AltWeeklies Wire

'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

'How to Lose Friends' is an American Film with a British Sensibilitynew

Working from British journalist Toby Young's memoir, director Robert B. Weide layers good, broad, dry jokes onto the bones of a traditional Hollywood plot arc.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Jeffrey M. Anderson  |  10-03-2008  |  Reviews

'Appaloos' is Nothing if Not Laid-Back -- Really Laid-Backnew

The themes throughout are familiar: the bonds between men, the desire for domesticity in the arms of a good woman versus the desire to remain free, most of all the challenge of establishing justice in places where the rule of law is more hope than hard fact. Too bad Harris is content to casually put these ideas on display rather than to put them through their paces.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  T.R. Witcher  |  10-03-2008  |  Reviews

Michael Moore's 'Slacker Uprising' is Worth the Pricenew

Had it been released theatrically, Slacker Uprising would have certainly been a critical and commercial flop. It lacks both the power and the controversy that made his normal, topic-based films successful.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Emiliano Garcia-Sarnoff  |  10-03-2008  |  Reviews

'A Thousand Years of Good Prayers': Bother Figurenew

A universe of regret, loneliness, and unease can exist between two family members sitting at a dinner table—especially when one of those people is visiting from a foreign country, experiencing his daughter’s adopted home for the first time.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

'Religulous' and 'Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist': He of Little Faithnew

Bill Maher vents some righteous anger at religion in his new documentary.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

'Ballast': An African-American Indie Film Fantasy Made for White Liberalsnew

Director-writer Lance Hammer shows a black Mississippi family torn apart by a double suicide attempt, drugs and alienation. But you have to see through these ludicrous black phantoms to the actual white middle-class fantasies at the film's core.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

The Gospel According to Bill Mahernew

A documentary hoax readymade for the bitter barroom politico.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

'Blindness' is Just Apocalypse Pornnew

Who'd guess that Miracle at St. Anna wasn't the worst film of the week? That honor goes to Fernando Meirelles' Blindness.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

Jonathan Demme Succeeds with Anne Hathaway in His Family-Chaos Filmnew

Avoiding the hip nihilism of repugnant family dramas like Margot at the Wedding and Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, Demme offers compassion.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

Sensory Overload: 'Blindness' Can be Hard to Watchnew

Don't let its uplifting previews lull you: Every moment of triumph and joy in Blindness has to be earned from a film that may rank among the darkest in cinema.
Arkansas Times  |  Sam Eifling  |  10-02-2008  |  Reviews

'Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist' Hits All the Right Notesnew

Nick & Norah's playlist may not be infinite, but it creates such good vibrations that it's definitely transcendent.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  10-01-2008  |  Reviews

Nick and Norah's Adventures Get Tiringnew

The characters crisscross Manhattan through adventures and emotional highs and lows — including a string of celebrity cameos and a rather creative sexual encounter in a recording studio — that rightly leaves audiences feeling just as worn out by the time the sun finally rises.
San Antonio Current  |  Cole Haddon  |  10-01-2008  |  Reviews

'Blindness': Fade to Whitenew

Blindness, a screen adaptation of Portuguese author Jose Saramago's novel, explores the probable effects of a widespread and incurable epidemic in the present day, though the storyline's most far-fetched aspects suggest the film is really an obtuse metaphor never fully elaborated.
San Antonio Current  |  Jeremy Martin  |  10-01-2008  |  Reviews

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