AltWeeklies Wire

Midlife Crisis Turns Film Partly Cloudynew

Frequently running to the crowd-pleasing Hollywood formula, the director and the screenwriter have ambitions to make the character's midlife crisis into a pointed statement about the hollowness of American values. The film seldom proves as profound as it thinks it is, but you appreciate its attempt to be serious.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Asian Directors Join Forces For Filmnew

In a singular example of transnational artistic cooperation, cult filmmakers from Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan come together with the shared goal of messing with their audience's heads and turning their stomachs.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Film An Uneven But Rich Tapestrynew

Though Nine Lives' intent is not always clear and certain vignettes yield fewer rewards than others, the film ends on a transcendent high note, and gives a sense that in a reckoning of our own mortality and the short, precious time we have here, we are all truly connected.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  10-27-2005  |  Reviews

Did an Atlanta Serial Killer Murder 20 Women a Century Ago?new

In 1911 and 1912, 20 black and mixed-race women showed up dead. They had been killed -- some almost decapitated -- by an unknown. Was it a serial killer at work or a copycat?
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Steve Fennessy  |  10-27-2005  |  Crime & Justice

Is Peace Petween Palestinians and Israelis Any Closer?new

Israelis and Palestinians are no closer to a comprehensive peace settlement today than they were two-and-a-half years ago when President Bush introduced the so-called "Road Map to Peace."
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Andisheh Nouraee  |  10-27-2005  |  Commentary

She Was a Decent Whorenew

At a restaurant where everybody was fucking everybody, it was a surprise to find out that Becky, the quiet one, was fucking the boss.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Hollis Gillespie  |  10-27-2005  |  Comedy

Currying Favor in Paradisenew

While vacationing on an island, the trick was finding a recipe that would be flexible and forgiving, one that would allow the cook to be playful with local fish without making the evening a major production.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Kim O'Donnel  |  10-27-2005  |  Food+Drink

Where Do We Sign Up for Drug Therapy?new

Although the phrase "wine therapy" rings of a Dr. Phil book gone fruity, alcohol -- as we all know too well -- allows people a release from the day's tensions. And wine provides an infinite topic of conversation, providing fodder for bonding.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Taylor Eason  |  10-27-2005  |  Food+Drink

Eden Moore Sees Dead Peoplenew

If you're looking for a Stephen King-style, piss-your-pants fright fest, Four and Twenty Blackbirds will disappoint. Priest is at times overly clinical, and many of the main character's ghosts hold no more terror than a kiss from your stinky Aunt Edna.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  10-27-2005  |  Fiction

When Will Leaders Learn More Highways Aren't the Answer?new

A man who may become Georgia's next lieutenant governor thinks we ought to keep widening roads. "As long as Georgians have a love affair with their vehicles, we've got to widen the roads," Republican Casey Cagle said at a recent candidate forum.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Doug Monroe  |  10-27-2005  |  Commentary

Losing a 'Voice'new

Here's why regulators should block the merger of the nation's two largest alternative weekly chains, Village Voice Media and New Times.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Tim Redmond  |  10-26-2005  |  Media

Cop Out

While helping out after Hurricane Katrina, New Mexico police allege they witnessed numerous and shocking incidents of police abuse committed by members of the Baton Rouge Police Department.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Dan Frosch  |  10-26-2005  |  Crime & Justice

Guitar Anti-Heronew

Marc Ribot strings tangled links between punk and everything else.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Lee Gardner  |  10-26-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

He’s Serlarious

Al Franken, known for being both hilarious and serious, says he has bigger fish to fry in his new book: the Bush administration and Congress.
The Inlander  |  Ted S. McGregor Jr.  |  10-26-2005  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

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