Film Edited by Virginia Gil
timeout.com/miami/film @virginwrites
Wonder women
Summer movies always bring the heat, but this season is dominated by a robust selection of femcentric offerings. By Joshua Rothkopf
WHEN THE WEATHER gets sultry, we often leave our brains at home before we head to the multiplex; it’s better for all involved. Thrillingly, this year might be the exception: Sure, this summer’s slate includes a ton of superheroic spandex and doofus-on-doofus yammering, but there are several smart alternatives. And we don’t think it’s a coincidence that those titles feature women, both in front of the camera and behind it. Movies grab back! Check out these seven lady- led films.
Alien: Covenant Fans are geeking out over
the return of director Ridley Scott to his signature series. (Didn’t they learn anything after his dull-as-dirt Prometheus?) Adding immeasurably to the plus column is Inherent Vice’s scrappy Katherine Waterston, playing a hard-as-nails space jockey à la Sigourney Weaver. à Opens May 19
DISCOVER! Time Out Miami May 18–August 16, 2017 Atomic Blonde
women, you can expect the psychological warfare to be sharpened to a prickly point. Her cast includes Kirsten Dunst, Elle Fanning and the on-fire Nicole Kidman. à Opens June 23
Atomic Blonde Charlize Theron is basically
Alien: Covenant
Wonder Woman If there’s any hope for the dead-
on-arrival DC Comics universe, it’s this side project starring the statuesque Gal Gadot. She’ll never be Lynda Carter—let that one go—but already we’ve heard leaks from the set that humor is being emphasized. That’s a good sign. à Opens June 2
Rough Night We’ll watch Scarlett Johansson
in anything and have the scars from Ghost in the Shell to prove
it. This rude ensemble comedy about a bachelorette party gone horribly wrong should set the star back on track. Adding Saturday Night Live’s Kate McKinnon and Big Little Lies’ Zoë Kravitz to the mix doesn’t hurt one bit. à Opens June 16
The Beguiled Don’t mess with Sofia
Coppola. Even when she takes on a remake of an underrated 1971 Clint Eastwood movie about a house full of vengeful
Good? Bad? Ugly? Our reviews at
timeout.com/miami/film. 50
a superhero in real life, and after stealing Mad Max: Fury Road from its title character, we’re glad to see her getting her own action vehicle. Here she plays a British spy who heads to Berlin in 1989
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