AltWeeklies Wire

Ghost Worldnew

Sunshine noirs The Black Dahlia and The Decay of Fiction go in search of Hollywood's heart of darkness.
The Village Voice  |  J. Hoberman  |  09-13-2006  |  Reviews

Harlin Phones It In

Darkly lit blue-tinted fog accompanies nearly every scene as a group of teenage descendants of witches, called the Sons of Ipswich, turn their Massachusetts prep school into a chamber of minor horrors.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

It Warms Hearts

This was Christopher Reeve's final film project, and the simple story of a little boy who risks everything to restore order to his family's depression-era existence is a well tempered and heartwarming animated children's movie.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Weak Story, Strong Martial Arts

Muay-Thai martial arts phenomenon Tony Jaa follows up his impressive debut with an action-packed, if less than sophisticated, story line.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Navel-Gazing Tedium

Navel-gazing director Michel Gondry wears his developmentally arrested heart on his sleeve in the most self-indulgent movie of 2006.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Dick Skewers the MPAA

Even if you've never given a second thought to who bestows ratings on movies or how those ranks are given, Dick's enlightening documentary will catch you up in its infectious spin of curiosity.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

French Policier is Alive and Well

The rarely done genre of the French policier is alive and well in director Beauvois' dynamic movie about a young police academy graduate who gives up his life in a small province to work in Paris.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Grand Cayman Island Corruption

Flowers loses track of his own narrative puzzle that includes a story about a shady but rich Floridian with an 18-year-old daughter escaping to Grand Cayman from the feds who want to arrest him.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

1940 Novel Gets a 1938 Setting

Charles Sturridge adapts this heart-warming story with strict attention to its modest emotional underpinnings of family, devotion, and a beautiful collie.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Insightful and Penetrating Drama

This independent jewel from writer/director Laurie Collyer showcases the ever-dependable Maggie Gyllenhaal in her first leading role since Secretary.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

L. A. Inconsequential

The Black Dahlia turns a lurid tale into a film of glossy surfaces.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Dead-On Visionnew

Mike Judge's comedy is the story of a man who awakes 500 years in the future to find a society so dumbed-down that he instantly becomes the smartest person alive.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

An Ultimate Lack of Viewpointnew

Although Hollywoodland stokes the dying embers of uncertainty regarding the 1959 death of George Reeves, TV's Superman, it nevertheless seems that the result should be more provocative and scandalous.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

100-Proof Bukowskinew

Charles Bukowski's Henry Chinaski is back, played by Matt Dillon in a low-key, gorgeously beery performance.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

Few Gaspsnew

Belgian horror romp Calvaire is so dead-set on being disturbing that it ends up tripping over its own hobbled feet.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-11-2006  |  Reviews

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