AltWeeklies Wire
Stray Heirsnew
Tideland is like a Wyeth painting...on smack.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
10-27-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Terry Gilliam, Tideland
You Talkin' To Me?new
A higher power was clearly not guiding the screenwriter.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-27-2006 |
Reviews
Selling Soulsnew
Undeniably if sometimes unsettlingly beautiful, but the narrative unveils somewhat confusingly.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-27-2006 |
Reviews
Unscary Movie
You may as well play the trailer over and over again for about 95 minutes and save your bucks.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Takashi Shimizu, The Grudge 2
Tin Soldiers and Bush Coming
Crisp, lively, but unsurprising.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Vanishing Act
Unlike writer-director Nolan's debut, The Prestige doesn't offer a conclusion that's thought-provoking so much as dismissible.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Christopher Nolan, The Prestige
But What About the Children?
Intentionally very literary, but feelings that might persuade on the page don't work when all the characters are embodied by movie stars.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Little Children, Todd Field
'Core Values
Perhaps what's most amusing about Rachman's doc is the kids-these-days! attitude of now-adult, former rebels, ranting against unnamed artists implied to be, say, Good Charlotte or blink-182.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: American Hardcore, Paul Rachman
Royal Pains
It all should add up to a tone that’s energetic and fun, yet the two-plus-hours Marie Antoinette is as empty as the calories the character consumes.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Marie Antoinette, Sofia Coppola
Lost in Forestation
A fill-in-the-blanks experience that defines itself more by what it isn’t than what it is.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: Kelly Reichardt, Old Joy
Songs of the Road
On one level, Riding Alone is Zhang’s most sentimental film, with lots of tear-jerking and even some outright blubbering. It’s also a remarkably sanguine portrait of the Chinese penal system, which proves unconvincingly receptive to the fixation of one bull-headed Japanese tourist.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
10-20-2006 |
Reviews
Channel Serfnew
A week of subsistence in TV's vast wasteland proves that whatever they're paying Julian McMahon, it's not enough.
Washington City Paper |
Mario Correa |
10-13-2006 |
TV
Tags: TV
Jibber Jobbernew
Employee shines when Simpson's offscreen.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-13-2006 |
Reviews
Texas, Messed Withnew
There's little to differentiate Sheldon Turner's "script" from a colorless, ho-hum slasher.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
10-13-2006 |
Reviews
Pulling Up Shortnew
The movie is amiable enough, but what makes Shortbus actively irksome is the suggestion that its genuine erections and unsimulated ejaculations constitute some sort of revolution.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
10-13-2006 |
Reviews
Tags: John Cameron Mitchell, Shortbus