Monday, November 29, 2021
A number of films hitting screens as the holidays kick in star music artists in key roles. Perhaps none has aroused the curiosity of biz peeps like
Licorice Pizza,
Paul Thomas Anderson’s return to the ’70s San Fernando Valley nostalgia of
Boogie Nights and
Magnolia. The picaresque flick stars
Alana Haim (of
Columbia’s sibling troupe
HAIM) alongside
Cooper Hoffman (son of the late
Philip Seymour Hoffman, a staple of Anderson’s earlier films).
Licorice Pizza takes its name from a once-mighty record-store chain that ruled the Valley back in the day; we can still remember the heady smell of incense and possibility emanating from the outlet at Laurel Canyon and Victory.
Tom Waits is also in the cast, as are
Sean Penn,
Ben Stiller,
John C. Reilly and
Bradley Cooper (who established his music bona fides in
A Star Is Born with
Lady Gaga).
Speaking of Gaga, she’s earning great reviews for her lead role in
House of Gucci, though notices for the film itself have been mixed. But she is a powerful, authentic presence onscreen, radiating old-school star power. Fellow musician
Jared Leto also stars, turning in a controversial performance that one critic described as “a Mario Brother from hell.”

Just as we absorb the loss of musical-theater giant
Stephen Sondheim, a new generation of filmgoers will discover his brilliant lyrics for
West Side Story, now opening in a lustrous new version helmed by
Steven Spielberg.
Ansel Elgort,
Corey Stoll,
Rita Moreno,
Ariana DeBose and
Ana Isabelle feature in the cast.
A more mainstream entry that’s top-heavy with music stars is
Marry Me, a high-concept rom-com starring the eternally radiant
Jennifer Lopez and Latin breakout
Maluma.
Owen Wilson plays the
schlub whom J.Lo’s humiliated pop star spontaneously decides to wed.
Of course, our eyes have been fixed for days on a six-hour-plus documentary that stars four musicians from Liverpool. Perhaps you’ve heard about it.