Monster Hunter, Nomadland and 5 great movies you can now watch at home

Theatrical releases are light, but it’s still a busy week in the entertainment world. Detective Chinatown 3, the long-awaited third installment in director Chen Sicheng’s mystery and comedy series, grossed more than $ 424 million at the Chinese box office, and a total that adds up to $ 100 million more than Christopher Nolan Principle worldwide and almost triple Wonder Woman 1984 global box office. Meanwhile, in Hollywood, this week saw the premiere of Disney’s upcoming live-action 101 Dalmatians Cruella Spin-off and Warner Bros. ‘ long-awaited Mortal Kombat reboot!

When it comes to new films to watch now, audiences have a lot to choose from this week, by Paul WS Anderson Monster hunter to critically acclaimed by Chloé Zhao Nomadland, to the sparkling period action movie by Choi Jae-hoon THE Swordsman. To help you choose what to watch, here are the new releases you can watch on VOD this weekend.

Monster hunter

Where to watch: Buy digitally for $ 19.99 on Amazon, Apple and Voodoo

Photo: jewels on the screen

Paul WS Anderson returns for another science fiction video game adaptation with Monster hunter. Milla Jovovich stars as Lieutenant Natalie Artemis, a US Army Ranger who is transported along with her United Nations team to an alternate world inhabited by gigantic monsters. From our analysis:

The entire film is light in the history and character department; The entire Jovovich Ranger squadron has names like “Ax”, “Marshall”, “Dash” and “Linc”. Anderson seems conscious – the tropes looked just as deliciously exaggerated as the action. Combined with a reverence for the games, the Monster Hunter fan-service setpieces were the perfect and stupid balm for 2020. It’s hard to say if it’s understandable to someone who doesn’t love the series, but its bombastic action is hardly delayed during its time of execution and a half. He is a happy member of this new class of video game films written with an obvious love for his tradition, although he may not be able to get up without a deep appreciation for the original material.

Nomadland

Where to watch: Cast on Hulu

mcdormand smiles at the camera

Photo: Searchlight Pictures

Chloé Zhao’s neo-Western drama, starring Frances McDormand as an itinerant wanderer trying to make a living in the harsh landscape of the contemporary American West, leads this year’s Oscar nominees for Best Picture. It is also absolutely unmissable. From our analysis:

The journey that Zhao took is wonderful, exploring literal and emotional peaks and valleys. Although Fern’s story is made up, the world she’s traveling through is real, made even more impressive by the rest of the cast and the seemingly insignificant little moments that Zhao chooses to remain. In one of these moments, Strathairn’s character kneels down to get the best possible photo of Fern in front of a giant dinosaur statue. There is something happily tender about the scene: the light is dimming and he is using a tiny flip phone, but it is evident how much he cares. This feeling of attention and empathy runs through the film, easily distinguishing it as one of the best of 2020.

The Swordsman

Where to watch: Digital rental, $ 4.99 Amazon at Apple; $ 3.99 on Voodoo

Blind swordsman Tae-yul (Jang Hyuk) holds a blade to a masked opponent's throat.

Photo: Well Go USA

Jang Hyuk plays Tae-yul, a blind and disgraced swordsman in a coup attempt that returns from self-exile to save his daughter’s life in Choi Jae-hoon’s Korean action drama. The movie trailer looks beautiful and elegant, with a frantic photograph courtesy of Won-ho Son (#Alive on Netflix) and a cast featuring I saw the demonare Choi Jin-ho and Joe Taslim from The Raid and The night comes for us fame.

Test pattern

Where to watch: Broadcast in Virtual Cinemas

Brittany S. Hall and Will Brill in a Test Pattern scene

Photo: Kino Lorber

Premiere of director Shatara Michelle Ford Test pattern follows the story of Renesha (Brittany S. Hall) and Evan (Will Brill), an interracial couple whose relationship is irrevocably altered following a devastating sexual assault. Advertised as a psychological horror part, a realistic drama part, Ford’s film offers a stimulating description of the myriad of systemic injustices, social conditioning and patriarchal obstacles that women face while navigating the thorny topics of sex and consent in American society.

supernova

Where to watch: Digital rental, $ 6.99 on Amazon, Apple and Voodoo

Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci at Harry Macqueen's Supernova

Photo: StudioCanal

Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci star as a 20-year-old lover couple in Harry Macqueen’s romance drama supernova. When Tusker (Tucci) is diagnosed with dementia, he and Sam (Firth) take the road to travel around England to meet and remember friends and family. Macqueen’s film looks like a humorous and moving story of enduring love after the loss of impediment and an exciting showcase of Firth and Tucci’s disarming chemistry on the screen.

Silk Road

Where to watch: Rent digital, $ 3.99 on Amazon; $ 5.99 on Apple and Voodoo

Nick Robinson as Ross W. Ulbricht on “Silk Road”.

Photo: Lionsgate

Inspired by the real life story of the doomed founder of the darknet drug market Silk Road, the wells of Tiller Russell Jurassic World stars Nick Robinson as Ross Ulbricht in the early days of a fledgling criminal company, under the pseudonym “the Dread Pirate Roberts”. As Silk Road grows in exponential scope and notoriety, its path inevitably collides with Rick Bowden (Jason Clarke), a volatile DEA agent determined to defeat it.

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