute would be handled by the rules of JAMS (an arbitration forum), and those rules give the arbitrator the ability to determine its own jurisdiction.
But the California appeals court rules that it should have been a trial court and not the arbitrator to determine who among those who hadn't signed the agreement was a proper party.
"Here, while it is true that the language of an arbitration agreement determines the scope of the arbitrator’s powers granted by the signatories, the agreement cannot bind nonsignatories, absent a judicial determination that the nonsignatory falls within the limited class of third-parties who can be compelled to arbitrate," states the opinion.
The judgment against the production company stands, but for the moment, Michael Benaroya has been able to reverse a decision he's liable as an alter ego.
Marty Singer, attorney for Willis, is ready for the next round.
"The Appellate Court ruling on whether Michael Benaroya should be an alter ego is a procedural issue," he comments. "Per the Court of Appeal ruling, we will now be proceeding in the Los Angeles Superior Court and we are confident that the court will follow the undisputed evidence in the arbitration establishing the liability of Michael Benaroya as the alter ego of Benaroya Pictures.”

Bruce Willis Has Legal Win Against Film Producer Reversed by Appeals Court


Sang-Ho Yeon's Netflix film tells the story of a slob who develops psychic abilities and is worth watching if you feel like skipping 'Deadpool 2

On April 25, Netflix unceremoniously released the miraculous South Korean superhero film Psychokinesis, a character-driven action film about a slob who develops psychic abilities after he accidentally drinks meteorite-infused spring water. The folks in charge of Netflix's Instant video releases seem to have thought so little of Psychokinesis — the latest film by Sang-Ho Yeon, the talented writer/director of the breakout 2016 zombie thriller Train to Busan — that they didn't even wait to release Yeon's latest on a Friday, the day they normally reserve for their most high-profile titles. Instead, Netflix released Psychokinesis on a Wednesday, a piddling nothing of a weekday that's only significant because ha ha, Humpday.
Still, Yeon adds a sneaky emotional resonance to what could have been just another deadbeat dad redemption story, a formulaic narrative that has become a staple of American blockbusters thanks to Steven Spielberg's (understandably!) popular daddy issues dramas. Yeon struggles with his film's central concern: does a lousy father deserve a place in his daughter's life given that his absence has already created significant emotional distressIn questioning that by-now trite restorative narrative and its attendant shop-worn tropes, Yeon delivers a superhero film of rare emotional resonance and potency. If you’re looking for an alternative to this weekend's Deadpool 2, this is the movie for you.
There are a lot of spoilers ahead. If you don't want to be ravished by spoilers, you should save yourself some grief and watch Psychokinesis now.
For starters: Yeon sympathizes with bad dad Seok-heon (Seung-ryong Ryu) without blithely confirming his character's paternal and often condescending point-of-view. Seok-heon is pretty much the only male character who gets stuff done: every other semi-efficient and/or emotionally complex character is a woman, particularly Seok-heon's conflicted daughter Ru-mi (Eun-kyung Shim) and his power-hungry corporate antagonist Director Hong (Yu-mi Jung). Seok-heon's point-of-view is ultimately validated, but Psychokinesis isn't just about a well meaning guy who takes some licks, flexes his muscles and saves the day. Instead, Yeon's latest is believably concerned with a sucky dad's inevitable realization that he's now living in his daughter's world, a rite of passage that is confirmed at film's end, when Ru-mi orders Seok-heon to use his powers to serve her restaurant's customers.
Psychokinesis begins with a TV news item about Ru-mi's own Gaem Gaem Chicken restaurant, a popular local business in Seoul's 6th Nampyeong district. In this personal interest story, Ru-mi reveals her backstory in a couple of expository lines of dialogue: her father left when she was very little, so her mother had to support them both by re-selling hair-pins down in the city's subway. Ru-mi can't bring herself to look at the camera. She's proud of herself, but you can tell she's blushing — even without the camera crew's unkind application of the kind of cameraphone app that adds blush, stickers, and puppy dog snouts to users' selfies — when the off-camera news correspondent asks her why she doesn't have a boyfriend. It's an embarrassing question, but not because Ru-mi doesn't believe in herself. You can see a lot of mixed emotions struggling to surface as she modestly describes the impact of Seok-heon's abandonment: "My mom...she's had a tough time." The forced nature of Ru-mi's matter-of-fact tone sets the table for a number of Ru-mi and Seok-heon's subsequent conversations.
Soon after this introductory sequence, we flash-forward to the present, where Ru-mi struggles to defend her storefront from burly, hard-hat-clad Pinkerton types. These guys are acting on behalf of Taesan, an omnivorous mega-corporation that wants to raze Ru-mi's neighborhood so that they can develop "a large-scale, duty-free shopping center for Chinese tourists." The locals are united with Ru-mi in their refusal to take Taesan's buy-out offers. This is their home and they won't be made to move. Unfortunately, that stubborn-ness in the face of Taesan's overwhelming influence — about two dozen men against one well-barricaded woman — doesn't serve Ru-mi well. Her mother (Yeong-seon Kim) pays the price when she, trying to defend Su-mi, crashes their Gaem Gaem Chicken van in a vain attempt at dispersing the mob. Ru-mi's mom dies from this collision, but not before the above-mentioned meteor passes over-head. Ru-mi's mom cries as the pretty space debris flies by. And for a moment, it looks like she's wishing for a miracle that will save her daughter. Granted, this trope is hardly progressive: a well-meaning, but effectively powerless woman can't save her own child and therefore relies on her historically negligent ex-husband to set things right. But...well, hang on.
Seok-heon makes an appearance at his ex's wake, but only because Ru-mi found his phone number in her dead mom's cell phone. Here we get another semi-substantial scene that has nothing to do with Seok-heon's powers, and everything to do with Ru-mi's emotions. She apologizes to him for "calling out of the blue," but her deeply internalized rage — and the attendant ways that she's chosen to suppress it — is apparent by the way that she walks away right after she orders him to get some food for himself. Still, Ru-mi isn't a pushover. She sees a group of Taesan heavies — including a guy whose haircut she messed up earlier — and literally charges at them head first. Here, cocky Taesan rep Min (Min-jae Kim) tries to win an ouch contest despite the apparent fact that he is crashing the wake of a woman who died trying to defend her family from his company. He whines to Ru-mi, "You're making my life so difficult. I'm so stressed out." Then he gallingly doubles down on his ridiculous self-victimizing claims: "Your mother passed away while driving. Why are you putting the blame on us? You obviously think like that because you're completely delusional." This scene is important later when Hong shows up, and reveals Min to be a boot-licking toady.
Still, you might be asking: what kind of man is Seok-heon that he can idly watch all this happen without even trying to intervene? When we first meet him, Ryu's character is a boorish security guard who thinks he's clever for stealing toilet paper from work and instant coffee packets from a nearby bank. He doesn't go through the usual hero's journey motions of struggling to master his powers, as so many formerly-impotent men do after they become super-hard. In fact, Yeon bluntly mocks the emasculating nature of Seok-heon's pre-powers crisis in a scene where Ryu's protagonist tries to show off to Ru-mi by using his mind powers to make his yellow neck tie dance around like a snake. It's important to note that we've already seen, in two earlier scenes, that Seok-heon has mastered his supernatural skills. Now the only thing that can stop Seok-heon from getting it up is Ru-mi, the strongest woman in the film.
Thankfully, Ru-mi isn't just the buzzkill who reminds Seok-heon of his past. In fact, she owns this confrontation, and finally gets to tell him off in a way that doesn't just make her look like a major stepping stone in her dad's path to emotional growth. Look at the way that Yeon focuses on Shim's actions and Ryu's reactions. Ru-mi stops her dad's impromptu magic act and takes control of the scene with an accusation: "Do you remember when our eyes met, as you were leaving at the break of dawn?" It's a super-charged moment, one that could have easily boiled over into unbearable bathos. But Shim holds it together until we see, in a reaction shot, that she's not getting through to him. So she continues, while holding back hiccup-sized sobs: "You pretended like you didn't see me." Again, she can't bring herself to look him in the eyes.
Seok-heon tries to regain control of this conversation, but Ru-mi stops him: "I'm trying to pull myself together, to get my life on track." At this point, she can't hold back and the rage she's been holding in for who knows how long comes out in a way that she instantly regrets: "But you showed up, and you're ruining everything now!" Shim quickly pats down her face with her palms and apologizes. Then she adds something that she can't take back: "But don't pretend like you're my dad now after being absent for years. It's disgusting." She walks off, and for a second, he's stunned into silence. The last thing we see in this scene is an over-the-shoulder medium shot of him processing what he just heard. Seconds later, as he's slouching away: he flashes back to the day he left and the time his daughter caught him leaving.
Any succeeding displays of Seok-heon's computer-generated super-abilities are colored by this scene. There are clear stakes now, and they're confirmed every time Seok-heon can't bring himself to look Ru-mi, Hong, or anyone else directly in the eye. Ryu admirably holds his own with Shim, and makes you believes that Seok-heon not only wants to make things up to Ru-mi, but also take his place in her narrative. At film's end, Seok-heon makes a symbolic gesture that not only gives audiences a sense of closure, but also gives Ru-mi and her neighbors a genuine gift: the ability to start over without feeling like they failed. 
But before Seok-heon can prove himself in battle, he must confront Hong, a villain who says all the right things, but always has a nasty smile on her face that reveals her bullying nature. Hong is not, as one newscaster cheekily puts it, defined by "super-powerlessness." She has flunkies savagely beat Min while she doctors evidence against Seok-heon. And she controls the sensation-chasing news media and the hammer-to-nail cops. The biggest difference between the city's equally mindless police officers and news anchors is that Hong doesn't have total control over the latter group, as a later scene proves. Still, Hong is in charge no matter how she claims that "those with real power aren't people like us[...]they have power over this country, the Republic of Korea. The country itself is their power. Everyone else, including you and me, are just slaves of this society." 
Yeon puts the lie to Hong's protests by cross-cutting to a riot that pointedly brings to mind the real-life Yongsan tragedy, a 2009 incident that left five Seoul tenants dead after riot police rushed into action without sufficient information. Seok-ki Kim, the former head of the city's police force, resigned in disgrace after this incident. But in the film, Seoul's policemen are briefly humanized in their own powerlessness, just as the rioters — led by Ru-mi, who chucks soju-based Molotov cocktails with unrestrained gusto — are presented like a wild force of nature. The individual participants in this violent set piece — the flashiest in the film — aren't strictly good or evil. If anyone is to blame, it's Min since he is literally revealed to be in the thick of the riot-gear-clad cops, like a tumor that's co-opted the city's potentially benevolent defenders.
Herein lies the secret of Psychokinesis's low-key maturity: Yeon makes you want to applaud Seok-heon's realization that he not only cannot but really should not punch all his problems away — no matter how eminently punchable Min may be —  by consistently focusing on the incremental evolution of Seok-heon and Ru-mi's relationship. You can tell that she ultimately has more power than he does just from the scene where she takes him out to lunch at her favorite "stew place." This scene is characteristically well-filmed and performed: Ryu purses his lips and hangs his head while Shim walks ahead of him without looking back once to see if  he's following her. Once they're both seated, they talk about the potential health risks of having super-powers. And for once, this exchange isn't a cheap way to foreshadow a plot contrivance about the biological limits of Seok-heon's strictly imaginary powers. Instead, Ru-mi and Seok-heon's dialogue functions as it should in any other drama: to develop their relationship in a semi-meaningful way. Modestly-scaled, and exceptionally well-realized scenes like this are why Psychokinesis is the superhero film of the summer. You just have to dig a little to find it

Why 'Psychokinesis' Is the Antidote to Summer Superhero Movie Fatigue

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