AltWeeklies Wire

Diamond in the Roughnew

Steve Martin's Pink Panther piddles on its predecessor.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  02-14-2006  |  Reviews

Rocky Watersnew

Annapolis salutes all the classic boxing cliches.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  01-31-2006  |  Reviews

Holy Bankrollernew

Pious Phil Anschutz has more than money at stake in the $150 million production of C.S. Lewis's beloved Christian allegory.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  12-14-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Sins of the Fathernew

The man looking for his missing 6-year-old daughter in this deeply moving film is the kind of pariah most urban dwellers will do anything to avoid.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  10-26-2005  |  Reviews

Listening to Klingonnew

The documentary Earthlings transports us into a secret society ruled by codes and wonders all its own, the province of Trekkies who joined the Klingon Language Institute.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  02-02-2005  |  Reviews

Hail Snail Mailnew

In this film about a father and son delivering a mail route in the mountains of South Hunan lurks a stone-faced reverence for civil service that may seem downright bizarre to most Americans.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  11-30-2004  |  Reviews

Next Best Thing to Being Therenew

The Radio City concert that was performed a century after the birth of the blues and gorgeously filmed by Antoine Fuqua gives us a profound sense of how the blues has blossomed over the years -- and the far corners it has reached.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  11-09-2004  |  Reviews

Puppet Mastersnew

The creators of this raunchy action farce made with prancing marionettes open fire on American militarism, French indifference, Peter Jennings, Hollywood blockbusters, Nebraska football and left-leaning movie stars who think they have interesting things to say about politics.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  10-15-2004  |  Reviews

Like Moths to a Flamenew

Jay Russell's action-packed, flame-broiled Ladder 49 is an all-out valentine to the firehouse fraternity. While it's good with mayhem, it's pretty weak in terms of actual human behavior.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  10-04-2004  |  Reviews

Silver City Stands Out in Season of Political Intriguenew

The new John Sayles movie, set and shot in Colorado, is downright bracing, and it has the kind of dramatic acumen the blunt propagandists can only dream about. There's no mistaking its liberal, or progressive, stance, but it's neither a bag of tricks nor a self-righteous rant.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  09-10-2004  |  Reviews

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