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    Movie Review

    Gloriously deranged Cocaine Bear is almost exactly what you expect

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 23, 2023 | 12:27 pm

    Naming a movie can sometimes be a tricky proposition. You can choose something that conveys the tone of the story, one that features the names of the main character(s), or one that simply tells where a story takes place. But sometimes, like with Snakes on a Plane, just telling the audience exactly what you’re going to show them does the trick.

    The latter is the route that Cocaine Bear takes; if you go into a film with that title and expect anything more than a bear jacked up on coke and wreaking havoc, you need to have a better thought process. Very loosely based on a true story, the film opens on a drug smuggler dumping bag after bag full of cocaine bricks out of a plane for unknown reasons other than that the plane is going down.

    Many of the bags land in a Georgia forest, where the title bear quickly becomes addicted to the drug. She proceeds to go on a rampage, running into a variety of people, including Sari (Keri Russell), who’s looking for daughter Dee Dee (Brooklynn Prince) and her friend Henry (Christian Convery) after they skipped school; Eddie (Alden Ehrenreich) and Daveed (O’Shea Jackson Jr.), two drug dealers sent to find the cocaine; Bob (Isiah Whitlock Jr.), a cop trying to find the drug dealers; park ranger Liz (Margo Martindale) and her unrequited crush Peter (Jesse Tyler Ferguson); and more.

    Directed by Elizabeth Banks and written by Jimmy Warden, the film goes further than you might think, but also oddly holds back in certain areas. If you prefer not to see blood and gore, steer far away from this film, as it – despite being a comedy/thriller - contains more than some horror movies. All of it is presented in a comical way with heightened situations, but the filmmakers do not shy away from showing the grisly results of the bear’s various maulings.

    At its best, the film is gloriously deranged, as long as you’re in the proper mindset for its main tone. But it’s when the film diverges from that tone that it loses some momentum. There are multiple times when the filmmakers try to inject a bit of earnestness into the proceedings, and those scenes are jarring when they’re near or directly adjacent to utter mayhem. If they were going for balance, a less drastic shift would have been better.

    The decision to keep the story from being completely absurd likely stems from the casting of the film. Some of the bold-face names, including Russell, Martindale, and Ray Liotta, are not known for their comedy work, so it makes sense to have them play things straight, for the most part. The funniest sections of the film tend to come from lesser-known actors, whose reactions to a high, murderous bear are exactly what you would want.

    You don’t come to a film like this for the acting, but the pairing of Ehrenreich and Jackson works well. Prince, previously best known for The Florida Project, appears to be well on her way to a nice career. It’s nice to see Russell, but the role doesn’t seem to suit her. And it’s bittersweet seeing Liotta in one of his final roles, as his presence alone lends the film credibility.

    Cocaine Bear delivers on the promise of its title, even if it sometimes stops short of all-out craziness. The over-the-top nature of its top scenes and unapologetic bloodiness make it worth the price of admission alone.

    ---

    Cocaine Bear opens in theaters on February 24.

    Coked-up bear in Cocaine Bear

    Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Coked-up bear in Cocaine Bear.

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    Movie Review

    Jodie Foster brings depth and wit to French thriller A Private Life

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 30, 2026 | 9:41 am
    Jodie Foster in A Private Life
    Photo by Georges Lechaptois
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    Jodie Foster has been a member of the Hollywood community for almost 60 years, first as a child actor on TV, and then branching out into movies. She earned an Oscar nomination at the tender age of 14 for her role in Taxi Driver, and she’s gone on to be nominated five times, winning twice. Now, at age 63, she’s showing she’s still capable of surprises by fluently speaking another language in the French film, A Private Life.

    Foster plays Lilian Steiner, a psychiatrist who sees patients out of her Parisian apartment. When she learns of the death of one of her patients, Paula (Virginie Efira), she’s sad but otherwise unaffected until a few suspicious things start happening. This includes the robbery of her apartment, in which a recording of Paula’s last session with Lilian goes missing.

    With the help of her ex-husband, Gabriel (Daniel Auteuil), Lilian becomes an amateur private detective, tracking the movements of Paula’s husband, Simon (Mathieu Amalric), whom she increasingly suspects of murder. At the same time, Lilian must navigate a tense relationship with her son, Julien (Vincent Lacoste), along with an unexpected rekindling of romance with Gabriel.

    Written and directed by Rebecca Zlotowski, and co-written by Anne Berest, it is a psychological thriller that at times feels like an Inspector Clouseau movie. With little to go on but her own perhaps misguided suspicions, Lilian digs herself deeper into a situation of her own making. And she further clouds her mind by indulging in a tryst with Gabriel, who’s all too eager to help Lilian pursue her criminal theories. While the film is not a comedy, there are elements of humor that pop in to keep the story light.

    Zlotowski plays with the competing tones of the story well, keeping viewers on Lilian’s side even as she indulges in things that might not be the healthiest for her. Lilian’s various eccentricities - an adherence to recording on old-fashioned mini discs instead of fully digital, keeping an emotional distance from her son and grandson - make her a fascinating character whose vacillating motivations keep viewers guessing as to what she’ll do next.

    In a lot of ways, the film is a study of how Lilian needs to try to find ways to heal herself. The possibility of Paula being murdered wakes Lilian up to the idea that she has not been as attentive a doctor as she should be. The sessions with different patients that Zlotowski shows give the impression that there’s a general level of dissatisfaction with her, with one patient outright breaking up with her.

    Foster is no less compelling speaking mostly in French than she is in English language movies. Her fluency is never in doubt, and she fits in seamlessly with the actual French actors in the film. Auteuil is a fun counterpart for Foster, showing an unexpected chemistry with her that keeps their scenes crackling with energy. Amalric, a Wes Anderson favorite, has a relatively small role but still stands out when he gets a chance.

    A Private Life is not the type of thriller that American audiences might be used to, but its slow, methodical storytelling and subtle humor make it an interesting watch from beginning to end. The film is not up for any awards, but Foster’s performance shows she remains a top-tier actor.

    ---

    A Private Life is now playing in select theaters.

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