<p class="title"><span class="bold">The Polka King</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">It is directed by Maya Forbes and Wallace Wolodarsky and arrives January 12. As it stars Jack Black, one's first surmise might be that it's Black's patch on John Candy and Eugene Levy's Schmenge Brothers, polka-musician characters first seen on <span class="italic">SCTV</span>. It is not. Rather, it's a fact-based comedy-drama about Jan Lewan, already the subject of a 2009 documentary, who combined music with a Ponzi scheme to realise his ambition to rule polka and make more money than anyone who had previously ruled polka had ever dreamed of. The movie was well received when it played at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Step Sisters</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">On January 19, there's <span class="italic">Step Sisters</span>, a collegiate drama directed by Charles Stone III. Its plot linchpin is, yes, step dancing. Stone did a pretty good job with the 2002 Nick Cannon film <span class="italic">Drumline</span>, which was about a marching band, so he might do the trick similarly here.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">A Futile and Stupid Gesture</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">It is a movie title born of a phrase well-known to devotees of the 1978 comedy milestone <span class="italic">National Lampoon's Animal House</span>. It was coined by Doug Kenney, a comedy wunderkind with a genuinely unusual personality who was one of the movie's screenwriters and a founding editor at National Lampoon. Fittingly the phrase serves as the title of Kenney's biopic, directed by comedy stalwart David Wain. Based on the book by Josh Karp, it stars Will Forte and features a bevy of contemporary comedy figures playing the real-life performers who went on to fame with <span class="italic">Animal House</span> and <span class="italic">Saturday Night Live</span>. Joel McHale plays Chevy Chase, Natasha Lyonne is Anne Beatts, Thomas Lennon portrays Michael O'Donoghue and Seth Green is Christopher Guest. The movie has its premiere on January 26.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">When We First Met </span></p>.<p class="bodytext">Directed by Ari Sandel and starring Alexandra Daddario and Robbie Amell, <span class="italic">When We First Met</span> looks quite a bit more ordinary. The plot hook for this rom-com fantasy is that Amell, after what he considers a perfect first night with Daddario, is upset that he is relegated to "the friend zone", but he gets to travel back in time to alter the situation.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Benji</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">March brings a revival of the <span class="italic">Benji</span> franchise, with a brand-new film directed by Brandon Camp, the son of the series originator Joe Camp. It's produced by Jason Blum, who founded Blumhouse Productions, a company best known for horror pictures such as <span class="italic">Get Out</span>, <span class="italic">Paranormal Activity</span>, <span class="italic">Sinister</span>,<span class="italic"> Insidious</span> and the attendant sequels. I doubt the prospects for a cute-dog-horror hybrid, though, and suspect a pre-emptive move to get a good children's franchise going before Disney establishes its own streaming service.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Roxanne Roxanne</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">March and April bring a couple of films with African-American themes and stories. <span class="italic">Roxanne Roxanne</span>, which played at 2017's Sundance Film Festival and is scheduled to hit Netflix sometime in March, is about Lolita Gooden, who became a force in hip-hop under the name Roxanne Shante. Newcomer Chante Adams plays the rapper, while Nia Long plays her mother. Also featured are Mahershala Ali, who won an Oscar for <span class="italic">Moonlight</span>, and Adam Horovitz, the Beastie Boy known as Ad-Rock. The writer-director of this movie, Michael Larnell, also directed the well-received but little-seen 2015 film <span class="italic">Cronies</span>.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Come Sunday</span></p>.<p class="bodytext"><span class="italic">Come Sunday</span>, debuting April 13, stars Chiwetel Ejiofor as the Rev. Carlton Pearson, a graduate of Oral Roberts University whose ministry in the Pentecostal Church of God in Christ was jeopardised by his <span class="italic">Gospel of Inclusion</span>, which, among other things, cast doubt on the concept of a hell of eternal torture. Adapted from <span class="italic">Heretics</span>, an episode of <span class="italic">This American Life</span> (one of the movie's producers is Ira Glass, the host and executive producer of that radio programme), the movie is directed by Joshua Marston, whose earlier pictures include <span class="italic">Maria Full of Grace</span> (2004) and <span class="italic">The Forgiveness of Blood</span> (2011), both of which showed a commendable sensitivity to cultural diversity.</p>.<p class="byline">The New York Times</p>
<p class="title"><span class="bold">The Polka King</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">It is directed by Maya Forbes and Wallace Wolodarsky and arrives January 12. As it stars Jack Black, one's first surmise might be that it's Black's patch on John Candy and Eugene Levy's Schmenge Brothers, polka-musician characters first seen on <span class="italic">SCTV</span>. It is not. Rather, it's a fact-based comedy-drama about Jan Lewan, already the subject of a 2009 documentary, who combined music with a Ponzi scheme to realise his ambition to rule polka and make more money than anyone who had previously ruled polka had ever dreamed of. The movie was well received when it played at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Step Sisters</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">On January 19, there's <span class="italic">Step Sisters</span>, a collegiate drama directed by Charles Stone III. Its plot linchpin is, yes, step dancing. Stone did a pretty good job with the 2002 Nick Cannon film <span class="italic">Drumline</span>, which was about a marching band, so he might do the trick similarly here.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">A Futile and Stupid Gesture</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">It is a movie title born of a phrase well-known to devotees of the 1978 comedy milestone <span class="italic">National Lampoon's Animal House</span>. It was coined by Doug Kenney, a comedy wunderkind with a genuinely unusual personality who was one of the movie's screenwriters and a founding editor at National Lampoon. Fittingly the phrase serves as the title of Kenney's biopic, directed by comedy stalwart David Wain. Based on the book by Josh Karp, it stars Will Forte and features a bevy of contemporary comedy figures playing the real-life performers who went on to fame with <span class="italic">Animal House</span> and <span class="italic">Saturday Night Live</span>. Joel McHale plays Chevy Chase, Natasha Lyonne is Anne Beatts, Thomas Lennon portrays Michael O'Donoghue and Seth Green is Christopher Guest. The movie has its premiere on January 26.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">When We First Met </span></p>.<p class="bodytext">Directed by Ari Sandel and starring Alexandra Daddario and Robbie Amell, <span class="italic">When We First Met</span> looks quite a bit more ordinary. The plot hook for this rom-com fantasy is that Amell, after what he considers a perfect first night with Daddario, is upset that he is relegated to "the friend zone", but he gets to travel back in time to alter the situation.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Benji</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">March brings a revival of the <span class="italic">Benji</span> franchise, with a brand-new film directed by Brandon Camp, the son of the series originator Joe Camp. It's produced by Jason Blum, who founded Blumhouse Productions, a company best known for horror pictures such as <span class="italic">Get Out</span>, <span class="italic">Paranormal Activity</span>, <span class="italic">Sinister</span>,<span class="italic"> Insidious</span> and the attendant sequels. I doubt the prospects for a cute-dog-horror hybrid, though, and suspect a pre-emptive move to get a good children's franchise going before Disney establishes its own streaming service.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Roxanne Roxanne</span></p>.<p class="bodytext">March and April bring a couple of films with African-American themes and stories. <span class="italic">Roxanne Roxanne</span>, which played at 2017's Sundance Film Festival and is scheduled to hit Netflix sometime in March, is about Lolita Gooden, who became a force in hip-hop under the name Roxanne Shante. Newcomer Chante Adams plays the rapper, while Nia Long plays her mother. Also featured are Mahershala Ali, who won an Oscar for <span class="italic">Moonlight</span>, and Adam Horovitz, the Beastie Boy known as Ad-Rock. The writer-director of this movie, Michael Larnell, also directed the well-received but little-seen 2015 film <span class="italic">Cronies</span>.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><span class="bold">Come Sunday</span></p>.<p class="bodytext"><span class="italic">Come Sunday</span>, debuting April 13, stars Chiwetel Ejiofor as the Rev. Carlton Pearson, a graduate of Oral Roberts University whose ministry in the Pentecostal Church of God in Christ was jeopardised by his <span class="italic">Gospel of Inclusion</span>, which, among other things, cast doubt on the concept of a hell of eternal torture. Adapted from <span class="italic">Heretics</span>, an episode of <span class="italic">This American Life</span> (one of the movie's producers is Ira Glass, the host and executive producer of that radio programme), the movie is directed by Joshua Marston, whose earlier pictures include <span class="italic">Maria Full of Grace</span> (2004) and <span class="italic">The Forgiveness of Blood</span> (2011), both of which showed a commendable sensitivity to cultural diversity.</p>.<p class="byline">The New York Times</p>