Two college freshmen make a pact to leave their troubled partners to live their best single lives in this well-intentioned but dull directorial debut. Decades after “When Harry Met Sally” asked audiences whether grown men and women can be friends, another romantic comedy poses the same question to a contemporary college audience. Yet in director Jordan Weiss’s “Sweethearts,” which revolves around two best friends who break up with their hometown romances over a holiday weekend, the traditional question waits until the final minutes to unfold, while a pair of separate screwball comedy plots have not been properly wrapped up. Though the film contains a talented cast and compelling sentiments about self-acceptance and platonic friendship, it comes across as two half-baked scripts fused together, held together by razor-thin connections. Director: Jordan Weiss Writers: Dan BrierJordan Weiss Stars: Kiernan Shipka, Nico Hiraga, Caleb Hearon Ben (Nico Hiraga) and Jamie (Kiernan Shipka) ha...
Everyone you know is fighting a battle you know nothing about. It’s a cliché because it’s true, and it could be the motto of Pixar’s best creations: its animations have revealed the hidden feelings of toys, monsters, and even cars. That idea is what drives Win or Lose, the studio’s latest TV series, and in the moments when it fully commits to its philosophy, it offers a powerful call to empathy with a knowing smile. We watch the Pickles, a high school softball team led by swaggering father-coach Dan (Will Forte), as they play a crucial game. They win! They thus get a chance to play in the state championship seven days later, which is as terrifying as it is exciting. That’s the foundation on which each installment is built. Like a sports version of the multi-perspective arthouse classic Rashomon, we keep replaying the events of the same week, but through the eyes of a new person each time. Stars: Winston Vengapally, Chanel Stewart, Josh Thomson First up is Laurie (Rosie Foss), who ...