AltWeeklies Wire

Renowned For Its Roguish History, One Boston Neighborhood Is Finally Getting Hollywood's Attentionnew

After years of playing second-fiddle to Southie, Charlestown is quickly becoming the go-to neighborhood for Hollywood filmmakers looking to capture the real Boston. This month alone, two feature-length movies are being filmed in Charlestown.
Boston Phoenix  |  Chris Faraone  |  09-16-2009  |  Movies

Inconvenient Truths Abound in Eco-Docs 'The Age of Stupid' and 'No Impact Man'new

So then, do the canvas bags, travel mugs, energy-saving appliances, clotheslines, CSA memberships, cycling, recycling, composting, and other ecologically minded efforts of a smattering of well-intentioned individuals matter at all? Or matter enough?
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Lynn Rapoport  |  09-16-2009  |  Movies

A Week Without Movie Stars at the 33rd Montreal World Film Festivalnew

For years Montreal's festival ran neck and neck with the Toronto Film Festival, competing to premiere films from the same pool of foreign and independent releases. But as Toronto secured its position by bringing in more big Hollywood pictures, Montreal continued to rely on foreign films. And with fewer of those picked up for North American distribution every year, the pool of high-profile picks shrank steadily.
Artvoice  |  M. Faust  |  09-11-2009  |  Movies

Conspiracy is in the Air ... No Wonder Hollywood is Embracing Paranoianew

With 9/11 Truthers, Birthers, Tea Partyers, and even Obama school-speech muckrakers dominating news cycles, conspiracy is clearly in the air. Hollywood has noticed -- that's why theaters are suddenly awash in paranoia.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  09-10-2009  |  Movies

Saving Shaolin: Portland Film Geek Unearths Grindhouse Goldminenew

Dan Halsted started Portland's Grindhouse Film Festival in 2004. Since then, he has developed the festival into a monthly showcase of genre cinema that pits the sordid pulp of films like The Toolbox Murders against the antiseptic blandness of contemporary multiplexes.
The Portland Mercury  |  Matt Davis  |  09-10-2009  |  Movies

Real (Scary) World: When Reality Shows Killnew

The tragic story of Ryan Jenkins allegedly murdering a swimsuit model named Jasmine Fiore would have been just another obscure, SoCal, TMZ footnote were it not for the fact that Jenkins was a rising star in the reality show world. That juicy tidbit is now shining an unwelcome light on the sleazy world of reality show one-upmanship.
Weekly Alibi  |  Devin D. O'Leary  |  09-01-2009  |  Movies

Horror Showdown: 'Halloween II' vs. 'The Final Destination'new

Horror sequels Halloween II and The Final Destination both open this week, but neither was screened in time for review. So instead, we've devised this scientific system (note: system not scientific at all) to determine which one might be worth horror fans' time and money.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Josh Bell  |  08-27-2009  |  Movies

Tarantino Picks His 20 Favorite Flicks of the Past 17 Yearsnew

When Ella Taylor asked me to rename my top five films of all time, I rattled off the obvious titles. She then asked, “Any since the last 17 years?”
L.A. Weekly  |  Quentin Tarantino  |  08-21-2009  |  Movies

Metro Phoenix May be the Next Porn Capital of the Worldnew

The adult business isn't what it used to be, especially in the San Fernando Valley outside Los Angeles, the long-reigning capital of porn in America. But luckily for Taryn Thomas, her new company's based in a place considered the next big hotspot for pornography: metropolitan Phoenix.
Phoenix New Times  |  Niki D'Andrea  |  08-18-2009  |  Movies

John Hughes Made Millions of Teens (Including Me) Think He Was Speaking Directly to Themnew

There are still great movies made for and about teenagers now. But John Hughes wrote our movies and introduced us to our own teenage angst for the first time. And nothing new, no matter how great, can ever take that away.
SEE Magazine  |  Mari Sasano  |  08-13-2009  |  Movies

The YouTube-ification of Public-Access TV in San Francisco is About to Beginnew

California has joined some 20 states in largely letting cable companies off the hook for funding public-access TV. Dozens of cities have lost their stations altogether, and in San Francisco, the operating budget has been hacked to a fifth of its former level. And the old cast of kooky cable programmers doesn't like it one bit.
SF Weekly  |  Lauren Smiley  |  08-12-2009  |  Movies

Find Those Hoary Old Cult Movie Chestnuts Onlinenew

The San Francisco collective Cosmic Hex is committed to finding, archiving, and digitally preserving just those forgotten treasures of underground exploitation film.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Michael Krimper  |  08-05-2009  |  Movies

Two New TV Nurses Snort Percocet, Shutup Coworkers and Rail Against Lunacynew

While the truth of the occupation lies somewhere between these polar extremes, HawthoRNe and Nurse Jackie represent breakthrough television on multiple levels.
San Antonio Current  |  Jim McFarlin  |  07-22-2009  |  Movies

Homo Panic! at the Cinemanew

Quasi-queer movies such as Bruno and Humpday are late to the game, while Nia Vardalos' rom-com, I Hate Valentine's Day, provides better gay imagery.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  07-09-2009  |  Movies

This Year's Rock Documentaries Are Funny, Moving, Exciting and Tragicnew

This year's crop of rock docs bring us talkes about Arthur Russell, the Monks, the '80s New Haven punk scene, the Hold Steady and Scott Walker.
New Haven Advocate  |  John Adamian, Christopher Arnott and Brianna Snyder  |  06-30-2009  |  Movies

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