AltWeeklies Wire

Documentary Finds and Explores the Defiant Spirit of Female Artistsnew

The documentary film Who Does She Think She Is?, directed by Pamela Tanner Boll and Nancy Kennedy, follows five women as they balance the many facets of their lives and, although not without struggles, manage to do so quite successfully.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Hannah Sayle  |  02-12-2010  |  Reviews

The Safety of Objects: The Art of 'Summer Hours'new

Some undisclosed time after a celebratory birthday party at her posh but weather-beaten French country home, lively and elegant matriarch Hélène (Edith Scob) dies, leaving her eldest son Frédéric (Charles Berling) to divide the loot with his two siblings.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Addison Engelking  |  02-05-2010  |  Reviews

The Latest 'Bad Lieutenant' Isn't Good or Bad. It Just Isnew

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (why the "Port of Call" part? Who knows! Who cares!) is a conventional detective thriller in basic form, but the procedural elements are sometimes listless.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  01-22-2010  |  Reviews

Robert De Niro Settles Down in a Travelogue Family Dramanew

Everybody's Fine is sort of like a square version of the more lauded recent Jack Nicholson vehicle About Schmidt, and its squareness is the main reason I prefer it.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  12-07-2009  |  Reviews

'Every Little Step' Is a Life-Affirming Look at Performancenew

Every Little Step, the absorbing documentary about the 2006 revival of the Broadway hit A Chorus Line — in other words, a movie about the casting of a musical that's about actors auditioning for a musical — is a rabbit hole well worth tumbling down.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Addison Engelking  |  06-26-2009  |  Reviews

After 49 Years, Red West Gets His First Starring Role -- and It's a Doozynew

Though a relatively short, simple film, Goodbye Solo is rich with emotion, incident, color, and mystery. And this little indie hit has done wonders for Memphis native Red West: at 72, after 49 years in the business, he's become an overnight success.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  05-15-2009  |  Reviews

Craig Brewer Readies '$5 Cover', Adds New Projectnew

While Craig Brewer has been at the Sundance Film Festival this week promoting his upcoming Web series $5 Cover alongside a group of his Memphis collaborators, he's also added yet another potential project to his to-do list.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  01-23-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

'The Express' is Silly, Simplistic, and Absurdnew

Gary Fleder's film is an unspeakably twee and sanitized Ernie Davis biopic that transforms this tale of an athlete dying young into a work of groan-inducing campiness.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Addison Engelking  |  10-20-2008  |  Reviews

Filmmaker Robert Gordon Chronicles the Impact of Johnny Cashnew

Johnny Cash's America grew out of a politically tinged discussion between the documentary's directors, author Robert Gordon and producer/director Morgan Neville.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Davis  |  10-10-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Eagle Eye' is Like Hitchcock for Moronsnew

If you leave your brains with the ticket-taker, then there's a good chance you might enjoy Eagle Eye, the stripped-down, hyperactive new chase film executive-produced by Steven Spielberg.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Addison Engelking  |  10-03-2008  |  Reviews

Battle Fatigue Settles in on Spike Lee's WWII Epicnew

So why is his new film such an interminable, unfocused, ridiculous mess?
The Memphis Flyer  |  Addison Engelking  |  10-03-2008  |  Reviews

'Hounddog': Amorphous Southern Soupnew

Even before its premiere at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, Hounddog was known as "the Dakota Fanning rape movie." The film got a lot of notoriety but for more than a year, until this spring, couldn't get a distributor.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Greg Akers  |  09-19-2008  |  Reviews

'The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2': This One's for the Girlsnew

Just as Sex & the City scored big by providing an alternative to a summer of boycentric popcorn cinema, this reunion of four attractive, relatable TV-identified actresses tries to do the same for a younger and (hopefully) more innocent demographic.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  08-08-2008  |  Reviews

Filmmaker Craig Brewer's Latest Project Brings Reality TV (of a Sort) to Memphisnew

It's a Friday night at the New Daisy Theatre on Beale Street, the first night of shooting on $5 Cover, Brewer's new web-based MTV series about Memphis music.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  07-25-2008  |  Movies

'The Children of Huang Shi' Offers a Middling Historical Dramanew

The film is a "based on a true story" movie that feels about nine degrees removed from what probably really did happen -- and that within those degrees was probably a more interesting story.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Greg Akers  |  07-07-2008  |  Reviews

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