AltWeeklies Wire
Tucker Max Wants You to Like Him for Being an Unapologetic Dickheadnew
The film adaptation of Max's notoriously infantile and incredibly popular tell-all memoir about his fratboy sexcapades is not immediately repugnant. I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell only becomes truly insipid when it makes a cloying, half-hearted attempt to show that Max and his buddies have learned the error of their ways and now have greater respect for women and themselves.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
09-24-2009 |
Reviews
If You Want a Nerve-Wracking Trip, Turn to 'Timecrimes'new
Writer/director Nacho Vigalondo's first feature film is that rarest of films: a movie about mystery that remains impenetrable even after its hand is played.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
12-11-2008 |
Reviews
Tags: Nacho Vigalondo, Timecrimes
'Dust' is an Unwieldy and Uneven Documentarynew
Mostly using the testimony of workmen and scientists, Bitomsky tells us about something we encounter every day but choose to ignore. Throughout the film's episodes, that transformation from fact to idea stalls at every step of the thinking process, from enumeration to visualization to extrapolation.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
12-04-2008 |
Reviews
'Repo! The Genetic Opera' is a Brain Drainnew
This sci-fi comic book musical (starring Paris Hilton) needs improvement.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
11-06-2008 |
Reviews
'Fear(s) of the Dark': Parts of a Holenew
Fear(s) shortcoming(s) reveal the omnibus film's illusion of intricacy.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
10-23-2008 |
Reviews
Tags: Charles Burns, Fear(s) of the Dark
Why Sexual and Character Ambiguity Don't Mix in 'A Girl Cut in Two'new
What makes Claude Chabrol's A Girl Cut in Two (2007) so trying is not that it's unsure of what it wants to be, but rather that it refuses to decide.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
08-18-2008 |
Reviews
Tags: Claude Chabrol, A Girl Cut in Two
The New Star Wars Film Would have Made a Better Video Gamenew
The animation in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Dave Filoni's completely unnecessary but somewhat entertaining addition to the ever-growing Star Wars prequel franchise, looks perfect. Too perfect.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
08-18-2008 |
Reviews
Standing Beside Philippe Petit Atop the World in 'Man on Wire'new
The biggest risk director James Marsh takes in Man on Wire, Marsh's documentary about Philippe Petit's daring tightrope walk between the Twin Towers in 1974, is in indulging Petit.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
07-24-2008 |
Reviews
The Key to Understanding Johnny To's Schizophrenic Sherlocknew
Mad Detective, Johnny To's latest collaboration with screenwriter/director Ka-fai Wai is just as cerebral and meaty as the pair's last project, Running On Karma, an action-comedy that had something for everybody.
New York Press |
Simon Abrams |
07-17-2008 |
Reviews