AltWeeklies Wire

The Wire Earns its Critical Acclaimnew

Each episode moves up and down the chain of command of both organizations, from junkies and street-corner pushers to Baltimore's most powerful elected leaders.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Heather Kuldell  |  09-15-2004  |  TV

Murder on the Campaign Trailnew

With Silver City, Sayles lives up to the stereotype of the socially conscientious but humorless leftist. Imagine Ralph Nader trying to crack a joke on the campaign trail and you'll get a sense of Silver City's discomfort with comedy.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-15-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Ju-on Marks Turning Point for Japanese Horrornew

Technically, this is Shimizu's third theatrical feature in a franchise begun with a made-for-TV film called Ju-on: The Curse. That might explain Shimizu's fiendish resistance to lay out the film's supernatural rules. The audience stays as off-balance as the characters.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-15-2004  |  Reviews

Legislation Could Require Standards for Preserving DNA Evidencenew

Sen. David Adelman, D-Decatur, an author of the new legislation, wants to guarantee that others will be able to test their crime scene DNA. Adelman is attempting to pass legislation requiring statewide standards for preserving DNA evidence in criminal cases.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Alyssa Abkowitz  |  09-15-2004  |  Civil Liberties

Prescription Drug Adderall is All The Rage on College Campusesnew

A growing trend among college students, an estimated one in five pop Adderall without a prescription, according to a 2002 Johns Hopkins study. Many students don't consider their use of Adderall to be abusive because it helps them perform well in school.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Alyssa Abkowitz  |  09-15-2004  |  Science

Corporate Icon Fends Off Multimillion-Dollar Lawsuitsnew

Rollins Inc. and Orkin are under siege, and president Glen Rollins is the general standing on the ramparts. The outfit is being nibbled at by lawyers and disgruntled customers who are as ferocious in their attack as termites are when they sniff unprotected wood.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  John Sugg  |  09-15-2004  |  Business & Labor

Could Zell Miller's Unbalanced Keynote Tirade Hurt the GOP?new

By the time of the Don Imus interview, Zell Miller already had learned that he and his wife, Shirley, were unceremoniously bumped from their enviable place on the stage during the president's speech — a move that seemed a clear acknowledgement that Bush's most ardent Democratic cheerleader had become an embarrassment.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Scott Henry  |  09-13-2004  |  Politics

New Book Examines Classic Rock Songs of the Southnew

Kemp sees the history of Southern rock as, in part, a program of recovery for young white Southerners forced to confront their ancestral guilt: the ashamed melancholy of the Macon-based Allman Brothers Band, the anger of Lynyrd Skynyrd, the intellectual distance of Athens band R.E.M., and the acceptance and final transcendence of the Drive-By Truckers as they sang, "Proud of the glory, stare down the shame/Duality of the Southern thing."
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  09-09-2004  |  Nonfiction

He's a Carolina Pranksternew

The protagonist of Singleton's new novel, Mendal Dawes, grows up in the, uh, 100 percent fictional small mill town of Forty-Five, S.C., son to a brilliant if somewhat unbalanced trickster of an anarchist-liberal who continually disrupts the town's banal busybodies and proselytizing religious nuts. Turns out, Singleton is writing from experience.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  09-09-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

First-Time Director Lance Rivera Never Finds the Laid-Back Tonenew

Too often The Cookout leaves comic opportunities half-baked while smothering the audience in flavorless homilies about family values.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-09-2004  |  Reviews

Gallo Uses Style as a Distraction From Lack of Originalitynew

All of the negative hype and reports of boos from audiences at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival prove to be legitimate responses to Vincent Gallo's masturbatory opus, The Brown Bunny.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  09-09-2004  |  Reviews

Philosophical Documentary is About Everything and Nothingnew

If you yawned at the high-tech action scenes of the Matrix movies but loved all the verbiage about the nature of reality, feed your head with What the #$*! Do We Know!?
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-09-2004  |  Reviews

Two Danish Filmmakers Make Art Out of Playnew

Von Trier asked Leth to remake his 1967 short The Perfect Human five times according to von Trier's exacting specifications. The resulting documentary is the ambitious and at times flawed The Five Obstructions, in which Leth and his films are analyzed, scrutinized and cut to pieces by von Trier.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  09-09-2004  |  Reviews

Criminal Teaches Con Film New Tricksnew

Grifter films have become so common that audiences quickly spot their tricks. We know they'll try to con us. Argentina's con-man drama Nine Queens, and the new American remake Criminal, both realize that we're no longer easy marks.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-09-2004  |  Reviews

Why Are Georgia's Leaders Sending Good Jobs to Third World Nations?new

It shouldn't be a shock to discover that Georgia officials are allowing the outsourcing of taxpayer-paid-for jobs to India and Mexico. Outsourcing private sector jobs to Asia, Africa and Latin America is big business. It's also bad business.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  John Sugg  |  09-09-2004  |  Commentary

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