AltWeeklies Wire

LeBron James Doc 'More Than a Game' is an Incurious and Narcissistic Puff Piecenew

This slick 90-minute promo film -- tarted up to resemble a doc -- for Nike's crown jewel overflows with energy, style and a great soundtrack, but shows zero insight and honesty.
Metro Times  |  Corey Hall  |  10-20-2009  |  Reviews

Documentary 'Taqwacore' Examines Muslim Punk Musiciansnew

Director Omar Majeed doesn't try to hide the artists' laziness and contradictory ideologies. His film embraces the musicians for the confused, irresponsible, sometimes delusional yet often admirable punks that they are.
NOW Magazine  |  Radheyan Simonpillai  |  10-16-2009  |  Reviews

Chris Rock Never Embraces the Nap in His Doc About African-American Hairnew

Good Hair is a mockumentary by accident because Rock pretends to explore the cultural phenomenon of how black women truly feel about their hair. Yet he relentlessly falls back on easy jokes and juvenile asides that mock the subject.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  10-08-2009  |  Reviews

In His Biofuels-Promoting Doc 'Fuel,' Joshua Tickell Tries to Do Too Muchnew

Joshua Tickell is very serious about biodiesel. Also, he just married a folk singer; he hates pollution; and he has a video camera. In short: Watch out, America, because there's a documentary full of sincerity coming your way.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  10-07-2009  |  Reviews

Michael Moore on 'Capitalism,' Reagan's Destruction and Getting Booted Out of GMnew

General Motors isn't Moore's only target this time. He argues that America's economic gap is a chasm, and that the foundations of a corrupt political and corporate system are about to crumble. With a wink and nudge, he wants you to help him push it over the edge, and then pick up the pieces.
Metro Times  |  Corey Hall  |  10-06-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Michael Moore's Latest Doc Sticks it to 'the Rich' ... Sort Ofnew

Capitalism filled me with a sensation that's previously been foreign to the Michael Moore viewing experience: boredom. It's longer, sloppier and less interesting than his usual demagoguery.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Sean Burns  |  10-05-2009  |  Reviews

With 'American Casino,' Andrew and Leslie Cockburn Recast the Recession as Civil Rights Storynew

With more spark than a Frontline documentary and less pretense than whatever Michael Moore has cooking, American Casino is the best film so far to explain the US economic crisis.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Corey Pein  |  10-01-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Capitalism': Love It or Leave It?new

If Michael Moore's Capitalism: A Love Story teaches us one thing about the global economic crisis, it is how much the stunt-documentary gold standard has declined in value.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Jonathan Kiefer  |  09-30-2009  |  Reviews

'No Impact Man': What’s the Big To-Do About Doing With Less?new

Is No Impact Man a landmark documentary? Is the book a Walden for our time? Not really. Both, in a modest, agreeable fashion, tell us what we already know: We buy too much, we waste too much, and we're using up resources disproportionate to our presence on the planet.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  09-28-2009  |  Reviews

Ken Burns Worships America's Spiritual Resource in His Latest Docnew

His PBS 12-hour epic The National Parks: America's Best Idea is a selective chronicle of the evolution of the National Parks system and the changing roles protected lands have played in American culture since Congress validated Yosemite in 1864.
Boston Phoenix  |  Clif Garboden  |  09-24-2009  |  TV

Michael Moore Sells the Same Old Shtick in 'Capitalism'new

I wish that more of the contradictions of late capitalism had made it into this scattershot, lazy slice of agitprop, which recycles Moore's usual slice-and-dice job on corporations, while bobbing a curtsey to the current crisis.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  09-24-2009  |  Reviews

Jimmy Page Charms in 'It Might Get Loud'new

While The Edge hates and Jack White poses, Page just revels in music. His face continually lights up as he spins old discs; his 64-year-old body slides into recurring boogie mode; and he shakes and grooves with his guitar like he was still the lean young man in Led Zeppelin.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  09-23-2009  |  Reviews

'Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg' Gushes Over First Lady of Televisionnew

Documentary pays tribute to Gertrude Berg, a pioneering Jewish writer and actress at the dawn of television.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-22-2009  |  Reviews

'It Might Get Loud' Climbs Stairway to Guitar Heavennew

An Inconvenient Truth director Davis Guggenheim presents a summit of three generations of rock guitarists.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-22-2009  |  Reviews

'Art & Copy' Misses its Own Pointnew

Doug Pray attempts to sell advertising to audiences in his latest film.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Edward Adams  |  09-22-2009  |  Reviews

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