Matthew Vaughn’s spy comedy ‘Argylle’ starring Bryce Dallas Howard and Henry Cavill is coming this friday time cinemas next to you most diverse offers: A period piece starring Mads Mikkelsen, an Oscar-nominated German classroom thriller, or a spider horror movie.
‘Argille’
‘Kingsman’ franchisee Matthew Vaughn delivers a new spy thriller and comedy starring Bryce Dallas Howard, Sam Rockwell and Henry Cavill, and the film debut of pop star Dua Lipa. Dallas Howard is Elly Conway, the reclusive author of a series of books. bestselling spy novelsHe explains how the plot of one of his books, which centers on an agent trying to expose a global criminal organization, begins to be a reflection of reality.
‘Teachers’ room’
‘Teachers’ Room’, which was nominated for an Oscar for the best international film, is a thriller set in classrooms and schools. He reflects on ‘fake news’, racism and intergenerational conflict(Berlin, 1984), directed by Turkish-German İlker Çatak. The plot revolves around an idealistic math and physical education teacher at a high school who, when a series of robberies occur and one of the students is suspected, decides to get to the bottom of the matter on his own, but little is seen. He is cornered by his angry parents, corporatist colleagues, and increasingly aggressive students.
‘Promised land’
This period film, directed by Nikolaj Arcel, deals with themes such as ambition, power, cruelty and love and is adapted from Ida Jenssen’s historical novel set in 1755. Mads Mikkelsen plays Captain Ludvig Kahlen, a nobleman’s bastard. He desires to be recognized in this way and embarks on a seemingly impossible task, Colonizing arid lands in a remote part of Denmark In the name of the king, where he will face competition from the most powerful man in the region.
‘Misanthrope’
Introduced as a modern-day Clarice Starling, Eleanor (Shailene Woodley) is a young police inspector battling the demons of her past and is recruited to profile and track the work of a disturbed individual. As police and the FBI launch a nationwide manhunt, they are hampered at every turn by the individual’s unprecedented behavior. Directed by Damián Szifron ‘Wild Tales’ was nominated for an Oscar.
‘Vermin: plague’
The first feature film by French director Sébastien Vaniček, which won the Special Jury Prize at the Sitges Film Festival, puts the residents of the building in a nightmarish situation after an invasion of spiders that has increased so much that the population is permanently quarantined. Among the interesting things about the movie, the following stands out: they used real spiders for all your scenes.
‘Concrete utopia’
South Korean director Um Tae-hwa directs this doomsday tape The person who represented the Asian country at the Oscars. A massive earthquake has left the world in rubble for an unknown reason, leaving only one apartment building standing in the heart of Seoul: Hwang Gung Apartments. Actor Lee Byung-hun (“Squid Game”) leads the survivors who will have to face complex ethical dilemmas.
‘Queen of the monastery’
Mario Vaquerizo makes his feature film debut as the protagonist of the comedy ‘The Queen of the Convent’, a story about love and chosen families that revolves around a woman who decides to become a nun. The cast of the film, which is Carmen Perona’s directorial debut, includes Antonia San Juan, Isabel Ordaz, Gemma Cuervo, Paz Padilla, Bibiana Fernández and the famous Dulceida.
‘In Adamant’
French director Nicolas Philibert’s (‘Ser y tener’) documentary ‘In the Adamant’ won the Golden Bear award for Best Film at the last Berlin Festival. Adamant is a ship docked at a dock on the River Seine in Paris, housing a psychological center that seeks new therapeutic ways to treat mental health problems, with an approach radically different from traditional psychiatry.
‘Little whale Katak’
Directed by Christine Dallaire-Dupont and Nicola Lemay, this French animated film tells the story of a little white whale’s dangerous journey to the Great North to fulfill his beloved grandmother’s last wish and prove that he has grown up. The film was screened at the Annecy Festival and won the Enfants Terribles Best Feature Film Award at the Gijón Festival.