AltWeeklies Wire

Man's Best Co-Star

This film is quick-moving and riveting, but you may as well tune out when the movie starts cutting back and forth between the humans, safely back in America, and the dogs, left to fend for themselves in increasingly perilous conditions.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  02-17-2006  |  Reviews

What In Carnation?

By shaking the hornet's nest of American race relations, von Trier has guaranteed that at least some viewers will find Manderlay injurious.
Washington City Paper  |  Mark Jenkins  |  02-17-2006  |  Reviews

Fables of the Deconstruction

The point of the original novel is never to get to the point, which this movie respects as best it can.
Washington City Paper  |  Mark Jenkins  |  02-17-2006  |  Reviews

Wait for the Fire Next Timenew

This Richard Price story about simmering racial tension that boils over during the course of a police investigation is scattershot and erratic.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

It's a Dog's Worldnew

We smell penguins, even though Eight Below's animals are really a pack of sled dogs in a dandy new man-and-dog movie.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

Invitation to the Dancenew

This is a majestic movie about a once celebrated ballet company that changed the face of modern dance.
Austin Chronicle  |  Kimberley Jones  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

Bonfire of Inanitiesnew

Gotta hand it to Julianne Moore -- she's turned in a piece of overacting even the Oscars would be embarrassed to honor.
Orlando Weekly  |  Steven Schneider  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

'Me Decade' Hedonismnew

Joseph F. Lovett's unimaginatively filmed talkathon fails to find meaning in the sexual cornucopia that was Manhattan.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

Unplugging the War Machinenew

Why We Fight shows clear merit in these convoluted, double-talking times, but thanks to the polarization of the American public, it's probably damned to preach to the choir.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

Racial Tensions Crashnew

In the spirit of social issue films of the 1970s, Freedomland addresses a hot contemporary topic but nearly fumbles it, as if dazzled by celebrity and a desire to oversimplify its story.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

Senior Momentsnew

Firewall and The Pink Panther both star leading men who are arguably too old to be doing what they're doing -- cultural icons whose sell-by date passed a while ago.
New York Press  |  Matt Zoller Seitz  |  02-16-2006  |  Reviews

Q&Anew

Jarecki's powerful documentary revisits Ike's admonitions.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Anders Wright  |  02-15-2006  |  Reviews

Pink With Promisenew

The new Panther is mediocre, but far better than other post-Peter Sellers efforts.
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  02-15-2006  |  Reviews

Endearing Formulanew

Except for its Sapphic twist, Imagine Me and You is a by-the-book romantic comedy.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  02-15-2006  |  Reviews

A Stalk to Remembernew

A family unwillingly has someone to watch over them in this psychological thriller.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Ian Grey  |  02-15-2006  |  Reviews

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