AltWeeklies Wire

Rumer Willis Gets Her Geek on in 'The House Bunny'new

If there's a difference between Willis—the daughter of Demi Moore and Bruce Willis—and other second-generation actors, it’s that she could relate to the geeky character she plays in the movie The House Bunny more than the glamorous world from which she hails.
The Georgia Straight  |  Ian Caddell  |  08-18-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Javier Bardem Finds the Real in 'Vicky Cristina Barcelona' Rolenew

When Woody Allen was writing the part of a Spaniard who seduces two American tourists, he had Bardem in mind.
The Georgia Straight  |  Ian Caddell  |  08-18-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Tropic Thunder' and 'Henry Poole Is Here': Mock and Loadnew

Tropic Thunder is a comedic beast that's nearly impossible to dissect, while Henry Poole is Here is a heavy-handed flick about an atheist who has faith forced upon him.
Washington City Paper  |  Tricia Olszewski  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

Directed by Proxy: Fred Durst Gives Hollywood a Limp

Directed by Fred Durst (of the band “Limp Bizkit”), “The Longshots” is a cookie-cutter feel-good kid’s movie that seems like it was made by some faulty gadget stuck on auto-pilot.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

Why Sexual and Character Ambiguity Don't Mix in 'A Girl Cut in Two'new

What makes Claude Chabrol's A Girl Cut in Two (2007) so trying is not that it's unsure of what it wants to be, but rather that it refuses to decide.
New York Press  |  Simon Abrams  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

The New Star Wars Film Would have Made a Better Video Gamenew

The animation in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Dave Filoni's completely unnecessary but somewhat entertaining addition to the ever-growing Star Wars prequel franchise, looks perfect. Too perfect.
New York Press  |  Simon Abrams  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

A Daredevil's World Trade Center Tightrope Walk was Made for the Moviesnew

As James Marsh's documentary Man on Wire tells it, a mischievous French teenager was sitting in a dentist's office in 1968 when a magazine image caught his eye. It was a sketch of two gleaming towers, under construction, piercing the clouds above lower Manhattan.
Nashville Scene  |  Jim Ridley  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

If Only 'Tropic Thunder' Were as Naughty as the P.C. Protesters Complainnew

Tropic Thunder arrives in theaters hyped, virally marketed and decreed by no less an authority than The New York Times as the naughtiest little studio release of the summer-movie season.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

Javier Makes Whoopee With Scarlett, Rebecca and Penelopenew

Leave it to Woody Allen to make a romantic comedy in which all the major players end up either single, homicidal or trapped in safe, boring marriages, and where the closest thing to a blissful relationship is a short-lived ménage à trois.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

Woody Allen's European Vacation: 'Vicky Cristina Barcelona'new

He lived the young man's dream in Spain; next, he directs Larry David in NYC and Puccini for L.A. Opera.
L.A. Weekly  |  Scott Foundas  |  08-18-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Searching for the Ghosts of Bunker Hill's Native American Pastnew

Resuscitated 1961 documentary recalls stark lives of L.A.'s urban Indians.
L.A. Weekly  |  Matthew Fleischer  |  08-18-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Frozen River' Manages to Play Economic Hardship for Suspensenew

If Frozen River is accurate in portraying how the other half lives, its most unpleasant truth may be that the other half often divides again, the top quarter exploiting the bottom quarter.
Chicago Reader  |  J.R. Jones  |  08-18-2008  |  Reviews

Cinematic Slaughternew

Tropic Thunder delightfully features big stars giving the middle finger to their Hollywood bosses.
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  08-15-2008  |  Reviews

Ban Clones!new

The new Star Wars is great if you enjoy violence, inconsistency and meaninglessness.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  08-15-2008  |  Reviews

'Vicky Cristina Barcelona' is an Invigorating Trip Abroadnew

The fourth (and apparently final) film in what might be called Woody Allen's European period, this is the closest to what fans of his classic relationship comedies keep hoping the writer-director will produce again. It's a light, entertaining and romantic movie without the strained zaniness of 2006's Scoop, filled with mild humor, some wonderfully drawn characters and a lovely Spanish setting.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Josh Bell  |  08-15-2008  |  Reviews

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