AltWeeklies Wire

'Taking Woodstock' is Ang Lee's Lamest Movie Evernew

If this film winds up being all that remains after a nuclear holocaust, it’ll be a valuable document. Otherwise, zzz.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Mike D'Angelo  |  08-27-2009  |  Reviews

Ang Lee Revives an Idealistic View of a Legendary Event in 'Taking Woodstock'

Taking Woodstock falls squarely within Lee's sweet spot. This may not be a look at the Woodstock that was, but it's fairly charming as a look at the Woodstock that we sort of wish it had been.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  08-25-2009  |  Reviews

Jim Sturges and Ben Kingsley Share Ireland's 'Troubles' in 'Fifty Dead Men Walking'

There's a lot to understand -- politically and emotionally -- about Martin McGartland. Kari Skogland's film makes it happen with muscle, brains, and loins.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  08-24-2009  |  Reviews

'You, the Living': Everything's Funnier With Weltanschauungnew

Perspective is what separates the brilliant You, the Living, a Swedish import, from the mediocre The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard, which Paramount snuck into theaters last week without any timely press screenings.
Chicago Reader  |  J.R. Jones  |  08-24-2009  |  Reviews

'Cold Souls' Has a Charlie Kaufman Premise, but it's Not a Charlie Kaufman Movienew

Sophie Barthes is a French writer-director, and this is her first feature. And it's no great criticism to say that her ideas, well, they get away from her.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  08-24-2009  |  Reviews

'Tetro' Aspires to Opera but Plays Like a Power Balladnew

Francis Ford Coppola's latest is by no means as tragically ambitious as Youth Without Youth, thus it makes much less of a mess when it collapses under its own weight as Youth Without Youth does. In fact, what hampers Tetro is not its surfeit of ideas and narrative impenetrability but, rather, its insufficiency of thematic hooks and dramatic content.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  08-20-2009  |  Reviews

'Post Grad' Doesn't Make the Gradenew

Bland to the point of pointlessness, Post Grad follows the inane highs and lows of a perky young optimist.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  08-20-2009  |  Reviews

New Documentary 'Art & Copy' Celebrates the Men Behind Ads by Skimming the Surfacenew

Advertising has long been perceived as a mirror reflecting reality back to consumers as a wish-fulfillment exercise. In that sense, Art & Copy is a worthy addition to a time-honored tradition.
New York Press  |  Mark Peikert  |  08-20-2009  |  Reviews

Kids Film 'Shorts' is Uneven but Enjoyablenew

Shorts isn't nearly as good as the first Spy Kids. Still, on a scale of Robert Rodriguez's kids' movies, it's much better than The Adventures of Shark Boy and Lava Girl.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Kristian Lin  |  08-20-2009  |  Reviews

'Inglourious Basterds' is Stylish, Daring and Snappily Writtennew

There were moments of trepidation for me during the early goings of Tarantino's latest. I wasn't sure I wanted to see a sensationalized, Grindhouse take on the events of World War II. And yet, Basterds is quite a bit more than that. It is inventive, surehanded, aggressively original -- and destined to be a classic.
San Antonio Current  |  Brian Villalobos  |  08-19-2009  |  Reviews

Buried Deep Under the Muck and Sludge of 'Taxidermia' is a Surreal Gemnew

Palfi has crafted a strikingly original film that veers completely out of control in ways that would make David Cronenberg sick. Is it recommended? Only to those who can see past the graphic deviant sex, seas of fluid and some pretty nasty gore.
Willamette Week  |  Ap Kryza  |  08-19-2009  |  Reviews

'One Day You'll Understand' Employs a Steely Form of Thoughtfulnessnew

In adapting Jerome Clement's book for the screen, Israeli director Amos Gitai is fully aware of the amount of restraint, denial, and dissociation that must be employed to survive a trauma the size of the Holocaust.
The Georgia Straight  |  Mark Harris  |  08-18-2009  |  Reviews

'Inglourious Basterds' is Tarantino's Best Work Yet

Quentin Tarantino has matured as an auteur even if he's as prone as ever to creating funny-ha-ha sequences of joyous cinematic revelry just for the sport of it.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  08-17-2009  |  Reviews

'Flame & Citron' Looks Over its Shoulder at the Nazi Occupation of Denmarknew

Even “good” wars are complicated. In director Ole Christian Madsen's Flame & Citron, the loyalties and motivations of citizens in Denmark during the Nazi occupation become so murky that the two title characters aren’t sure who can be trusted.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Jana J. Monji  |  08-17-2009  |  Reviews

'Adam': Star-Crossed Loversnew

Hugh Dancy and Rose Byrne co-star in this love story about a guy with Asperger's Syndrome and the girl who lives next door.
Austin Chronicle  |  Kimberley Jones  |  08-14-2009  |  Reviews

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