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Parents With Problemsnew

An impeccable cast creates characters you won't soon forget in Roman Polanski's 'Carnage'
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  01-13-2012  |  Reviews

Characters can't leave the room in Polanski's latest, Carnagenew

For God's sake, why don't the Cowans just leave? The answer lies in the fact that, for his whole career, Roman Polanski has been interested in domestic interiors and how they take hold of his characters.
INDY Week  |  Nathan Gelgud  |  01-11-2012  |  Reviews

Carnage is Roman Polanski’s real-time brawl between flawed parentsnew

Roman Polanski's film is the real-time encounter between two sets of parents — the bordering-on-mediocrity Penelope (Jodie Foster) and Michael (John C. Reilly) Longstreet and the obviously wealthier Nancy (Kate Winslet) and Alan (Christoph Waltz) Cowan — following a scuffle between their sons.
Charleston City Paper  |  Susan Cohen  |  01-11-2012  |  Reviews

Polanski Takes on a Spy Mystery in 'The Ghost Writer'new

There've been quite a few movies made in the last few years about the war on terror and the excesses of the Bush administration, but Roman Polanski's The Ghost Writer is the first to turn that backdrop into a spook story whodunit.
Arkansas Times  |  Matthew Reed  |  03-25-2010  |  Reviews

Invisible Ink: Polanski's Political Thriller Evaporates

It's a big deal when Martin Scorsese and Roman Polanski both release mystery thrillers in the same week. Coincidentally, Shutter Island and The Ghost Writer are mutually set on islands and both begin with the arrival of a boat coming directly into the frame.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  02-15-2010  |  Reviews

Roman Polanski Finally Gets His Due in This Penetrating Documentarynew

Polanski, in life, has been as fascinatingly enigmatic as his films, with a personal back-story capable of trumping even his most bizarre fictions, and now it's all dredged up in Marina Zenovich’s HBO documentary.
New York Press  |  Felicia Feaster  |  07-10-2008  |  TV

Let's Twist Againnew

Some may doubt the need to once more bring Dickens's tale to the screen, but Polanski's deft adaptation proves that there's still life in that well-worn story of a boy who beats the odds.
Austin Chronicle  |  Steve Davis  |  10-06-2005  |  Reviews

Gruel Intentionsnew

Well, he's got the dinginess down. In Roman Polanski's interpretation of Dickens' Oliver Twist, the London streets see hungry, unwashed masses taunted by nearby reminders of unattainable solvency.
Orlando Weekly  |  Steve Schneider  |  09-30-2005  |  Reviews

The Plight of Childrennew

Roman Polanski offers a flawed but harrowing, empathetic view of the world seen through the eyes of its most powerless and invisible citizens. Oliver Twist's salvation comes at a great cost.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  09-29-2005  |  Reviews

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