Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 111, No. 61, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 2, 2014 Page: 28 of 36
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User: dennisjackson@dentonrc.com Time: 10-01-2014 23:45 Product: DRC_Tab PubDate: 10-02-2014 Zone: State Edition: 1 Page: DTIME_T08 Color: Ki
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Your chance at ‘Eternity’
Fathom Events
■ t doesn’t seem possible that From Here to Eternity could get more sultry than the film’s iconic passionate kiss on the
I beaches of Pearl Harbor. But Tony Award-winning musical-maker Tim Rice adapted the film for the stage, and if reports are
I true, audiences had to fan themselves through the big numbers. A filmed version of the musical — about young Army men
in 1941 and the women they love — was made of this spring’s production on London’s West End, starring Darius Campbell as
First Sgt. Milton Warden and Rebecca Thornhill as Karen Holmes. The company men doff their shirts and the women play
peek-a-boo with pinup-style curves while the band plays on. Fathom Events screens the musical at 7:30 p.m. today at theaters
including the Denton Cinemark, 2825 Wind River Lane. A repeat screening is at 7 p.m. Oct. 9. The musical is rated R for adult
situations. For tickets, visit www.fathomevents.com.
Eggs (voiced
by Isaac
Hempstead
Wright) is a
human boy
raised by
creatures in
“The Box-
trolls.”
Focus Features
THEATERS
Cinemark Denton 2825 Wind River
Lane off I-35E. 940-535-2654. www.
cinemark.com.
Movie Tavern 916 W. University
Drive. 940-566-FILM (3456).
www.movietavern.com.
Carmike Hickory Creek 16 8380
S. I-35E, Hickory Creek. 940-321-
2788. www.carmike.com.
Silver Cinemas Inside Golden
Triangle Mall, 2201S. I-35E. 940-387-
1957. www.silvercinemasinc.com.
OPENING FRIDAY
Annabelle A young couple with a
new baby learn that a vintage doll in
their home has a demon attached to
it. With Annabelle Wallis, Ward
Horton and Alfre Woodard. Written by
Gary Dauberman. Directed by John
Leonetti. (1:35) R. — Los Angeles
Times
The Good Lie A brassy American
woman helps four Sudanese refugees
start over in the U.S. With Reese
Witherspoon, Arnold Oceng and Ger
Duany. Written by Margaret Nagle.
Directed by Philippe Falardeau. Rated
PG-13,112 minutes. — LAT
Left Behind When millions of
Christians are transported to heaven
in the Rapture and the rest of the
world is plunged into chaos, a pilot
tries to save his hysterical passengers
and get back to his family. With
Nicolas Cage, Chad Michael Murray
and Cassi Thomson. Written by Paul
Lalonde and John Patus. Directed by
Vic Armstrong. Rated PG-13, HO
minutes. — LAT
NOW PLAYING
The Boxtrolls (★★★) Oregon
animation studio Laika's 3-D stop-
motion film is set in the British village
of Cheesebridge, whose supposed
scourge is the Boxtrolls, little noc-
turnal creatures who wear discarded
boxes like a turtle shell and scavenge
for mechanical parts. The Boxtrolls
live peacefully underground with a
child (voiced by Isaac Hempstead
Wright) who begins to explore Chee-
sebridge above ground and befriends
a girl (Elle Fanning). Despite a rather
uncertainly structured story, The
Boxtrolls has its pleasantly demented
charms. With Ben Kingsley, Richard
Ayoade, Nick Frost. Rated PG, 96
minutes. — The Associated Press
Dolphin Tale 2 A boy who helped
rescue and rehabilitate an injured
dolphin tries to find her a companion
so she can stay at the local aquarium.
With Nathan Gamble, Harry Connick
Jr. and Morgan Freeman. Written and
directed by Charles Martin Smith.
Rated PG, 100 minutes. — LAT
The Equalizer (★★1/2) Denzel
Washington plays a deadly vigilante
who takes revenge for the beating of
a young woman (Chloe Grace Moretz)
by wiping out a Russian mob headed
by a surly boss (Marton Csokas). This
act sets off the film's resulting re-
venge-action tale, ably but not im-
pressively choreographed by director
Antoine Fuqua. Based on the 1980s
TV show, the film delivers the action
but without anything fresh. Rated R,
126 minutes. — Boo Allen
Guardians of the Galaxy (★★1/2)
This 3-D space opera is Marvel's most
irreverent film yet, and has a wel-
come, slightly self-mocking tone.
Peter Quill (Chris Pratt) is a Han
Solo-like scavenger who stumbles
across a silver orb also sought by
some evil forces: Ronan the Accuser
(Lee Pace) and his boss, Thanos (Josh
Brolin). The resulting scrum for the
orb introduces several more seekers:
the green-skinned Gamora (Zoe
Saldana), the hulking Drax (Dave
Bautista), a sardonic raccoon named
Rocket (Bradley Cooper) and a talking
tree called Groot (Vin Diesel). Direct-
ed by James Gunn (Super). Rated
PG-13,121 minutes. — AP
The Maze Runner In a post-apoca-
lyptic future, an amnesiac teen wakes
up trapped in a massive maze with a
group of other boys and has to find a
way to escape. With Dylan O'Brien,
Kaya Scodelario and Ami Ameen.
Directed by Wes Ball. Rated PG-13,113
minutes. — LAT
The Song An aspiring singer-song-
writer struggling to escape the
shadow of his father, a country music
legend, finds romance and writes a
breakout hit, only to grapple with
stardom and temptation. With Alan
Powell, Caitlin Nicol-Thomas and Ali
Faulkner. Written and directed by
Richard Ramsey. Rated PG-13, 111
minutes. — LAT
This Is Where I Leave You (★★)
A good comedic cast comes together
for an abundance of variously good
and bad jokes spread throughout a
predictable tale of a family reuniting
after the death of their patriarch.
Jason Bateman takes the highest -
profile role as the most angst-ridden
son, joined by his sister (Tina Fey),
two brothers (Corey Stoll and Adam
Driver) and mother (Jane Fonda).
Directed by Shawn Levy, with script
from Jonathan Tropper from his own
novel. Rated R, 103 minutes. — B.A.
A Walk Among the Tombstones
A former NYPD cop working as an
unlicensed private investigator
reluctantly agrees to help a heroin
trafficker hunt down the men who
kidnapped and brutally murdered his
wife. With Liam Neeson, Dan Stevens
and David Harbour. Written and
directed by Scott Frank. Rated R, 114
minutes. — LAT
When the Game Stands Tall A
football coach takes his high-school
football team from obscurity to a
record-shattering 151-game winning
streak. With Jim Caviezel, Michael
Chiklis and Alexander Ludwig. Direct-
ed by Thomas Carter. Rated PG, 114
minutes. — LAT
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 111, No. 61, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 2, 2014, newspaper, October 2, 2014; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1124635/m1/28/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .