
Page 2 June 3, 2021
Entertainment
6 New Films Coming Out in June
That You Should Know
By Ryan Rojas for Cinemacy
With the passing of Memorial Day weekend
bringing us even more fully into the summer
season, it’s an exciting time once again for
movies, as previously unreleased titles get slated
and theaters reopen in larger numbers across
the country. June releases bring some highly
anticipated new films–some that have played
in film festivals earlier this year and last–that
Photo credit: Clockwise, from top left: ‘The Sparks Brothers,’ ‘Zola,’ ‘Undine,’ ‘I Carry You With Me’
are finally able to be seen by audiences. We
rounded up six films coming out this month
that you should definitely have on your June
releases radar to check out.
Undine (IFC Films)
I don’t know much about Undine, except that
early reviews are comparing it to Guillermo
Del Toro’s The Shape of Water (which makes
me think this mysterious movie might get a
bit... fishy). Undine is the name of its lead
character (Paula Beer), a historian who, after
being left by the man she loves, must fulfill
an ancient myth of killing him and returning
to the water. The latest from director Christian
Petzold (whose films Phoenix and Transit have
been well-received by critics, but which I’ve
personally yet to see), I’m very excited to
see what’s in store with this film, as well as
looking forward to Paula Beer’s performance
in the lead role (Beer won the Best Actress
award at the Berlin International Film Festival
where the film was also nominated for Best
Picture). ‘Undine’ opens in select theaters and
is available on Digital and VOD Platforms
starting Friday, June 4th.
The Sparks Brothers
(Focus Features)
If you’re a fan of director Edgar Wright, then
you already know that his extensive knowledge
of obscure pop-culture music makes for some
of the best needle-drop soundtrack moments
in his films. In his documentary feature debut,
Wright shines his spotlight on the band Sparks
(who, if you’re like me, may not have heard
of before this documentary, but is very likely
“your favorite band’s favorite band”). As Wright
shares with fan-boy energy and passion, Sparks’s
(made up by brothers Ron and Russell Mael)
career spans over five decades in which the
pair made 25 studio albums and 500 songs,
but never saw the breakthrough recognition.
which Wright attempts to course-correct here.
I saw The Sparks Brothers when it premiered
at Sundance earlier this year, and immediately
after watching it dove into their vast back
catalogue and started recommending my new
discoveries to friends–which is what you’ll
be doing too in this summer of Sparks. ‘The
Sparks Brothers’ opens in domestic theaters
on Friday, June 18th.
I Carry You With Me
(Sony Pictures Classics)
After premiering at Sundance Film Festival
earlier this year, writer and director Heidi Ewing’s
I Carry You With Me won the Audience
Award for the festival’s Best of NEXT selection
as well as the NEXT Innovator Award. The
story of forbidden love between two young
Film Review
Your Neighborhood Therapist
Dear Neighborhood Therapist:
I am struggling with a major decision that
I have to make in about a month. Whatever I
choose is going to have long term effects, and
I am feeling paralyzed. I cannot stop thinking
about this decision, weighing the pros and
cons, and making lists. But I feel like I am no
further along than I was when I first started
to ponder it. I am afraid I’m going to wait
until the last minute, and then make the wrong
decision and end up regretting it for the rest
of my life. Is there some way around this?
– Fearing Regret, Hawthorne
Dear Fearing Regret,
The short answer is no, there is no way
“around” it. The longer, and I hope somewhat
more satisfying answer, is that while you cannot
avoid regret, you can learn to live with it,
because you are no doubt already living with
regret. We all are. It’s part of being human.
Imagine standing at the top of a very deep
valley, and the path diverges down either side.
You can continue down one side or the other,
but not both. You can see some of what lies
ahead, but eventually both paths disappear
around the bend, and you don’t know what
comes next. Though the paths are each different,
each is also appealing in its own way.
You know that as you walk down your
chosen side, you will see the path across the
valley, and you may well continue to wonder
if that might not have been a better choice.
Maybe it would have been! So you wonder:
is it better over there? Should I have chosen
the other path?
Perhaps the only way to know the answer
to this question is to retrace your steps. But
often, you are too far down the path for that
to make sense. And so you continue forward,
vowing to make the best of it and wondering
what would have happened had you made a
different decision. As life progresses, one path
leads to another path, more choices and more
paths not taken. We face countless choices
about who to date, what to study, where to
live, what job to take. This, for many of us,
creates that gnawing, lingering uncertainty of
the inevitable regret. There are so many other
choices we could have made where things
would have turned out differently.
Despite those “No Regrets” slogans you see
around sometimes, regret is inevitable. The idea
that we should - or even possibly could - have no
regrets is to assert that there has never been a
time when we were faced with more than one
good option in any situation (which we get every
time we go to an ice cream store, for example).
We do the best we can, forced to make some
decisions under pressure, or with little information.
We regret things we said, and things
we didn’t say, or talking to the wrong person.
Perhaps we are not that good at talking about
regret and disappointment after all.
You cannot take both paths at the same time.
Regret, then, is a real possibility. But it’s more
than that. It’s baked in. If you have made the
best decision you possibly could, given the
info available to you, your circumstances, and
interests, then I suspect that may provide a
very strong shield from the arrows of regret.
Please write to tom@tomandrecounseling.
com or text to 310.776.5299 with questions
about handling what is affecting your life, your
family, the community or the world. Tom Andre
is a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist
(LMFT119254). The information in this column
is for educational purposes only and nothing
herein should be construed as professional advice
or the formation of a therapeutic relationship. •
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