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Movies Opening This Week These movies open Friday unless noted. One Missed Call A group of people begin receiving chilling voice-mail messages that detail their impending deaths. Edward Burns and Shannyn Sossamon star. A remake of the 2003 Japanese horror flick Chakushin ari.

Movies

Opening This Week

These movies open Friday unless noted.

One Missed Call

A group of people begin receiving chilling voice-mail messages that detail their impending deaths. Edward Burns and Shannyn Sossamon star. A remake of the 2003 Japanese horror flick

Chakushin ari

.

There Will Be Blood

Daniel Day-Lewis stars as an oil prospector who strikes it big out West at the turn of the 20th century, only to find that his troubles aren't behind him. From the Upton Sinclair novel

Oil!

Excellent (****)

Reviewed by critics Carrie Rickey (C.R.) and Steven Rea (S.R.). W.S. denotes a wire-service review.

Before the Devil Knows You're Dead

An audacious tale of greed, infidelity and murder from top-of-his-game director Sidney Lumet, this jewelry-store-heist melodrama involves two brothers (Ethan Hawke and Philip Seymour Hoffman), their agitated dad (Albert Finney), and Marisa Tomei as an unfaithful spouse. It's a horror show of hatred and festering psychic wounds. So why is it so much fun? 1 hr. 48

R

(violence, profanity, drugs, sex, nudity, adult themes) -

S.R.

Very Good (***1/2)

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

Julian Schnabel's impish and pitiless profile of Jean-Dominique Bauby, a Parisian rake who suffers a massive stroke that leaves him almost completely paralyzed. In this portrait of the artist who creates despite physical restraints, Mathieu Amalric plays Bauby, who dictates a memoir one letter at a time by blinking his eye to his secretary. In French with English subtitles. 1 hr. 52

PG-13

(nudity, sexual content, profanity) -

C.R.

Enchanted

Supercalifragilistic. Amy Adams is a delight as the cartoon princess from Andalasia who falls down a well, climbs up a sewer and finds herself - a real live woman now - smack in the middle of Times Square, searching for true love's kiss. With Patrick Dempsey and James Marsden, songs by Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz. 1 hr. 47

PG

(innuendo, mild cartoon violence) -

C.R.

The Great Debaters

Enthralling Depression-era David and Goliath story about a debating team from historically black Wiley College that faces off against blueblood national champs from Harvard. Directed by and starring Denzel Washington, with Forest Whitaker, Jurnee Smollett and Nate Parker. 2 hrs. 07

PG-13

(discreet sex, lynching victim) -

C.R.

Juno

A 16-year-old girl (sensational Ellen Page) has an unplanned pregnancy, plans to give up the baby for adoption. Improbably endearing comedy about a decidedly unfunny situation. Also starring J.K. Simmons, Allison Janney, Jennifer Garner, Jason Bateman and Michael Cera. 1 hr. 31

PG-13

(sexual candor, procreative candor, mild profanity) -

C.R.

The Kite Runner

Moving adaptation of Khaled Hosseini's beloved best-seller about the intertwined lives of Afghan boys whose friendship - and lives - are forever altered one day before Soviet tanks and then Taliban fundamentalists roll into Kabul. With the splendid Homayoun Ershadi and mournful Ahmad Khan Mahmoodzada. 2 hrs. 02

PG-13

(mature themes, sexual violence) -

C.R.

No Country for Old Men

The Coen brothers' taut, terrific adaptation of the Cormac McCarthy novel about a psycho killer, a Vietnam vet, a Lone Star sheriff, and the bag of money that brings them together in the stark borderlands of 1980 West Texas. With Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin and Javier Bardem. 2 hrs. 02

R

(violence, profanity, adult themes) -

S.R.

The Savages

The superb Laura Linney and Philip Seymour Hoffman costar in Tamara Jenkins' mordant and poignant portrait of siblings caring for the ailing parent (Philip Bosco) who abandoned them in childhood. 1 hr. 53

R

(profanity, sexual candor) -

C.R.

Also on Screens

Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem

The residents of a small town are in for trouble when rival groups of aliens and predators stop by for a little war in this sequel to the 2004 sci-fi thriller. 1 hr. 26

R

(violence, gore, salty language) -

W.S.

Alvin and the Chipmunks **1/2

The harmonizing rodents are back, this time in CGI, with Jason Lee as their live-action dad in this diversion for 6-year-olds and their babysitters. 1 hr. 31

PG

(mild vulgarity) -

C.R.

Charlie Wilson's War ***

Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts, and Philip Seymour Hoffman star in this true-life tale of a party-hearty Texas congressman who orchestrated one of the largest covert operations in U.S. history, funding the fight against the Soviets in 1980s Afghanistan. Anything but a sober history lesson, this Mike Nichols-directed political comedy abounds with sex, drugs and intrigue. 1 hr. 37

R

(sex, drugs, profanity, nudity, violence, adult themes) -

S.R.

I Am Legend **1/2

Will Smith is the last man in Manhattan in this viral sci-fi thriller. It's essentially

28 Days Later . . .

, or

28 Weeks Later . . .

, only with millions more for special effects and nothing approaching those pics' power and smarts. But Smith's a genuine star, and there are long stretches where his military-scientist dude prowls the streets, a creepy hush in the air, commanding our attention. Warning: plot holes the size of New York potholes. 1 hr. 40

PG-13

(violence, profanity, scares, adult themes) -

S.R.

National Treasure: Book of Secrets *1/2

A thumping, gabby slog of a sequel to the surprise 2004 blockbuster. Nicolas Cage returns as the galavanting historian, this time digging for clues in the diary of Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth. An impressive cast - Bruce Greenwood, Ed Harris, Harvey Keitel, Diane Kruger, Helen Mirren and Jon Voight - is wasted. 2 hrs. 04

PG

(action, adult themes) -

S.R.

The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep **1/2

A kind of

Free Willy

set in Scottish lake country -

Free

MacWilly

, that would be - about a boy and his mythical beastie, and the trouble the pair get into. With Ben Chaplin and Emily Watson as the grown-ups, and creature effects courtesy of the digital wizards at Peter Jackson's company. 1 hr. 51

PG

(action, violence, adult themes) -

S.R.

Theater

Reviewed by critics Wendy Rosenfield (W.R.), Howard Shapiro (H.S.) and Toby Zinman (T.Z.).

Opening This Week

The Screwtape Letters

(Lantern Theater) Anthony Lawton's adaptation of C.S Lewis' classic about the vicissitudes facing an apprentice devil. Opens Wednesday.

Extremities

. William Mastrosimone's thriller about an attempted rape and a woman's revenge. Opens Friday.

Continuing

Age of Arousal

(Wilma) The Wilma's U.S. premiere of this Canadian play about Victorian women fighting for equality is a solid production of a belabored script. Great costumes, though. Through Jan. 6.

- H.S.

Ain't Misbehavin'

(Prince Music Theatre) Melba Moore headlines a good cast in this entertaining if not always thrilling revue of 29 Fats Waller songs. Ends tomorrow.

- T.Z.

A Christmas Carol

(Mum Puppettheatre) Local playwright Bruce Graham and puppeteer Robert Smythe team up with Charles Dickens to create an imaginative, charming production of the old favorite; Jered McLenigan's 25 voices are remarkable. Ends today.

- T.Z.

Greater Tuna

(Walnut Independence Studio) John Zak and Benjamin Lloyd play 20 characters in this mostly funny show about a redneck town in Texas. Ends today.

- T.Z.

Holiday Show at the Swing Club

(Theatre Horizon at the Centre Theatre, Norristown) A 1940s musical revue that evolved from interviews with senior-center residents. Great tunes, swinging hoofers and affectionate performances led by Ted Powell as bandleader Jimmy Goodshaw. Ends tomorrow.

- W.R.

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat

(Media Theatre) The Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice musical about Old Testament jealousy and redemption is like the best Sunday school class ever. Media's production delivers on every aspect except set and sound. Ends today.

- W.R.

Menopause: The Musical

(Society Hill Playhouse) Long-running, popular show about The Change. Open-ended run.

Peter Pan

(Walnut Street Theatre) Revival of the much-loved musical about a boy who won't grow up. Director Marc Robin keeps all your childhood memories intact and inserts a few extra giggles in this robust, splendid production. Through Jan. 6.

- W.R.

Sleeping Beauty

(Arden) Whit McLaughlin directs that rare production whose discrete elements - set, costumes, music, lighting, directing, acting - add up to one enchanting entity. Through Jan. 27.

- W.R.

Stomp

(Merriam Theatre) No talking, just wild and rhythmic percussion. This electrifying percussion international hit is back in town, feeling as fresh and exciting as ever. If you haven't seen it, see it. If you have seen it, see it again. Through Jan.2.

- T.Z

.

This Is the Week That Is

(1812 Productions at the Adrienne) A vaudeville of skits and songs of up-to-the-minute political satire, often funny, rarely shocking. Through Jan. 13.

- T.Z

.

Treasure Island

(People's Light & Theatre) Not a retelling of the Stevenson pirate classic - though it does retain a few of the original's characters - this fun musical panto calls for rowdy audience participation and lots of laughs. Ends today.

- W.R.

A Very Merry Unauthorized Children's Scientology Pageant

(Lantern Theatre) This musical journey of the baby savior L. Ron into eternity is complex indeed. But somehow the production emerges triumphant, retaining its innocent sense of inquiry and buoyant good humor while making some pretty serious philosophical points. Ends today.

- W.R.

The Velveteen Rabbit

(Enchantment at the Suzanne Roberts) A Grammy-nominated musical recording of Margery Williams' classic children's book is played over a live adaptation of the story with masks and puppets. Aurally and visually pleasing, just not at the same time. Ends today.

- W.R.

The World Goes 'Round

(11th Hour at Walnut 5) Kander and Ebb musical revue of songs from

Chicago

,

Cabaret

,

Kiss of the Spiderwoman

and more, all given new and contemporary context. An enjoyable evening, if not the youthful, avant-garde edginess we've come to expect from the company. Ends today.

- T.Z.

Video

Shoot 'Em Up

*** Clive Owen and Paul Giamatti star in this lethal-weapon Looney Tune about a mobster in search of a newborn baby, and the mysterious hero who has it. It's a blood-soaked, breakneck 87 minutes that borrows buckets full from John Woo, Quentin Tarantino and Chuck Jones. 1 hr. 27

R

(violence, profanity, nudity, sex, adult themes) -

S.R.