AltWeeklies Wire

Take This Womannew

Piper Perabo plays a boring bride with an untimely lesbian streak in this new film.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  01-30-2006  |  Reviews

Three's Companynew

Susan Kaplan's documentary about two male partners who decide to bring a woman into their relationship is really something -- an intimate, honest film with plenty of food for thought.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  12-06-2005  |  Reviews

Closet Casenew

In spite of its many mistakes, this coming-of-age film works because of lead actor Michael McMillian.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  11-30-2005  |  Reviews

ISO Substancenew

In many ways, Craigslist the movie is like Craigslist the Web site: genial, nonjudgmental, copious, quirky, human, and utterly decentralized.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  10-11-2005  |  Reviews

Something Missingnew

This film about a young man's search for the woman who saved his grandfather from the Nazis certainly has strengths, including gorgeous art direction and clever humor, but its essence is empty.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  09-27-2005  |  Reviews

Bad Educationnew

Kids are learning some serious riffs at Paul Green's rock school in Philadelphia. Don Argott's documentary examines the price they pay for it.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  06-08-2005  |  Reviews

Another Brick in the Wallnew

If the dismally morose Daybreak is any indication, the flavor of Swedish misery is remarkably similar to the kind we do here in America -- only colder and with less natural light.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  05-11-2005  |  Reviews

Club Lifenew

A dreamy mood movie, 3-Iron is at times deliciously sensual, creepily somnolent, whimsically spiritual, and disturbingly violent. But it is never quite coherent.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  05-11-2005  |  Reviews

The Grapes of Mirthnew

Jonathan Nossiter's documentary exposing the globalization of the wine industry is subversive, funny and humane.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  04-09-2005  |  Reviews

Love, African Stylenew

A drama about Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings in post-apartheid South Africa devolves into a clumsy romance.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  03-21-2005  |  Reviews

The Camera's Weeping Eyenew

This is a gorgeous, wrenching film in which a concerned Westerner enters a dark and hidden world and, instead of merely observing it, endeavors to change it.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  02-11-2005  |  Reviews

He's Got Legsnew

The true story of a Thai transgender kickboxer inpires a well-intentioned film with a heart of gold -- and a brain of lead.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  01-24-2005  |  Reviews

Searching for Shylocknew

Pacino plays Shakespeare's most contentious character in a a gripping, highly cinematic adaptation of a gorgeous work of theater.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  01-19-2005  |  Reviews

Father of African Cinema Produces a Beautiful Polemicnew

The 81-year-old Senagelese director's film about girls fleeing ritual circumcision has a moral center that is painfully clear. It also expresses each character's humanity.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  01-04-2005  |  Reviews

Enduring Creepinessnew

The film wants to come from behind and surprise in a way that feels punishing, as though the audience being taught a bitter lesson. The result is creepy and unpleasant. There is hope, however bleak, at the end, but mostly there's a sense of unnecessary devastation.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  11-15-2004  |  Reviews

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