What's Hot
MOST READ
  • Lizz Winstead bites back The political pundit and creator of The Daily Show discusses the feminist elite, slut-shaming, and the difference between essay and memoir | 5/8/2013
  • Orlando City Soccer's goal rush The Brit, the Brazilian and their (not so?) crazy scheme to make Orlando soccer capital of the Southeast | 5/8/2013
  • Food & Drink - Reader' Picks Best Caribbean 1st Bahama Breeze, multiple locations, bahamabreeze.com 2nd Mama Millie's, 12273 University Blvd., 407-382-3570, mamamillies.com | 7/18/2012
  • Fringe Fest 2013 shows Some choices for geeks, gamers, those who prefer to fly solo, kids, oldsters and more | 5/15/2013
  • Not to be upstaged The Free Outdoor Stage on the lawn at Fringe is not what you might expect | 5/15/2013
  • Fringe Fest 2013 reviews Our top seven picks | 5/22/2013
  • Under the Rainbow Our favorite mess, Judy Garland, shares hints on surviving Fringe | 5/15/2013
What's Going On

Calendar

Search thousands of events in our database.

Restaurants

Search hundreds of restaurants in our database.

Nightlife

Search hundreds of clubs in our database.

Orlando Daily Deals powered by ReferLocal

Print Email

Film & DVD

In Your Queue: 'We Have a Pope' and 'For Ellen'

Movies streaming online now

Photo: , License: N/A


We Have a Pope (streaming on Netflix, Amazon) When it comes to picking a new pope, the Vatican plays it pretty close to the chest. Rumor and speculation aside, no one really knows what happens except the cardinals. Since we have no evidence of what happens when they pick the pontiff, Palme d'Or-winning director Nanni Moretti fills the knowledge gap in the most Catholic way possible: through absurdity.

Michel Piccoli plays an obscure cardinal named Melville who, after many deadlocked ballots, is unexpectedly named pope. As he is being announced to the masses in Saint Peter's Square he is struck by the mother of all existential crises, and the anxiety-stricken Pope runs away from the Vatican, leaving the College of Cardinals and Catholic bureaucrats sequestered with the Pope's unwilling shrink (Moretti) as the pope traipses around Rome anonymously, trying to figure out what to do.

Moretti's intense focus on the absurdity of the situation is a grace stroke, making it specific without being an in-joke for Catholics-only. Piccolo is wonderful as the pope, but Gianluca Gobbi, as the Vatican guard who is charged with ruffling the pope's curtains every now and then so no one figures out what's going on, really steals the show. – Rob Boylan

For Ellen (streaming on Netflix, Amazon Prime) Seeing the trailer for it, I thought it was somewhat surprising that For Ellen couldn't gain a real foothold once it came to market. It stars Paul Dano in an intense performance as an almost-famous musician named Joby who's returned home to sign divorce papers. His wife, Claire (Margarita Levieva), is about to get remarried and wants him out of her life. She wants him out of their daughter Ellen's life too, which is something he wasn't expecting. Joby goes to devious means to spend some time with Ellen in this almost one-man show.

Dano, who played a mute for much of Little Miss Sunshine, isn't everyone's cup of tea, though he puts in a strong performance here. It's an interesting portrait of an uninteresting man – a character we've seen many variations on in the past – made palatable by his surroundings. – RB

We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
comments powered by Disqus