AltWeeklies Wire
'The Band's Visit' & 'City of Men': Group Dreamsnew
Sticking together is easier said than done in these two films.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
02-28-2008 |
Reviews
'The Signal' Sends a Bloody, Dystopian Messagenew
Among many ridiculous scenes, the one in which someone literally jump-starts and interrogates a decapitated head summarily erases any chance you'll take the script's weak stab at social commentary -- i.e., technology is destroying our minds -- seriously.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
02-21-2008 |
Reviews
'Charlie Bartlett' & 'Honeydripper': Cure of Dutynew
The heroes of two new films go hunting for quick fixes.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
02-21-2008 |
Reviews
Vaughn & Gamesnew
Don't judge Vince Vaughn's Wild West Comedy Show by its title—the documentary isn't 100 minutes of Fred Claus running his mouth.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
02-08-2008 |
Reviews
What Happened to Our Show?new
For four seasons The Wire reinvented the crime drama. Now the viewer's the victim.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Athitakis |
02-01-2008 |
TV
Choice Lessonsnew
In 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days, a young woman is pregnant, but she can’t go searching for a solution in the Penny Saver. There are no supportive parents, cute singalongs, or OMG! banter between her and her best friend.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
02-01-2008 |
Reviews
'How She Move': Dancing is Overshadowed by Platitudesnew
The story never finds its groove, with underdeveloped characters and relationships and an arc that doesn't exactly surprise. Worse, the dancing, though athletic, isn't always that impressive, nearly ensuring that a better title would have been How She Tank.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
01-24-2008 |
Reviews
Tags: How She Move, Ian Iqbal Rashid
'Mad Money' and '27 Dresses': Ladies' Worstnew
These female leads are stuck in second-rate roles.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
01-17-2008 |
Reviews
Age Against the Machinenew
Time is the enemy in Youth Without Youth and The Bucket List.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
01-10-2008 |
Reviews
'The Orphanage': The Parent Trapnew
The Orphanage's scares aren't cheap, and with an exception or two, you probably won't even jump at its twists. Instead, its capacity to frighten lurks in its atmosphere.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
01-03-2008 |
Reviews
Tags: Juan Antonio Bayona, The Orphanage
Big Talknew
The ever-ingratiating Denzel Washington both stars and directs this feel-bad-then-good fable, based on the mid-'30s triumphs of the debate team from all-black Wiley College. Also reviewed: The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
12-27-2007 |
Reviews
A Journal of the Vague Yearnew
Shaky morals and muddled heroes defined 2007's best movies.
Washington City Paper |
Tricia Olszewski |
12-27-2007 |
Movies
All Queasy on the Eastern Frontnew
War is hell, and 2007's war movies weren't much better.
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
12-27-2007 |
Movies
Crease is the Wordnew
Ken Scott's screenplay was reportedly fact-checked by Richard himself before he died in 2000 and cinematographer Pierre Gill's hockey sequences faithfully depict the game play, equipment, and atmosphere of late-'40s and early-'50s hockey. In that sense, it's more historical film than drama.
Washington City Paper |
Matthew Borlik |
12-13-2007 |
Reviews
Love in the Time of Call Centersnew
Outsourced screened at this year's DC Labor Filmfest under the guise of a globalization parable, yet no inconvenient truths about the exportation of American jobs are revealed in the film, which is actually a sweet-natured, cross-cultural romantic
Washington City Paper |
Mark Jenkins |
12-13-2007 |
Reviews
Tags: John Jeffcoat, Outsourced