AltWeeklies Wire

Javier Makes Whoopee With Scarlett, Rebecca and Penelopenew

Leave it to Woody Allen to make a romantic comedy in which all the major players end up either single, homicidal or trapped in safe, boring marriages, and where the closest thing to a blissful relationship is a short-lived ménage à trois.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

'Swing Vote': Bud, Wisernew

Kevin Costner stars as the world's least interesting man.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  08-01-2008  |  Reviews

'Frozen River': A Hard-Knock Lifenew

Struggling single mom skates on thin ice in Sundance prizewinner.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  08-01-2008  |  Reviews

Miss Mulder and Scully? Watch the Re-runsnew

The truth is still out there, like an unsold lawn chair at a garage sale, in this just plain lousy second big-screen outing for erstwhile FBI agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  07-25-2008  |  Reviews

Young-Adult Fiction: 'American Teen'new

High school heroes and zeros roam the halls of alleged documentary.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  07-25-2008  |  Reviews

Was Roman Polanski a Pedophile?new

Along its winding road to crucifying the American judiciary, Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired grinds some very blunt axes, makes some dizzying leaps to judgment and does a lot of silly editing with movie clips.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  07-18-2008  |  Reviews

'Mamma Mia!' Big-Screen Musical Drains the Fun Out of ABBAnew

For all its halfhearted stabs at catering to the transatlantic youth market (with a little gift tucked in for the stage show’'s voluminous gay following), Mamma Mia! is a (Shirley) valentine to 50-something we're-not-done-yet broads.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  07-18-2008  |  Reviews

Heath Ledger Cements His Legend Playing Nemesis to Christian Bale's Gotham City Heronew

What a brooding pleasure it is to return to Nolan's Gotham City -- if pleasure is the right word for a movie that gazes so deeply and sometimes despairingly into the souls of restless men.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  07-18-2008  |  Reviews

'Hancock', America's Low-rent Superhero, Just in Time for the Recessionnew

Even bearing in mind the conventional wisdom that superman movies keep coming back to cheer us through hard times, I'm not clear whether Hancock is meant to be a representative of the homeless, a midcareer-burnout case or a troubled brother from another planet.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  07-07-2008  |  Reviews

'The Love Guru': Mike Myers' Cosmic Goofnew

Mostly it's dreary dick jokes and elephant poop, slack directing by Marco Schnabel (a second unit on the Austin Powers movies) and, of all fatal errors, Mike Myers shooting for cuddly.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  06-20-2008  |  Reviews

'Kit Kittredge': As American As Overpriced Dollsnew

In Mattel co-production, all it takes to cure the Depression is a little Miss Sunshine.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  06-20-2008  |  Reviews

Norwegian Pie: Joachim Trier's 'Reprise'new

Like their American youth-movie counterparts, the 20-something guy friends of Norwegian director Trier's Reprise spend a lot of time talking about and clumsily pursuing the fairer sex. Only, his characters are as much (or more) concerned with getting published as getting laid.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  05-30-2008  |  Reviews

Despite the Labels, SATC Movie is a Canal Street Knockoffnew

Trust me, there's precious little to give away other than labels, for though Sex and the City is every bit as busy as its HBO progenitor was, it's mostly plotless, not to mention pointless.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  05-30-2008  |  Reviews

'The Children of Huang Shi': Epic Borenew

Spottiswoode is hardly alone in distilling a distant country's pain into the story of one white Westerner, armed with a similarly pale romantic interest and wry native sidekick, making a difference while world history rages around him.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  05-27-2008  |  Reviews

Parenting Off the Grid and Off the Reservation in 'Surfwise'new

Halfway through Surfwise, a mesmerizingly ambivalent documentary about an itinerant family of Jewish surfer-dude health nuts, we meet the 84-year-old patriarch, "Doc" Paskowitz showing director Doug Pray a blown-up photo of a Nazi preparing to shoot a Jewish mother and child at close range.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  05-27-2008  |  Reviews

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