AltWeeklies Wire

David Mamet's Redbelt is a Return to Formnew

In a sense, the arc of Mamet's career has been one long journey from Chicago to Hollywood, and his last few movies as a writer-director -- State and Main, Heist and Spartan -- suggested that arc was turning steeply downward. Redbelt emphatically reverses this decline by combining in near-perfect proportion what Mamet loves and hates about Hollywood.
Chicago Reader  |  J.R. Jones  |  05-19-2008  |  Reviews

David Mamet Knows Kung Funew

The ghosts of the Shaw Brothers haunt this tale of Mike Terry, a painfully noble Los Angeles jiu-jitsu instructor who, through a series of increasingly unlikely occurrences, gets sucked into a world of sketchy movie producers and unethical mixed martial arts fighters.
The Portland Mercury  |  Erik Henriksen  |  05-09-2008  |  Reviews

David Mamet's Kung-Fu Comebacknew

He's back in shape with the martial-arts thriller Redbelt.
Montreal Mirror  |  Malcolm Fraser  |  05-09-2008  |  Reviews

'Redbelt': You Can't Spell Mamet Without MMA!new

The famed playwright goes jiu-jitsu on us.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Kristian Lin  |  05-08-2008  |  Reviews

David Mamet Shows Jiu Jitsu Some Lovenew

Redbelt is a likable distraction, especially for Mamet's trademark staccato dialogue and the deft choreography of its martial-arts sequences.
San Antonio Current  |  Steven G. Kellman  |  05-07-2008  |  Reviews

David Mamet Creates a Serious 'Karate Kid'new

But Mamet's self-seriousness stifles Redbelt's cinematic potential.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  05-01-2008  |  Reviews

Narrow Search

Category

Hot Topics

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range