It is a given among the comfortable that most crime happens because there are bad people. It’s a certainty among the disadvantaged, however, that some crime happens because those without financial safety nets often lack other options. That’s a running theme in Willy Vlautin’s novels, two of which have already been adapted as movies (2012’s “The Motel Life,” acclaimed “Lean On Pete” five years later). Now there’s “ Night Always Comes ,” with producer Vanessa Kirby as a hard-luck case in Portland, Ore., who’s driven to unlawful acts over several hours’ course in a last-ditch effort to save her home. It’s a compelling tale of increasingly hazardous desperation, even if the star and her fellow-Brit director Benjamin Caron (oth veterans of royalty drama series “The Crown) aren’t necessari
'Night Always Comes' Review: Vanessa Kirby Fights to Avoid Homelessness

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