AltWeeklies Wire

Bewitched Wastes Its Ironic Premise With Romantic Clichésnew

On the big screen, TV plots feel at once thin and overinflated. Yet Hollywood keeps making them.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-23-2005  |  Reviews

Old Show's Nature Seems Rickety Vehicle for Featurenew

It's just like the 1950s series, only with an African-American cast, a modern setting and lame jokes.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-16-2005  |  Reviews

Another Road Home Is a Journey Both Personal and Politicalnew

Another Road Home has echoes of the sharp divide between black and white experience in the United States, and how one race can be oblivious to discrimination, and the other, daily, painfully aware of it.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  06-16-2005  |  Reviews

Movie Magic Keeps Howl's Castle Movingnew

What sticks with you are the film's moments of delicate epiphanies, like seeing a fire demon cook bacon and eggs, or watching a hopping scarecrow hang clothes to dry.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-16-2005  |  Reviews

Batman Begins Examines the Man Behind the Masknew

Batman Begins breaks from tradition by compellingly tracing the motives that lead a brooding billionaire to pick fights dressed as an airborne rodent.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-16-2005  |  Reviews

Mr. & Mrs. Smithnew

John and Jane Smith (Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie) are actually freelance assassins unaware of each other's occupation. When they discover each other's double lives, they embark on a series of deadly cat-and-mouse games.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-09-2005  |  Reviews

Some Aspects Give Film Unsportsmanlike Conductnew

The authority-defying premise and violent punchlines still click, but the gay-bashing humor gives The Longest Yard penalties for unsportsmanlike conduct.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-02-2005  |  Reviews

Cinderella Man's Fight Scenes K.O. Clichesnew

The boxing biopic Cinderella Man offers a sweat-dripping, rib-cracking, tooth-loosening version of the famous fairy tale. Instead of a humble beauty meeting a noble prince with a glass slipper, Cinderella Man shows a humble bruiser who finds his destiny through an ignoble prizefighter with a glass jaw.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  06-02-2005  |  Reviews

Lords of Dogtown Skates Along the Edgenew

Digging deeper into the personalities behind this fierce cadre of pioneer skateboarders would have made sense, but Lords of Dogtown is unnecessarily beholden to the skating milestones unearthed in Stacy Peralta's documentary.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  06-02-2005  |  Reviews

Restored Film Remains Flawlessnew

For Major Dundee's 40th anniversary, Sony Pictures Repertory presents a re-edited, extended version of the film with new music and 12 minutes of restored scenes that more closely match director Sam Peckinpah's intentions.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  05-26-2005  |  Reviews

Tame Madagascar Fails to Captivatenew

Though brand new, Madagascar feels stale, and its most clever ideas play second banana to tired, TV-friendly shtick.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  05-26-2005  |  Reviews

Layer Cake a Slice of the Dangerous Lifenew

Layer Cake exemplifies how recent English gangster films seldom prove as grandly operatic or steeped in social issues as America's Godfather imitators. But that can be good.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  05-26-2005  |  Reviews

Fans Make Own Star Wars Filmsnew

Many fan productions are spoofs, but Star Wars: Revelations keeps a straight face for what might be the most elaborate fan film ever made.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  05-19-2005  |  Reviews

Humor Comes Too Little Too Latenew

Will Ferrell's primal-scream shtick should be perfect for a comedy about the timely subject of enraged sports parents. But when Phil finally cuts loose and bellows at boys, the humor comes too little too late.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  05-19-2005  |  Reviews

Globalization Squeezes the Wine Industrynew

A documentary about the changes globalization has wrought on the wine industry, Mondovino, takes a concept that on its surface would have limited appeal, and makes it feel like a matter of profound urgency.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  05-19-2005  |  Reviews

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