A cheerleading-squad captain faces stiff competition from an inner-city squad, plus she must train a new team member and replace routines her former captain stole from other squads.
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After decades of dreaming, a quartet of older women, who are dedicated football fans, finally decides to make a pilgrimage to the Super Bowl for the once-in-a-lifetime chance to meet their favorite player, noteworthy NFL mainstay Tom Brady. Along the way, a series of hijinks ensue.
Maybe I Do, directed by Michael Jacobs, tells the story of Michelle and Allen, who have finally decided to get married. As part of their planning, they decide to invite their parents to meet each other. While this seems normal, the situation turns uncomfortable when they realize they already know each other intimately. The meeting quickly goes from awkward to awful when it is revealed that they're all having affairs - with each other. Starring Emma Roberts, Luke Bracey, Diane Keaton, Susan Sarandon, Richard Gere, and William H. Macy.
Cantankerous and alone, widower Otto (Tom Hanks) spends his days critiquing his bemused neighbors, rarely holding back his scathing opinions. Much to his dismay, a boisterous young family moves into the house next door, challenging his sour personality and negative ideals. Otto then finds unexpected kinship with the members of the family that turns the tide in his lonely life. Marc Forster directs the comedy-drama based on the novel by Fredrik Backman. Co-starring Rachel Keller, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, and Cameron Britton.
John Cameron Mitchell, who created a cult sensation as writer and director of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, blazes a brave new trail with this comedy-drama which combines the stories of a handful of emotionally unsatisfied New Yorkers with some of the most explicit sexual material to ever appear in a mainstream motion picture. Sofia (Sook-Yin Lee) is a couples' therapist who has a major relationship problem of her own -- she's never had an orgasm, and her husband Rob (Raphael Barker) doesn't seem capable of giving her one. Sophia's clients include James and Jamie (Paul Dawson and PJ DeBoy), a gay couple who have been together for five years and are beginning to grow tired of one another. As James and Jamie discuss the possibility of bringing another man into the bedroom, Sophia accidentally mentions her problem, and they tell her of an upcoming "Shortbus Party," a sexual free-for-all in which straight, gay, and lesbian couples are all welcome to either talk about sex or take a more active role in the main ballroom. As James and Jamie hook up with Ceth (Jay Brannan) for some mutually satisfying action at the bash, Sophia experiments with Sapphic diversions, and begins to truly find herself when she encounters Severin (Lindsay Beamish), a professional dominatrix. However, while Sophia begins to find what she needs with Severin, she discovers that while Severin is able to casually enter into a sexual relationship, she's never been able to emotionally commit herself to someone else. Shortbus was screened in competition at the 2006 Toronto Film Festival.
After a family gathering is disrupted by the sudden death of the patriarch, two detectives are sent to investigate the mysterious incident. But as the dysfunctional family continues to fight, the detectives begin to consider the idea that the death may not have been an accident.
In the remote town of Inishmore, tucked away on Ireland's Aran Islands, Padraic (Colin Farrell) and Colm (Brendan Gleeson) share a close, intimate bond of friendship that spans their lives. Yet when one of the men brings their lifelong bond to a swift, abrupt end, the other reels, questioning their decades of friendship and his own identity in the process. Martin McDonagh writes and directs the Irish comedy-drama. Co-starring Kerry Condon, Barry Keoghan, and David Pearse.