AltWeeklies Wire

'The Kingdom' Has Powernew

Surprisingly, the best of this year's lot of war movies thus far is The Kingdom, an action movie with characters filled by Hollywood central casting.
INDY Week  |  Neil Morris  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'War/Dance' Tells a Poignant Talenew

The winner of the 2007 Sundance award for documentary direction, War/Dance is a powerful film about the plight of children in war-ravaged northern Uganda, where hundreds of thousands of children have been kidnapped or orphaned in a vicious conflict.
Orlando Weekly  |  Jeffrey C. Billman  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'View From a Grain of Sand' is Unapologeticnew

Weaving together the stories of three Afghan women (a doctor, a teacher and a social activist) who have sought refuge from war, political conflict and an oppressive regime, the film intermittently infuses the country’s history under three distinct leaders.
Orlando Weekly  |  Deanna Sheffield  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Strange Culture' Desconstructs Documentary Formnew

Lynn Hershman Leeson deconstructs the documentary form in Strange Culture, the Kafka-esque saga of Steve Kurtz, an artist whose work concerns biotechnology and GMO foods.
Orlando Weekly  |  Jessica Bryce Young  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Prince of Peace — God of War' Asks Why Christians Support Warnew

While it may seem a distant, simple -- even annoying -- feast of hypothetical subject matter, the underlying question may be an open door into the religious right's base politics. Have they skipped Jesus and leapt straight to the Crusades?
Orlando Weekly  |  Billy Manes  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Postcards From Tora Bora' Examines Kabul Then and Nownew

Kabul is a starkly different city than the flourishing, cosmopolitan center it once was. Osman’s film mixes childish cartoons with man-on-the-street footage to powerful effect.
Orlando Weekly  |  Bob Whitby  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'New Urban Cowboy' Explores New Pedestrianismnew

New Urban Cowboy documents Michael Arth's valiant efforts and big dreams for the "neighborhood of the future" and provides a model not just of new developments, but new developers.
Orlando Weekly  |  Ian Monroe  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Lillie & Leander: A Legacy of Violence' Explores Southern Paranoianew

What starts out looking like yet another story of a black man wronged by the racist powers-that-be in the early 20th-century Florida Panhandle emerges in the hands of director Jeffrey Morgan as a documentary that is as shocking as it is emotionally engaging.
Orlando Weekly  |  Jason Ferguson  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'The Great Match' Presents a Nonpatronizing One-World Themenew

The Great Match is about the attempts of three far-flung groups to watch the the final match of the 2002 World Cup, going through motions both comical and extreme in their struggle to see the game.
Orlando Weekly  |  Jason Ferguson  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Election Day' Eschews the Conspiratorial for the Obviousnew

Katy Chevigny's enlightening documentary eschews the pretensions of voter-fraud overstatement in favor of a real-time portrait of actual poll-station shenanigans.
Orlando Weekly  |  Billy Manes  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Ballad' Shows the Dark Side of Supporting the Troopsnew

The Ballad of Esequiel Hernandez documents the 1997 murder on the banks of the Rio Grande of a 17-year-old high-schooler, Esequiel Hernandez, who was shot by four undercover Marines while walking the family goats near his home in Redford, Texas.
Orlando Weekly  |  Lindy T. Shepherd  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'The Kingdom': The Middle East for Dummiesnew

The film's main fault lies in its didactic pretensions, and in wanting to be something more than it's capable of being -- at heart, The Kingdom is really just a standard little TV action show for the big screen, with decent actors and a hyperactive cameraman.
Dig Boston  |  David Wildman  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

Robert Benton Gives Us The Love Jittersnew

Feast of Love is a feel-good movie for the semi-literati; as such it may grate on those too sophisticated for its smooth ways and easy answers.
New York Press  |  Marsha McCreadie  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

Love and War in the New Releasesnew

2 Days in Paris, In the Valley of Elah, Feast of Love, The Kingdom, Interview, and Good Luck Chuck bring us intimacy and Iraq.
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Matt Brunson  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

'Vanaja': More than Masalanew

Written and directed by Rajnesh Domalpalli as his graduate thesis at Columbia University, Vanaja is an engaging and shocking look at class, gender roles and sexuality in rural India.
Orlando Weekly  |  Jason Ferguson  |  09-27-2007  |  Reviews

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