AltWeeklies Wire

Three the Horror Waynew

This lush and horrific anthology film from three of the finest craftsmen working today -- Fruit Chan, Chan-wook Park, and Takashi Miike -- is an instantly memorable and squirm-inducing assemblage.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Saw Bucksnew

With nary a decent, connective character in sight, this nasty sequel quickly becomes little more than a strenuous battle for survival among the already damned.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

The Legend of Zorro

The film falls flat in its seriously siesta-inducing pace.
Washington City Paper  |  Mario Correa  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Fast-Forwarding Through Life

Writer-director Ben Younger seems to think that merely showing Rafi (Uma Thurman) and David (Bryan Greenberg) tonguing each other after each sparkless date is enough to make the audience believe in their romance.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Lost in Interpretation

Shopgirl, based on the novella by Steve Martin, will inevitably be viewed as Martin's Lost in Translation. But Martin, it turns out, is no Bill Murray.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Evocation of Madness

An immaculately art-directed plunge into bewilderment, Stay begins with a disorienting car crash that recalls the opening of Krzysztof Kieslowski’s Blue.
Washington City Paper  |  Mark Jenkins  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Unreal World

This film about a journalist's investigation of two former song-and-joke partners would have been more convincing with actors who played both sides of their characters.
Washington City Paper  |  Mark Jenkins  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Gentleman's Seasnew

A lot of us have long thought that Jeff Daniels was an innocuous onscreen presence, and now it's time to take it all back.
Orlando Weekly  |  Steve Schneider  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Spill the Weinsteinnew

My Big Fat Independent Movie is a pleasant surprise, if only because a handful of seemingly credible reports had indicated the film was the Antichrist.
Orlando Weekly  |  Steve Schneider  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Tru Colorsnew

With the concepts of artistic representation and exploitation becoming hopelessly blurred, the need for Capote couldn't be more compelling.
Orlando Weekly  |  Steve Schneider  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Kidnappednew

This is the story of seven strangers picked to live in a house … but only for a few hours, thanks to inhaled poison that's rotting their bodies from the inside.
Orlando Weekly  |  Steve Schneider  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Cut Off at the Legs

A clever/stupid horror movie gets a perfectly clever/stupid sequel.
Columbus Alive  |  J. Caleb Mozzocco  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Z-Movie

As far as this belated Zorro sequel is concerned, better never than late.
Columbus Alive  |  Melissa Starker  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Forecast: Gloomy

Gore Verbinski and Nicolas Cage suffer a mid-film crisis.
Columbus Alive  |  Melissa Starker  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Gold Minersnew

A fictionalized account of the 1984 court case that revolutionized sexual harassment law and exposed the misogyny of Minnesota’s mining industry, this must-see drama is marked by understated, focused direction and assured performances.
Jackson Free Press  |  Paul Dearing  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

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