AltWeeklies Wire

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

Spike Jonze Turns Maurice Sendak's Classic Children's Book into an Adult Work of Artnew

Jonze's sensibility is an authentic development of the music-video era's generational split -- which is also an aesthetic split. He doesn't exploit pop rebellion but has a counter-intuitive slant on what's funny, sad, universal.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  10-15-2009  |  Reviews

'Where the Wild Things Are' Left Me Out in the Coldnew

It's standard practice to praise children's movies by saying they'll be enjoyed by parents and children alike, but in this case I suspect that some parents will sink blissfully into a reverie watching the characters throw clods of dirt, while their offspring tug on sleeves to ask when they can go outside and throw clods of dirt.
Willamette Week  |  Aaron Mesh  |  10-14-2009  |  Reviews

'Couples Retreat' is Like a Half-Assed Update of 'Fantasy Island'new

Getting away from it all isn't easy. Start by getting away from this movie.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Jonathan Kiefer  |  10-14-2009  |  Reviews

Blaxploitation Homage 'Black Dynamite' Had Me Rolling on the Floor

Not only could Scott Sanders' film serve as a textbook DIY how-to primer for what it takes to make Blaxploitation cinema, it may also be the all-time best party film next to Animal House. If this movie doesn't make you laugh, call a doctor.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  10-14-2009  |  Reviews

Spike Jonze Sincerely Adapts 'Where the Wild Things Are'

Jonze's no-nonsense movie expands gently on Maurice Sendak's elegant 20-page kids' book to address children, acknowledging their primal impulses -- which they must eventually control.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  10-12-2009  |  Reviews

1960s Period Piece 'An Education' Gets Good Marks, as Does Star Carey Mulligannew

Danish director Lone Scherfig's movie is something of a deceptively packaged Oscar-season bonbon -- a seemingly benign, classily directed year-I-became-a-woman nostalgia trip that conceals a surprisingly tart, morally ambiguous center.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  10-09-2009  |  Reviews

The Secret Lives of Queer Leading Mennew

How Howard Bragman, Hollywood's coming-out guru, helps gay actors tell the truth. Bragman's parents were "tolerant and accepting" when he came out in his 20s; Proposition 8 was "extremely painful"; gays and lesbians need to "call people on their shit."
L.A. Weekly  |  Patrick Range McDonald  |  10-09-2009  |  Movies

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

The Coen Brothers Make Their Most Personal, Most Maddening Film Yetnew

The Coens have never made a movie like A Serious Man before, combining the screwball sensibilities of O Brother with the larger issues of No Country. But this isn’t an existential film -- far from it.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Anders Wright  |  10-07-2009  |  Reviews

'Tony Manero' Shows Us That the Flipside of Pop Culture Escapism is Soul-Sucking Insanitynew

Shot on Super 16mm film, employing a handheld camera that purposely loses focus, and creating a seedy, claustrophobic atmosphere of despair, Tony Manero is the kind of edgy, angering work cinephiles flock to because it seems so much more uncompromising than it is.
Metro Times  |  Jeff Meyers  |  10-06-2009  |  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

Return of the B Movie: Full Moon Entertainment is Backnew

To a certain percentage of the population -- those who grew up in the dawning Home Video Age of the '80s -- Full Moon still holds a certain nostalgic resonance. Now, after years of weathering bankruptcy, various lawsuits and the death of the VHS tape, Full Moon is back.
Weekly Alibi  |  Devin D. O'Leary  |  10-06-2009  |  Movies

'The Damned United' is One Damned Entertaining Movie

In his portrayal of famed British soccer team manager Brian Clough, Michael Sheen solidifies his status as this generation's Laurence Olivier.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  10-05-2009  |  Reviews

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