

Interwoven with daddy issues and residual family traumas, “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol.
BEST MOVIES FROM 2017 ESQUIRE MAGAZINE MOVIE
The movie that solved Marvel’s villain problem (once, if regrettably not for all), Star-Lord’s second big-screen adventure is space opera done right. Still, this documentary is as fascinating as it is flawed, following Talese as he prepares his New Yorker piece on Colorado native Gerald Foos, a man who built an entire motel just so he could secretly spy on his guests all night long.Īvailable to stream December 1. Directed by Myles Kane and Josh Koury, the Netflix Original film seems to have been conceived as a kinky meta-commentary on the desire to watch and the need to be seen, but it never seems to know what it’s looking for. Lucky for Talese, “ Voyeur” appears oblivious to the fact that it’s painting him in that light. But now it’s 2017, Talese is 85, and a new documentary about the greatest disaster of his career discretely suggests that he’s grown irrelevant, and that he’s not handling it well. Once upon a time, Gay Talese elevated the entire medium of journalistic profiles by fleshing routine portraits into genuine pieces of literature published in the April 1966 issue of Esquire, “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold” might well outlive the magazine that paid for it. It’s a film that starts with the worst digital snow you’ve ever seen, and ends with someone earnestly saying the words: “You thought you had to become Bigfoot in order to save this town, but it turns out you saved it by just being you.” Gather your family around the television and settle in for something truly special.Īvailable to stream December 15. It’s a film that has zero sense of its own tone, and somehow even less of a handle on its relationship to the genre that it exists to parody and/or celebrate. A Christmas tale in which Michael Shannon pretends to be Bigfoot in order to save his small New York town and win back his furry wife (Christina Hendricks), “Pottersville” is a film thats mere existence is infinitely more amusing than any of its jokes. And yet, you might just have to watch it anyway when you’re home for the holidays. It still wouldn’t really be one of the seven best movies coming to Netflix this month if there were only six movies coming to Netflix this month. Okay, so “Pottersville” is a very, very bad movie. From an under-the-radar family drama that some critics believe is the best movie the year, to a demented Michael Shannon Christmas movie that some critics don’t even believe is a real thing, these are the seven best films coming to Netflix this December.

But the streaming giant’s latest batch of new releases, however scarce, offer a wild variety of things to see. If December is a relatively quiet month for Netflix, perhaps that’s because they want you to spend the holidays scaling the seemingly infinite mountain of content they’ve released this year.
