NANCY DREW AND THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE (2019)

(VOD) Katt Shea (POISON IVY) directed and Nina Fiore (BLOOD DRIVE, one of my favorite one-season wonders) wrote this extremely winsome teen mystery that feels like a cult early naughts film. The mystery itself is pretty easy to suss out, but the inventive set pieces and Sophia Lillis’ charming performance elevate the material into something far better than it needed to be.

SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES (1980)

(VOD) Feels like Neil Simon’s THE PHILADELPHIA STORY, but slightly more insufferable. As a screwball comedy it ultimately works, partially due to some damn fine quips, but mostly due to Goldie Hawn’s ebullience. Chase’s smugness is extraordinarily suffocating at first, but that gets worn away roughly halfway through the film. Not a great movie — allegedly Simon doesn’t even remember writing the screenplay — but it’s a breezy fun time.

LITTLE JOE (2019)

(Hulu/VOD) A film about airborne pathogens that alter your brain might be a tasteless viewing choice right now, but LITTLE JOE is a sleek, patient take on THE BODY SNATCHERS, despite a surprisingly overbearing score that would feel more at home in Bryan Fuller’s HANNIBAL than a film about malicious flowers.

THE SWIMMER (1968)

(Crackle/Plex/VOD). Forgotten 60s classic about a man — Burt Lancaster, clad only in swimming trunks for the entire film — literally trying to swim his way through the haunted pools of his past, seeking redemption.

It’s worth noting that Grindhouse Releasing has limited, newly restored Blu-Ray available: https://grindhousereleasing.com/the-swimmer/

THE FITS (2016)

(AMC+/fubo/kanopy/Showtime/VOD) A girl training to box joins a community cheerleading team and, suddenly, members of the squad start falling inexplicably ill. More of an intimate drama than it sounds like, reminding me of Megan Abbot’s — no, not DARE ME — THE FEVER.

BREWSTER MCCLOUD (1970)

(VOD) An icarus story with a serial killer MacGuffin, Altman’s follow-up to MASH is even more chaotic and irreverent, while also being extremely impenetrable. The weirdness worked in my favor, but your mileage may vary.

LIMELIGHT (1953)

(Criterion/HBO MAX/VOD)? A fine melodrama bolstered by an amazing performance by Chaplin (who also wrote, directed, and composed his own swan song) — basically playing the Little Tramp and himself as a washed up clown — and features Claire Bloom as the young ingenue he aids. The theatrical numbers, while certainly self-indulgent, are not unwelcome, especially since the later ones also include Buster Keaton.

THE LADY IN RED (1979)

(tubi) Penned by John Sayles — his second screenwriting credit — it tells the story of Ana Cumpănaș, aka the last woman to be involved with John Dillinger before his death. The film’s an odd amalgam of genres, including: cathouse, women in prison, and gangster, but yet manages to be more than the sum of its parts.

Please note: the trailer below is NSFW.

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME? (2018)

(VOD) Criminally underseen docudrama about Lee Israel, but less focused on telling her story than telling the story about the inherent selfishness of telling the story of others.