Also Opening This Weekend
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

I KNOW WHO KILLED ME
R, 105 minutes
Aubrey Fleming’s (Lindsay Lohan) life — and body — are irreparably damaged following an abduction by a heinous serial killer. Though Aubrey manages to make a dramatic a miraculous escape from the clutches of the madman, she does so with deep psychological scars, plus the loss of a hand, a leg, and untold amounts of blood.
Aubrey’s parents view her return as an answer to their prayers, but they are devastated when their daughter awakes and claims another identity — that of a young woman named Dakota. She also exhibits a wholly different personality and mannerisms, and — frighteningly — insists that Aubrey is still alive, in the throes of the maniac’s grip, and mere inches from death.
THE CAMDEN 28
Unrated, 83 minutes
At 4 a.m. on August 22, 1971, eight Vietnam War protestors went up a ladder outside the federal building in Camden, N.J., and broke into the offices of the local draft board. For two hours they shredded Selective Service records before being surprised by FBI agents.
Twenty co-conspirators were also soon arrested and in 1973 the “Camden 28” went on trial. In this documentary opening today at Cinema Village, director Anthony Giacchino explores how and why these individuals, including four Catholic priests and a Protestant minister, placed themselves at such risk of arrest and imprisonment. The activists claimed that their civil disobedience was meant to call attention to their belief that killing, even in war, was morally indefensible.
Between 1967 to 1971, similar break-ins had occurred at numerous draft boards throughout the country, but the 63-day trial of the Camden 28, which received national attention, was the only one that saw the defendants acquitted.
NAMING NUMBER TWO
PG, 94 minutes
“Naming Number Two” stars Ruby Dee as Nanna Maria, an elderly Fijian matriarch. Inspired by a dream, Nanna commands her grandchildren to throw one last great feast, at which she will name her successor. But the simple task proves nearly impossible as the deep-seated rifts of a painful family legacy threaten not only to derail the feast, but to tear apart the family.
Before it’s too late, the grandchildren must unite and prove to Nanna Maria that her family will again know passion, joy, and life, especially after she’s gone.
WHO’S YOUR CADDY?
PG-13, 93 minutes
In this re-imagining of “Caddyshack,” a rap mogul named CNote (Big Boi) runs into fierce opposition when he tries to join the high-minded Carolina Pines Golf & Country Club. Undeterred, CNote decides to buy the land adjacent to the golf club’s 17th hole, which he leverages to gain membership. His crew wreaks havoc as they bring their larger-than-life style to the club.
As the club’s buttoned-up leadership desperately tries to revoke C-Note’s membership, the hero realizes that his family’s honor — and secret record-breaking golf history — is at stake. With a new perspective, C-Note sets about bringing down the club’s establishment and welcoming it to the 21st century.
Staff Reporter of the Sun