AltWeeklies Wire

Celebrating 'Hancock,' Peter Berg's Latest Genre Mashupnew

Anticipation runs high for further blackening of Batman's soul in The Dark Knight, but the Fourth of July weekend belongs to Hancock, a handsomely haywire comic-tragic concoction that flies high, sideways, off course and straight up in the air.
Chicago Newcity  |  Ray Pride  |  07-02-2008  |  Reviews

'Gonzo' Looks into the Minds of Hunter S. Thompsonnew

Gibney says that he was drawn to his latest subject largely because of that persona. "He was a guy who didn't play by the rules, and it seems like we need a guy like that around now, when the rules are being used against us by people in power."
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Cheryl Eddy  |  07-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Hancock' is no 'Men in Black,' but It Still Teems with Destruction, Funninessnew

It's no Men in Black, but still teems with destruction, funniness
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Amber Humphrey  |  07-02-2008  |  Reviews

Young Novelists Navigate Ambition and Their 20s in Coming-of-Age Flick, 'Reprise'new

Although it has its moments, for the most part it is a shopworn story of young, well-off people who confuse celebrity with greatness and suffering with an unsatisfactory job.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Martin L. Johnson  |  07-01-2008  |  Reviews

German Director Matthias Glasner Crafts a Remarkably Human Examination of Fear and Desirenew

While its first 20 minutes, which include a lengthy, brutal rape scene, suggest leanings toward artsploitation, the rest of the movie, released straight to DVD this week, is sober and completely uninterested in shock value.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Steve Erickson  |  07-01-2008  |  Reviews

Inaugural Philadelphia Independent Film Festival Programs Honest-to-goodness Indie Filmsnew

Coming as it does in between April's behemoth Philadelphia Film Festival and July's ever-expanding Philadelphia International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, the Independent Film Fest has to be looked at as David next to a pair of well-established Goliaths.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Shaun Brady  |  07-01-2008  |  Movies

Queers Get Pressured to Support Bad Moviesnew

Why can’t a queer fest program decent features?
NOW Magazine  |  Susan G. Cole  |  06-30-2008  |  Movies

Tragic Punk Icons The Gits are Recaptured in a Long-awaited Filmnew

Following a series of eBay purchases, a tentative friendship sprung up between Gits drummer Steve Moriarty and aspiring producer Jessica Bender and budding director Kerri O'Kane, who shared an obsession with the Seattle band and their late singer, Mia Zapata.
Seattle Weekly  |  Hannah Levin  |  06-30-2008  |  Movies

Steve Carell is an Unlikely Spy in 'Get Smart'new

The movie is being billed as an action comedy, but this is one of those cases where the action works against the comedy, crushes it in its big clumsy fingers.
Isthmus  |  Kent Williams  |  06-30-2008  |  Reviews

'Hancock' Dive Bombs

Hancock attempts a high degree of difficulty, but hits the pool flat.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

Spike Lee versus Clint Eastwoodnew

Lee was off base in giving the impression that Eastwood's body of work is racist. That is simply not the case. Lee was correct, however, in pointing out that Eastwood's omission in Flags of Our Fathers only reinforces the idea that black contributions to America's struggle in World War II were minimal.
Shepherd Express  |  Richard G. Carter  |  06-27-2008  |  Movies

'Gunnin' for That #1 Spot' is Like a Better 'Hoop Dreams'new

As Nathaniel Hörnblowér, he's directed a gazillion Beastie Boys videos, but here, Adam Yauch profiles nine high school kids (including Lake Oswego's Kevin Love and Medford's Kyle Singler) as they gear up to play in the annual "Elite 24" basketball game at Harlem's Rucker Park.
The Portland Mercury  |  Erik Henriksen  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

Why 'Wall-E' is Fucking Phenomenalnew

Wall-E won't only be one of the best films of the year, but may become one of the best science-fiction films ever made.
The Portland Mercury  |  Erik Henriksen  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

'A Bend in the River' Looks at a Nashville Prison Rehab Programnew

While it's neither a wallow in sensational cellblock horrors nor a Scared Straight-style sock in the gut, A Bend in the River offers quiet, solemn and persuasive evidence that prison is the last place on earth anyone wants to end up.
Nashville Scene  |  Jim Ridley  |  06-27-2008  |  Movies

'Mongol' Paints a Historically Hazy but Kick-ass Picture of Genghis Khannew

Here's a brawny old-school epic to make the CGI tumult of 300, Alexander and Troy look like sissy-boy slap parties.
Nashville Scene  |  Jim Ridley  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

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