![]() Members of a ranching family and a group of Mexican immigrants band together to seek refuge in the nearest safe place, back in Mexico. Unfortunately, the purging doesn’t end when the siren wails after 12 hours - the ruling party has lost control of its creation. It’s some years after the events of “Purge: Election Year,” and the American people have put the New Founding Fathers back in power and the Purge - the annual night of bloodshed - back into effect. Whoopi Goldberg won an Oscar as the psychic who reconnects the couple, and it’s the perfect October date-night movie. “Ghost”: Love transcends death in this timeless romantic fantasy about a murdered man (Patrick Swayze) reaching out to his widow (Demi Moore) from the spirit world. “Desperately Seeking Susan”: This mistaken identity comedy is always worth watching for stars Madonna and Rosanna Arquette and its tour of mid-’80s New York street life. “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”: Robert Redford and Paul Newman are in their prime in this Western about real-life outlaws on the run. With Tatum O’Neal and Jackie Earle Haley. “The Bad News Bears”: The rude humor was surprising in 1976 for a family film about a flailing Little League baseball team, but it’s also why Baby Boomers remember the movie so fondly all these years later. “Never Rarely Sometimes Always”: This indie film about a teenage girl who leaves her home in rural Pennsylvania to try to get an abortion in New York was a prize winner at the Sundance Film Festival. For the unlucky victims of a supernatural curse, sex slowly but inevitably leads to death unless they can pass it on. “It Follows”: Peacock has added enough horror movies to keep you up all night through Halloween, including this 2015 indie sensation. “Cats”: There may well come a late night when you no longer can resist taking a peek at this furry mess, based on the long-running hit Broadway musical and starring Idris Elba, Judi Dench, James Corden and some dancing cockroaches. Robert Rodriguez for young and old: The San Antonio-born director worked with Antonio Banderas on the big-budget “El Mariachi” sequels “Desperado” and “Once Upon a Time in Mexico” as well as the imaginative family thriller “Spy Kids” and its sequels “Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams” and “Spy Kids 3: Game Over.” All on Netflix. Here’s a look at a few highlights among the many, many movies arriving Friday on streaming services. One especially loathsome character calls the multilayered sound of gunfire “American music,” so consider that a trigger warning. “The Forever Purge”: The Purge franchise has gone to Texas with guns blazing. On : Scary things to do in San Antonio for Halloween: haunted houses, theme parks, ghost tours and more New - Blu-rayĪdela (Ana de la Reguera) is captured by a purger near the U.S.-Mexico border in “The Forever Purge.” Universal Pictures But you won’t wonder about any of that until the game is over it’s too much fun.Īvailable to buy now on digital platforms after being released in theaters. It’s also funny that a movie with a plot about stolen computer code steals so much from “Inception,” “The LEGO Movie,” “They Live,” “Black Mirror” and more. So it seems like a glitch that more of it isn’t animated, a la “Ready Player One.” But who would want to see the expressive faces of Ryan Reynolds, who plays Guy, and Jodie Comer, as his gamer girl ally, pixilated? Here’s how to watch it for free.“Free Guy”: This frenetic comedy is about a nonplayer character (an oft-robbed bank teller named Guy) in a “Grand Theft Auto”-style video game who becomes self-aware. ![]()
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