AltWeeklies Wire

'Love Songs' Offers Perverse Entertainmentnew

The film takes a sudden nosedive into a deep, deep funk, vying to becoming the most depressing musical since Cabaret.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Matt Prigge  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

Mongol: Meet the Barack Obama of 12th-century Asianew

Genghis Khan's all about rejecting the politics and divisions of the past. He's a new kind of leader, ready to unify the fractious clans of Central Asia into one nation under a new code of law.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

'Before the Rains' Explores Love, Lust and Empirenew

Before the Rains is a carefully recreated and opulent period drama that explores the psychology of individuals grappling, and losing their grip, with the historical conditions of their time.
Shepherd Express  |  David Luhrssen  |  06-13-2008  |  Reviews

Director Sergei Bodrov Retraces the Footsteps of Genghis Khannew

Just over a decade ago, Bodrov made his mark in the West with his Academy Award–nominated movie Prisoner of the Mountains. After frustrating stints as a director-for-hire, he did the smart thing and made the movie he wanted to make.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  06-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Guy Maddin Explores His Hometown and Childhood in New Docufantasianew

When someone grows up on tales of stampeding racehorses being frozen in a river, leaving just their rearing heads above the ice, how can they not be a little off-kilter in their sensibilities?
New York Press  |  Mark Peikert  |  06-12-2008  |  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

The Incest of 'Savage Grace' Knocks Julianne Moore from Her Gay Cinema Thronenew

Moore plays a woman who is the target of her gay son's frustrations in Savage Grace -- the story of Barbara Baekeland, the unbalanced wealthy socialite who led her son to incest and murder in 1972.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  05-29-2008  |  Reviews

'The Unknown Woman' Struggles to Hold on to Her Humanitynew

One of the unexpected byproducts of the economically disastrous Soviet collapse was the massive export of mainly unwitting prostitutes from formerly socialist republics, a theme rarely shown as poignantly as in Giuseppe Tornatore's latest feature.
The Georgia Straight  |  Mark Harris  |  05-27-2008  |  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

'The Children of Huang Shi' is Lovely to Look Atnew

But that's about it. The real star of Huang Shi is the cinematographer, Zhao Xiaoding, who was a camera operator on the breathtaking epic Hero and director of photography on House of Flying Daggers.
New York Press  |  Raphaela Weissman  |  05-22-2008  |  Reviews

100 Minutes of Helen Hunt's Egonew

If you've ever wanted to see Salman Rushdie playing a gynecologist, then consider seeing Then She Found Me.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  05-15-2008  |  Reviews

Illegal Immigrants Find Out that Brooklyn isn't All Skinny Jeansnew

Sangre de Mi Sangre is decidedly not a fun, sexy summer movie, eschewing as it does romance for tentative connections forged in desperation, and fight scenes dripping with money for gritty life-or-death lunges on the streets of a Brooklyn rarely seen on film.
New York Press  |  Mark Peikert  |  05-15-2008  |  Reviews

David Mamet Knows Kung Funew

The ghosts of the Shaw Brothers haunt this tale of Mike Terry, a painfully noble Los Angeles jiu-jitsu instructor who, through a series of increasingly unlikely occurrences, gets sucked into a world of sketchy movie producers and unethical mixed martial arts fighters.
The Portland Mercury  |  Erik Henriksen  |  05-09-2008  |  Reviews

David Mamet Shows Jiu Jitsu Some Lovenew

Redbelt is a likable distraction, especially for Mamet's trademark staccato dialogue and the deft choreography of its martial-arts sequences.
San Antonio Current  |  Steven G. Kellman  |  05-07-2008  |  Reviews

Jeremy Podeswa Adds A Personal Touch to 'Fugitive Pieces'new

Like Jakob Beer, the hero of Anne Michaels's novel, Fugitive Pieces, Podeswa's father is Polish and survived the war.
NOW Magazine  |  Deidre Swain  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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