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A Selective Preview Of Summer Movies

<em></em> <em></em>Pixar's <em>B</em><em>rave</em> follows the independent and courageous Merida (voice by Kelly Macdonald).
Pixar
Pixar's Brave follows the independent and courageous Merida (voice by Kelly Macdonald).

Forget the calendar. With The Avengers, Battleship, and Men In Black already battling aliens at the multiplex, Hollywood's summer has arguably been under way for weeks.

No doubt, the tent-pole blockbusters — Ridley Scott's Prometheus, The Amazing Spider-Man, The Bourne Legacy, and the rest — will offer plenty of entertainment value, but there are a couple of hardy, resourceful little girls you might want to attend to, too.

Quvenzhane Wallis as Hushpuppy in <em>Beasts of the Southern Wild</em>.
Jess Pinkham / Fox Searchlight
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Fox Searchlight
Quvenzhane Wallis as Hushpuppy in Beasts of the Southern Wild.

Beasts of the Southern Wild (June 27)

One is a precocious seven-year-old with the unlikely name of Hushpuppy (the actress' name is equally unlikely: Ouvenzhane Wallis). Hushpuppy is the diminutive heroine of a magic-realist indie Beasts of the Southern Wild, a hit at Sundance a few months ago, and a breathtaking exercise in smart, low-budget filmmaking.

Filmed with mostly first-time actors and a 16mm camera in post-Katrina Louisiana, the film observes a bayou community known as the Bathtub and how it deals with the aftermath of a monster storm. Hushpuppy lives with — or more accurately, near — her hard-drinking father (Dwight Henry) amongst chickens, waterfowl and prehistoric aurochs (some of which may reside mostly in Hushpuppy's head). The fates aren't kind to the community, but its residents show the sort of rough kindness to each other that melts the heart.

Brave(June 22)

An animated lass will land on far more screens, when Brave, Pixar's first picture centered on a girl, arrives at the multiplex. Kelly Macdonald voices an animated heroine whose interest in frilly dresses and decorous behavior is all but nonexistent. She's wily, independent, courageous, and — shades of Katniss Everdeen — a crack archer.

Anne Hathaway as Catwoman in <em>The Dark Knight Rises</em>.
Ron Phillips / Warner Bros.
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Warner Bros.
Anne Hathaway as Catwoman in The Dark Knight Rises.

The Dark Knight Rises(July 20)

While we're talking distaff casting, let's also note the summer's new Catwoman: Anne Hathaway, pouncing lightly in the footsteps of Michelle Pfeiffer, Halle Berry, and others as Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy draws to a close. The last Batman flick topped one billion dollars worldwide, a fact that's led observers to note that The Dark Knight Rises is the one movie this summer with a shot at topping The Avengers at the box-office, if that matters.

And of course, there will be treasures hidden amongst the 70-or-so also-rans opening before Labor Day, among them:

June

Snow White and the Huntsman
Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted
Prometheus
Paul Williams: Still Alive
Safety Not Guaranteed
Peace, Love, and Misunderstanding
Your Sister's Sister
Seeking A Friend For The End Of The World
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
Magic Mike
Neil Young Journeys

July

The Amazing Spider-Man
Savages
Queen of Versailles
Ice Age: Continental Drift

August

The Bourne Legacy
Total Recall
Hope Springs
The Campaign
Sparkle
Chicken With Plums
Para-Norman
Premium Rush

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Bob Mondello, who jokes that he was a jinx at the beginning of his critical career — hired to write for every small paper that ever folded in Washington, just as it was about to collapse — saw that jinx broken in 1984 when he came to NPR.
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