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Top 10 Movies As Of April 9, 2025

Top 10 Movies As Of April 9, 2025

Buzz Feed15-04-2025

Captain America: Brave New World
Sam finds himself in the middle of an international incident after meeting with President Thaddeus Ross. He must soon discover the reason behind a nefarious global plot before the true mastermind has the entire world seeing red.
A Minecraft Movie
Mufasa: The Lion King
Lost and alone, orphaned cub Mufasa meets a sympathetic lion named Taka, the heir to a royal bloodline. The chance meeting sets in motion an expansive journey of an extraordinary group of misfits searching for their destinies.
Dog Man
When a police officer and his faithful police dog get injured in the line of duty, a harebrained but life-saving surgery fuses the two of them together -- and Dog Man is born. As Dog Man learns to embrace his new identity, he must stop feline supervillain Petey the Cat from cloning himself and going on a crime spree.
Paddington in Peru
When Paddington discovers his beloved aunt has gone missing from the Home for Retired Bears, he and the Brown family head to the jungles of Peru to find her. Determined to solve the mystery, they soon stumble across a legendary treasure as they make their way through the rainforests of the Amazon.
Ne Zha 2
After the catastrophe, although the souls of Nezha and Aobing were saved, their bodies would soon be shattered. Taiyi Zhenren planned to use the seven-colored lotus to rebuild their bodies.
Snow White
Snow White, a princess with a kind heart, joins forces with seven dwarfs and a bandit named Jonathan to liberate her kingdom from her cruel stepmother, the Evil Queen, who is jealous of Snow White's inner beauty
The Life List
When her mother sends her on a quest to complete a teenage bucket list, a young woman uncovers family secrets, finds romance and rediscovers herself.
A Working Man
Levon Cade left behind a decorated military career in the black ops to live a simple life of working construction. However, when human traffickers kidnap his boss's daughter, his search to bring her home uncovers a world of corruption far greater than he ever could have imagined.
Black Bag
When his beloved wife, Kathryn, is suspected of betraying the nation, intelligence agent George Woodhouse faces the ultimate test -- loyalty to his marriage or his country.

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‘Phineas and Ferb' Sticks to What Works in a Welcome Return
‘Phineas and Ferb' Sticks to What Works in a Welcome Return

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time3 hours ago

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‘Phineas and Ferb' Sticks to What Works in a Welcome Return

Most TV revivals are bad. They exist solely for the cynical purpose of exploiting a familiar title, not because there are new stories worth telling in a particular world. Good TV shows are the product of a specific time in the lives of the characters on the show, the people making the show, and the people watching at home. Change one or more of those, and it usually doesn't work. There are exceptions, of course. The passage of time in some ways enhanced both Roseanne/The Conners and Party Down, because they're shows about people in dire financial straits, and revisiting them in an even worse economy made the comic stakes even sharper. And Twin Peaks: The Return was a masterpiece because traditional rules of storytelling never applied to David Lynch. More from Rolling Stone Disney's Live Action 'Snow White' Gets Digital and Physical Release Dates America Runs on Disney: Brooks Drop Surprise Limited-Edition RunDisney Sneaker Collab Lululemon's Viral Disney Capsule Initially Sold Out Fast - Here's Where It Just Restocked Online Now there's Disney's Phineas and Ferb, returning with its first new season in a decade. The family TV classic is animated, which helps enormously, because the characters don't have to age (though they do very slightly). More importantly, it's a show designed to be both timeless and formulaic, so that it can return in any era, act exactly like it always has, and nothing will seem amiss. As the infectious Bowling for Soup theme song has long explained, the title characters — stepbrothers in a blended family (voiced in the original series by, respectively, Vincent Martella and Thomas Brodie-Sangster) who live in an unnamed tri-state area — have 104 days of summer vacation to fill, and the kind of boundless imaginations, technical skills, and resources to do anything they want. In various episodes of the original series, they traveled through time and space, built the world's biggest roller coaster, and designed a plane that allowed them to circumnavigate the globe in one incredibly long summer day by always staying ahead of the sunset. Their older sister Candace (Ashley Tisdale) is obsessed with busting them by showing their mother Linda (Caroline Rhea) the boys' wild and dangerous creations. And every episode has a subplot where the family's pet platypus, Perry, secretly works as a spy, who is constantly trying to prevent the 'evil' — really, just annoying — schemes of pathetic mad scientist Heinz Doofenshmirtz (played by the show's co-creator, Dan Povenmire). Inevitably, the plots intersect when Doof's latest gadget (which always has the suffix '-inator') somehow erases evidence of the boys' latest scheme just before Linda can get a look at it. And that's it: the same idea, repeated in two stories per episode, for nearly 140 episodes that aired over eight years. But the genius of what Povenmire, co-creator Jeff 'Swampy' Marsh, and company did over those eight years was the way they gradually turned that rigid formula to their advantage. Once the audience understood that the same story beats would happen in the same rough order from week to week, no matter how different the inventions, the more the show got to have fun with it. At times, it involved the characters becoming aware of those recurring tropes, like Candace eventually deciding that there's some universal force preventing Linda from ever seeing what the boys are really doing, or Doofenshmirtz noticing when Perry is late or otherwise not following his usual routine. At others, the show found ways to subvert its own formula while somehow sticking with it; in one classic episode, Candace and Doof's teenage daughter Vanessa (Olivia Olson) swap outfits after a dry cleaner mix-up, and as a result, the usual A-story/B-story structure gets flipped, so that it's Doof with a big idea (trying to build his own floating island nation), while the boys build an -inator (albeit one with a benign purpose, to show a friend what they think will be her first rainbow). The only thing standing even partially in the way of a revival is the fact that the show had a definitive ending in 2015, with an episode set on the last day of that wonderful summer vacation. When the team reunited briefly for the 2020 movie Candace Against the Universe, the story was set earlier in that summer. As it is, there are far more individual stories than would fit into even a 104-day summer. At some point, the story needs to move forward, even a little(*). (*) There was another 2015 episode, 'Act Your Age,' set 10 years in the future, where the boys and their friends are preparing to leave for college. But nothing in it would significantly constrain stories set in the kids' present-day lives. And that is basically what this fifth season does. We begin on the last day of the school year, as Phineas has just finished telling the class about all the adventures he, Ferb, Isabella (Alyson Stoner), Baljeet (Maulik Pancholy), and Buford (Bobby Gaylor) had the previous summer. The bell rings, there's a musical number — because there's always an upbeat musical number somewhere in each episode — and then a new summer begins. When we finally get Bowling for Soup to open the second episode, the theme song's lyrics now declare, 'There's another 104 days of summer vacation,' and everything else is otherwise the same. That holds true for the show. The kids are in theory a year older, but the only way to tell that is that some of the actors' voices have gotten deeper. (Martella is now in his thirties, and he re-recorded a few of his lines in the opening credits so they're more consistent with how Phineas sounds today; Ferb is now voiced by David Errigo Jr., but he speaks so infrequently that you'd barely notice.) The show remains unapologetically self-aware. When Perry crashes into the Doofenshmirtz Evil, Inc., headquarters like usual to find out about his nemesis' latest scheme in the first episode, Doof admits, 'I know, today's -inator is a little basic. But I'm purposely starting slow.' And that classroom musical number includes Phineas acknowledging the high bar they set the previous summer, while insisting, 'I'm confident we can top ourselves somehow.' The bar is, indeed, spectacularly high. The original run is one of the greatest kid/family/whatever animated comedies of all time. With one exception, there's not anything in the five episodes I've seen that I would put against the very best of the 2000s/2010s batch. But the fact that the series is able to return after a decade away (give or take Candace Against the Universe) and still feel like itself is a remarkable achievement. The new episodes are much more of a piece from the final season or so, when the creative team was pushing harder against the boundaries of their formula, and focusing more on the supporting characters. There are several stories this time out that barely even feature Phineas and Ferb, including one that follows up on the idea that Candace's best friend Stacy (Kelly Hu) knows that Perry is really a secret agent(*). The best of this group (the one that belongs in the stratosphere of the original) is an even bigger experiment, where the kids build a giant zoetrope — which Buford dubs 'Tropey McTropeface' — and it goes off to have a delightful series of adventures that includes a romance with a local Ferris wheel, much of this accompanied by an unexpected special musical guest. It would be the weirdest new installment if it weren't for the one that turns a single joke from an old episode — that Buford for some reason has life-sized molds of all the other characters, for purposes unknown — into an entire plot, which at one point has Buford simultaneously wearing a Candace skin suit and a Linda skin suit. (Warning: You might have nightmares about that one later.) Mostly, though, Phineas and Ferb thankfully manages to still be Phineas and Ferb. (*) For O.W.C.A., the Organization Without a Cool Acronym, where all the agents are animals wearing fedoras. Later this summer, King of the Hill will return from an even longer hiatus with a season that will both age up the characters and explicitly deal with how the world has changed since that animated classic last appeared. Maybe that will work. But it's a relief to have something as funny, optimistic, joyous, and inventive as Phineas and Ferb back in our lives, acting as if barely any time at all has passed. The first two episodes of the new Phineas and Ferb season debut tonight on Disney Channel, with additional episodes releasing weekly on Saturday mornings, while 10 episodes will begin streaming June 6 on Disney+. I've seen five episodes. 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There's no place like Duluth's free movies in the park this summer
There's no place like Duluth's free movies in the park this summer

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time19 hours ago

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There's no place like Duluth's free movies in the park this summer

There's no place like Duluth's free movies in the park this summer originally appeared on Bring Me The News. Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you might miss that you can catch some free movies in Duluth's Leif Erikson Park. Downtown Duluth's annual Movies in the Park series will offer eight movies on Friday nights from July 11 to Aug. 29, with a mix of recent family fare and more classic all-ages movies. In addition to movies, the series offers popcorn, nachos, and candy from vendors on-site. Here's a look at the free family fare headed to the Movies in the Park series this summer. July 11: Wicked (2024) July 18: The Wild Robot (2024) July 25: The Parent Trap (1998) Aug. 1: Mufasa: The Lion King (2024) Aug. 8: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (2001) Aug. 15: Despicable Me 4 (2024) Aug. 22: The Wizard of Oz (1939) Aug. 29: Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986) Downtown Duluth encourages movie lovers to bring their own chairs or blankets. Additionally, any viewers 16 and under are required to be accompanied by an story was originally reported by Bring Me The News on Jun 4, 2025, where it first appeared.

'Snow White' to stream June 11 on Disney+
'Snow White' to stream June 11 on Disney+

UPI

timea day ago

  • UPI

'Snow White' to stream June 11 on Disney+

1 of 5 | Rachel Zegler plays the title character in "Snow White," which arrives on Disney+ June 11. File Photo by Jim Ruymen/UPI | License Photo June 4 (UPI) -- The Snow White live-action remake will arrive on Disney+ June 11, the streamer announced Wednesday. The musical fantasy film reimagines Disney's 1937 animated film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Rachel Zegler, 23, stars in the titular role, which she described as "the hardest thing" she's ever done. "It's amazingly rewarding when you see it and when you complete it to say that this is a thing that we did, but you basically do three different versions of every scene," Zegler told Jimmy Kimmel in March. Gal Gadot portrays the Evil Queen, whose jealousy of Snow White prompts her to try and kill her stepdaughter. "The classic story comes to life on Disney +," the streamer wrote in an Instagram post announcing the title's arrival.

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