AltWeeklies Wire

Publish and Perishnew

The writer will do anything to get his book. The film shows at what a profound moral cost.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  10-20-2005  |  Reviews

Actress Gets Down and Dirtynew

The film begins on a downbeat note and only spirals deeper into the muck, though it's engrossing, socially relevant mud-boggling all the way.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  10-20-2005  |  Reviews

Sprawling Film Navigates Two Livesnew

The director seems determined to squeeze every life lesson, every artistic idea he's ever had into his rich, sprawling melodrama, which lasts two-and-a-half hours but doesn't dawdle for a second.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  10-20-2005  |  Reviews

Thriller Genre Conventions Mar Film's Deeper Meaningnew

Stay suggests the director's desire to interweave the moral and psychological complexities of an art film with some of the flash of an old-fashioned bone-chiller.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  10-20-2005  |  Reviews

Outside-the-Box Biopic Goes Deepnew

This director's second film is a morally complex and incisive look at not only the literary significance of In Cold Blood, but a penetrating observation of the devil's pact made between writers and their subjects.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  10-20-2005  |  Reviews

Have Gun, Will Unravelnew

The story developed by cinema auteur Lars von Trier makes no sense and depends upon people acting based on some crazed Dane's mental stereotype of Americans.
Dallas Observer  |  Luke Y. Thompson  |  10-19-2005  |  Reviews

Truth Syrupnew

The directorial debut of screenwriter Julian Fellowes, who won an Oscar for his work on the screenplay for Gosford Park, is about how lies beget lies and how a seemingly perfect life can unravel in the blink of an eye.
Dallas Observer  |  Jean Oppenheimer  |  10-19-2005  |  Reviews

Past Primenew

This movie should have been about something more than an older woman digging on a younger man, much to the disapproval of the younger man's mom.
Miami New Times  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  10-18-2005  |  Reviews

Green Street Hooligans

It's understandable that Elijah Wood should want to atone for being a hobbit.
Washington City Paper  |  Louis Bayard  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

The War Within

American cinema has enjoyed a long love affair with the antihero, but the protagonist of The War Within may just take the cake.
Washington City Paper  |  Jason Powell  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till

The horrific death of 14-year-old Emmett Till is not an untold story -- at least not as presented by Keith A. Beauchamp's vivid documentary.
Washington City Paper  |  Mark Jenkins  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

The Singing Defective

This is Hollywood's sorta-true version of Domino Harvey's story of a model turned bounty-hunter.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

The Singing Defective

In this film, the ideal '50s housewife goes beyond rearing her children and keeping a spotless home. She instantly defuses her spouse's alcoholic rages, with a quip, a bright smile, or, when things got especially tense, maybe a flung bowl of Jell-O.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

Solitary Refinement

Amid a glut of onscreen romances that contain between 90 and 99 percent schtick, Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown mercifully varies the boy-meets-girl formula. Yet Crowe's latest homage to Crowe is overstuffed and blunt.
Washington City Paper  |  Mark Jenkins  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

Eat Your Veggiesnew

Wallace & Grommit's feature-length debut is sure to please adults and kiddies.
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  10-14-2005  |  Reviews

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