{"id":2214761,"date":"2025-12-28T17:05:45","date_gmt":"2025-12-28T17:05:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/?p=2214761"},"modified":"2025-12-28T17:05:45","modified_gmt":"2025-12-28T17:05:45","slug":"channing-tatum-and-kirsten-dunsts-movie-is-delightful","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/channing-tatum-and-kirsten-dunsts-movie-is-delightful\/","title":{"rendered":"Channing Tatum and Kirsten Dunst\u2019s movie is delightful."},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p>\n<div itemprop=\"mainEntityOfPage\">\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"24\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsa721000gockpgiqpnfpk@published\">In Slate\u2019s annual\u00a0<a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/tag\/movie-club-2025\">Movie Club<\/a>, film critic Dana Stevens emails with fellow critics\u2014for 2025, Justin Chang, Alison Willmore, and Bilge Ebiri\u2014about the year in cinema.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"5\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5a4001b357bggyjkiow@published\">Dear Dana, Alison, and Bilge,<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"116\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5cy001c357bp3ej10qv@published\">While trying to process this month\u2019s seismically awful events\u2014and while reading Dana\u2019s <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2025\/12\/rob-reiner-movies-princess-bride-spinal-tap-stand-by-me.html\">deeply insightful and moving words about Rob Reiner<\/a> and what a generous, menschy, joyously committed force for cinematic and civic decency he was\u2014I found myself, like just about everyone, navigating a personal flood of formative Reiner memories. It may be solipsistic, but it\u2019s also only natural, to flash back on our first encounter with an artist whose work means something to us (and in ways that we never thought we\u2019d have to reckon with so cruelly soon). But with Reiner, whose best films became such lasting fixtures of American popular culture, to encounter Hollywood movies at a certain age, really, was to encounter him.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"249\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5fo001d357b3swp1evp@published\">I thought about first seeing The Princess Bride as a kid, with a still-primitive grasp of how TV and movies worked, and feeling mostly confused about what that kid from The Wonder Years was doing in the same film with that guy from my dad\u2019s favorite TV show, Columbo. I was too young to grasp, let alone quote, any of William Goldman\u2019s immortal dialogue, though that would come later, and how. (Officiating my friends\u2019 wedding in my mid-20s, I kicked off my little homily with a hearty \u201c<a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=3odMTPuzLwY\">Mawwiage! Mawwiage is what bwings us twogevah twoday<\/a>.\u201d As they wished.) I thought about watching When Harry Met Sally \u2026 with my college dormmates and screening a bunch of Meathead-and-Archie smackdowns from All in the Family in an Intro to TV class. I thought, of all things, about the blowhardy gusto that Reiner brought to the role of a producer in the 1999 Matthew McConaughey-starring reality-TV satire EDtv\u2014the swaggering corporate bully who\u2019s finally humiliated into doing the right thing only when news of his penile implant almost goes public. And, yes, although it represents barely a fraction of Reiner\u2019s heroic activism, I thought about the number of times, post-November 2016, that one of his tweets had crossed my social media feed and given me, if only for a moment, something to cling to amid so much dystopian clamor. Everything might have been going to hell, but among various Hollywood voices of anti-Trump sanity, his was one of the warmest and most reassuring.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"163\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5if001e357bo2m00u34@published\">Dana, you asked us what the Castle Rock equivalents of 2025 are, and Is This Thing On?\u2014basically a better, waaaaaay less bickersome version of Reiner\u2019s 1999 couples-therapy dramedy The Story of Us\u2014is about as heartening an answer as I can come up with.<br \/>(Bradley Cooper, like Reiner, is an actor turned director, and one who\u2019s demonstrated pretty good instincts so far.) Others would surely make a case for James L. Brooks\u2019 awesomely batshit Ella McCay\u2014which Alison described, correctly, as \u201c<a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.vulture.com\/article\/review-ella-mccay-is-pure-gas-leak-cinema.html\">gas-leak cinema at its finest<\/a>\u201d\u2014though that might speak more to the generally impoverished nature of Hollywood\u2019s neo-<a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2021\/03\/preston-sturges-movies-lady-eve-streaming-criterion-channel.html\">Sturgesian<\/a> small-town political-satire romantic-dramedy scene than anything else. As a director, usually of other writers\u2019 scripts, Reiner possessed an anti-auteurist touch that\u2014as borne out by his astonishing, genre-skipping run of movies through the \u201980s and early \u201990s\u2014was notable for its relative invisibility, its actor-driven focus. Brooks, by contrast, is very much an auteur: For better or worse, his big swings, admirable misses, and neo-screwball idiosyncrasies are pretty unmistakably his.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"172\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5l3001f357bzozwbp64@published\">I love Dana\u2019s own suggestion of Roofman, Derek Cianfrance\u2019s fact-based crime-caper romance, starring Channing Tatum as a big-hearted fugitive hiding out in a Toys \u201cR\u201d Us. There\u2019s something especially Reiner-esque in the way that Cianfrance\u2014in lighter, less broody form than you\u2019d expect from the guy who made <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2010\/12\/blue-valentine-with-michelle-williams-and-ryan-gosling-reviewed.html\">Blue Valentine<\/a> and <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2013\/03\/the-place-beyond-the-pines-starring-ryan-gosling-reviewed.html\">The Place Beyond the Pines<\/a>\u2014allows well-established actors like Tatum, Peter Dinklage, and an especially wonderful Kirsten Dunst to explore new facets of themselves and their talent. I have to quote our colleague Charles Taylor\u2019s <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/charlestaylor.substack.com\/p\/when-this-old-world-starts-getting\">marvelous Substack review of Roofman<\/a>, which he hails as, essentially, the American movie of the year\u2014a story about \u201chow our national spiritual life, our commitment to treating people like human beings, can survive when they have been replaced by the temporary goods and lasting emptiness of consumer culture.\u201d Charley goes on, rightly, to lament that the movie itself has become a casualty of that consumer culture as practiced by Hollywood\u2014an IP-clogged, franchise-driven system that has bred the same fatal laziness and incuriosity among studio decisionmakers and audiences alike.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"127\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5nm001g357bmyrm4r2x@published\">The collapse of the midbudget studio movie may account for why the success of the exuberantly scary and entertaining <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2025\/08\/weapons-movie-2025-review-barbarian-how-scary.html\">Weapons<\/a> felt like cause for hosannas, when, in a healthier state of affairs, it would simply have been good business as usual. I caught up to Zach Cregger\u2019s Twilight Crone horror-fantasy a bit late, having missed the early screenings, and I\u2019m glad that I did: Seeing Aunt Gladys get her ass royally Romero\u2019d with an enthusiastic multiplex crowd\u2014several of whom did \u201cthe run\u201d in the lobby afterward\u2014was one of the whooping-and-hollering highlights of my moviegoing summer. And since Weapons is more or less the best recent Stephen King adaptation not actually adapted from the work of Stephen King, perhaps that\u2019s another one to throw on the Reiner mantle.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"225\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5q8001h357btf0214t7@published\">Shifting gears: I\u2019ll co-sign every word of Bilge\u2019s pushback against our <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2025\/12\/the-secret-agent-movie-oscars-best-picture-2025.html\">relentless and often art-deadening emphasis on story<\/a>, and if anyone wants a \u201cCinema Is Nothing Without Its Non-Narrative Pleasures\u201d T-shirt, let me know and I\u2019ll add it to my order. (Our story obsession, of course, goes well beyond the purview of cinema or even culture, as my former New Yorker colleague Parul Sehgal unpacked in her brilliant 2023 essay \u201c<a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2023\/07\/10\/seduced-by-story-peter-brooks-bewitching-the-modern-mind-christian-salmon-the-story-paradox-jonathan-gottschall-book-review\">The Tyranny of the Tale<\/a>,\u201d in which she dismantles \u201cthe doctrine of narrative supremacy.\u201d) The imperatives of story, as Bilge notes, simply don\u2019t account for some of the year\u2019s great moviegoing experiences\u2014which is to say, the often dramatically circuitous and intensely atmospheric ways in which great filmmakers make meaning. Along with the rich and rangy world-building of The Secret Agent and the exquisite micro-detailing of Peter Hujar\u2019s Day, I\u2019d throw in the <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/culture\/the-current-cinema\/the-delirious-cinematic-artifice-of-bi-gans-resurrection\">gobsmacking derangement<\/a> of <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/culture\/2025-in-review\/the-best-films-of-2025\">Resurrection<\/a>, a new magnum opus from the terrifyingly gifted 36-year-old Chinese director Bi Gan (<a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.latimes.com\/entertainment\/movies\/la-et-mn-long-days-journey-into-night-review-20190418-htmlstory.html\">Long Day\u2019s Journey Into Night<\/a>). Bi\u2019s movie, I should note, happens to be an absolute feast of narrative\u2014a full-blown genre buffet, unfurling four (or five, or six) different plotlines. It\u2019s got silent-cinema monsters, newfangled vampires, serial-killer investigations, grifter hijinks, bodily transfigurations, you name it. More story per capita than most movies this year, in other words, and yet emphatically not something to experience on your TV.<\/p>\n<p>    <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2025\/12\/knives-out-3-wake-up-dead-man-movie-netflix-locked-room-mystery.html\" class=\"recirc-line__content\"><\/p>\n<div class=\"recirc-line__img\">\n          <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=140\" width=\"141\" height=\"94\" srcset=\"https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=320 320w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=480 480w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=600 600w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=840 840w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=960 960w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=1280 1280w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=1440 1440w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=1600 1600w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=1920 1920w,&#10;https:\/\/compote.slate.com\/images\/bfe3d0c2-3fb9-45f1-a5ae-334133d838d0.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1040%2Cx0%2Cy0&amp;width=2200 2200w\" sizes=\"auto, 141px\" alt=\"\" loading=\"lazy\"\/>\n        <\/div>\n<p><h4 class=\"recirc-line__byline\">Laura Miller<\/h4>\n<h3 class=\"recirc-line__promoline\">To Fully Appreciate the Brilliant New Knives Out, It Helps to Understand the Subgenres It\u2019s Riffing On<\/h3>\n<p>        <b class=\"slate-link--bold recirc-line__read-more\">Read More<\/b>\n      <\/p>\n<p>    <\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"192\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5t5001i357bxeh5bxm3@published\">Somehow, amid this discussion, I\u2019ve managed not to say a word about Oliver Laxe\u2019s <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2025\/11\/24\/sirat-movie-review\">Sir\u0101t<\/a>, my favorite movie of 2025 by a Moroccan desert mile, and it seems right to do so now, as my final Movie Club dispatch winds down. Sir\u0101t itself tells a ripping good yarn, but it is also a hypnotic, sensorily overwhelming pure-cinema experience, possessed of a visual, musical, and spiritual power that sometimes tilts gloriously toward abstraction. Minute by nail-biting minute, Laxe\u2019s mix of thunderous doom-and-boom and equally jolting compassion shattered and transported me more than anything I saw this year, and it\u2019s stuck with me for reasons that\u2014unlike the fairly straightforward details of what happens to whom\u2014I have trouble putting into words. Flashing back on Sir\u0101t, which has been gloriously often, I think about two sets of high beams on a pitch-black night, lighting their way across a desert landscape without end. I also linger on Laxe\u2019s extraordinary (nonprofessional) actors, dancing and gyrating with fearless, defiant abandon. I love where the movie goes from there, but honestly, part of me does wish it had stayed right there in the desert\u2014that the rave would go on forever.<\/p>\n<ol class=\"in-article-recirc__list\">\n<li class=\"in-article-recirc__item\">\n          <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2025\/12\/rob-reiner-movies-princess-bride-spinal-tap-stand-by-me.html\" class=\"in-article-recirc__link\"><\/p>\n<p>            With Rob Reiner Dies a Whole Tradition of Hollywood Filmmaking<br \/>\n          <\/a>\n        <\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"182\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5vq001j357b42sedtea@published\">Which is sort of how I feel about this edition of Movie Club. Alison, I\u2019m curious to hear about any prime story-adjacent cinematic experiences you had this year, though your earlier thoughts on April and Sound of Falling\u2014neither one a plotless void, I should note\u2014provide some sense of that already. Is now perhaps the time to raise the divisive specter of Eddington, a movie that you both <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.vulture.com\/article\/review-ari-asters-eddington-isnt-sure-what-to-say.html\">admired and took apart with consummate skill<\/a>? For <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2025\/07\/28\/eddington-movie-review\">all that I found vacuous and meretricious about it<\/a>, it\u2019s nothing if not its own scabrous attack on narrative, or at least narrative expectation\u2014in terms of how movies are supposed to behave, and also in terms of the petty, self-flattering stories we contrive to get by in a world of ungovernable, extremely online chaos. Wherever we go from here, I look forward to reading your brilliant insights, and Bilge\u2019s and Dana\u2019s, too, through this conversation and beyond. Happy holidays and new year to you all, and I hope our paths cross soon in New York, at a festival, or at some other abstrusely <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=EUd2SSdFrWc\">password-protected rendezvous point TBD<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"2\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc5ya001k357bylsdkikd@published\">Much love,<\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"1\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbscsuq001z357bz7k6a33d@published\"><span class=\"slate-paragraph--tombstone\">Justin<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"slate-paragraph slate-graf\" data-word-count=\"10\" data-uri=\"slate.com\/_components\/slate-paragraph\/instances\/cmjbsc60y001l357b2oa9impf@published\"><a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/tag\/movie-club-2025\"><strong>Read all of the entries in Slate\u2019s 2025 Movie Club<\/strong><\/a><strong>.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>      <span class=\"newsletter-signup__description\">Get the best of movies, TV, books, music, and more.<\/span>\n    <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><script type=\"text\/javascript\">\n!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){\nif(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?\nn.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;\nn.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0';n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;\nt.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window,\ndocument,'script','https:\/\/connect.facebook.net\/en_US\/fbevents.js');\n<\/script><\/p>\n<p><em> \u2018 The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties \u2019 <\/em><\/p>\n<p><em> \u2018 Some details of this article were extracted from the following source slate.com \u2019 <\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In Slate\u2019s annual\u00a0Movie Club, film critic Dana Stevens emails with fellow critics\u2014for 2025, Justin Chang, Alison Willmore, and Bilge Ebiri\u2014about the year in cinema. Dear Dana, Alison, and Bilge, While trying to process this month\u2019s seismically awful events\u2014and while reading Dana\u2019s deeply insightful and moving words about Rob Reiner and what a generous, menschy, joyously [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":2214762,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"jnews-multi-image_gallery":[],"jnews_single_post":[],"jnews_primary_category":[],"jnews_social_meta":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[25173],"tags":[22339,305246,427974,21912,349407],"class_list":["post-2214761","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-artists","tag-comedy","tag-crime","tag-movie-club-2025","tag-movies","tag-romance"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Channing-Tatum-and-Kirsten-Dunsts-movie-is-delightful.jpeg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2214761","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2214761"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2214761\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2214763,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2214761\/revisions\/2214763"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2214762"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2214761"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2214761"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2214761"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}