AltWeeklies Wire

In Cold Bloodnew

David Cronenberg defines the history of violence, though with such cold-blooded efficiency and cryptic detachment, his film may evoke more admiration than pleasure.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  09-22-2005  |  Reviews

Film Loses Something in Translation from Stage to Screennew

Ideas treated so passionately in David Auburn's play -- like the thin line separating madness and genius, for instance -- are hardly given the focus they deserve in John Madden's truncated Proof.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  09-22-2005  |  Reviews

Thin Movie Has Some Lovely Bonesnew

Tim Burton's loose reenactment of a Russian folk tale seems a bit blase about mortality, treating it as no more menacing than an uninvited party guest.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-22-2005  |  Reviews

Dead Puppets Make Better Loversnew

Tim Burton knows how to tickle eyeballs with rich and playful visuals, but he can't carry an innovative plot to save his life.
Dig Boston  |  Chris Braiotta  |  09-21-2005  |  Reviews

Good Shotnew

The story of a Ukrainian emigre in New York's violent Little Odessa is three-quarters of a great film, weakened by its moralizing.
Dallas Observer  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  09-20-2005  |  Reviews

Sundance Into the Sunsetnew

An Unfinished Life never transcends its simple storyline to charter original ground, but it is the kind of movie you cannot fault too terribly much, primarily because its heart seems to be in the right place.
Austin Chronicle  |  Steve Davis  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Comedy as Funeral Dirgenew

Less a movie than a longform, live-action Celebrity Death Match between its leads, this wheezing comedy may herald the death knell of the interracial buddy-cop farce.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marrit Ingman  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

The Way of the Gunnew

Gattaca writer-director Andrew Niccol shines his usual cynicism on the subject of gunrunning in his new film, a strange amalgam of compelling visuals and fascinating vocational details forged with deep moral ambivalence and often hollow didacticism.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Amour, Interruptednew

A languorous, bittersweet take on Scenes From a Marriage comes from French auteur Francois Ozon.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Satan's Little Helpernew

This yawner fails to amount to much more than an overlong exercise in Jesuit Theosophy 101, played against the backdrop of Law & Order.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Play It Again, Jacquesnew

A character study of a young man torn between disparate career paths as either a mob enforcer for or a virtuoso pianist, this French adaptation of the American film Fingers adds little to original.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Nice Guys Finish ...new

Director Michael Showalter misses a terrific opportunity to pull back the curtain on "the other guy" -- and ends up making a pretty good case for why the sad sack never gets the girl.
Austin Chronicle  |  Kimberley Jones  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Ghost Worldnew

This romantic comedy about a winsome, charming ghost and the man who loves her sidesteps abundant potential clichés through sheer dint of the acting skills on display.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Motion Slickness

The fanciful world of Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride doesn’t need much story.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  09-16-2005  |  Reviews

Beautifully Shallownew

2046 is gorgeous, but its story is nearly nonexistent.
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  09-15-2005  |  Reviews

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