AltWeeklies Wire

Bob Teitel Brings His Moviemaking Success Home to the Old Neighborhoodnew

A late February rain melts the snow that blankets Humboldt Park. Gray and wet, yet bustling with pedestrians. It's the first day above freezing in weeks, and the neighborhood is starring in its first major motion picture, called, fittingly, Humboldt Park.
Chicago Newcity  |  Ed M. Koziarski  |  04-30-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Behind the Scenes of 'Saturday Night Live' with Comedy Writer Bryan Tuckernew

The unseen workings of SNL are controlled chaos, the result of painstaking detail and hours of writing and rewriting. For Tucker, the funny white kid from the Virginia suburbs with a knack for riffing on hip-hop culture, it's the pinnacle.
Style Weekly  |  Brent Baldwin  |  04-30-2008  |  TV

Errol Morris and the Aesthetics of Evidencenew

While the endlessly loquacious and deeply political director has made a film about Abu Ghraib and the secondary victims (those who were punished of low rank and those of higher rank who created the atmosphere where such violations were possible were not), he's more interested in dissecting the meaning of photography.
Chicago Newcity  |  Ray Pride  |  04-30-2008  |  Reviews

Filmmaker Eric Shiveley Talks About Music, Fame and Assless Chapsnew

He'll hate the comparison, but Shiveley brings to mind a thinking man's Paris Hilton: He usually travels with a posse of little dogs, and his new film, Everyone But You, is a sort of video docu-diary.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Jill Thomas  |  04-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Indie Spirit Film Festival Hits Colorado Springsnew

The films range from don't-blink shorts to full-length features. Some avant-garde entries that defy categorization -- like Gods of Light, Idols of Mud, an experimental short with no dialogue, about three people escaping reality.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Jill Thomas  |  04-29-2008  |  Movies

Preachy Politics Spoil Thomas McCarthy's Otherwise-quiet Character Studynew

For his sophomore effort McCarthy has burdened his slight character drama with a capital-M Message, which weighs down even the most intimately observed character moments.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Shaun Brady  |  04-29-2008  |  Reviews

Out and Proud Neil Patrick Harris Loves Playing Comedy's Favorite Pussy Houndnew

The result of Harris' willingness to poke a little fun at himself is a new Cult of NPH, with T-shirts and even a (New Line-run) What Would NPH Do? web site that Harris says confuses him more than flatters him--though he admits, with a smirk, to visiting it more than he probably should.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Cole Haddon  |  04-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Best (and Worst) at the Newport Beach Film Festivalnew

Many of this year's selections center on the idea of the unlikely hero: From the out-of-shape failure who rises to face a mighty foe (305, Big Man Japan) to unheralded real-life heroes like Max Lesnik and Barney Rosset, this is the year of protagonists who are more than they seem to be at first glance.
OC Weekly  |  Luke Y. Thompson  |  04-29-2008  |  Movies

Can't Buy Him Love

Leading-man status doesn't suddenly turn Made of Honor's Patrick Dempsey into a charismatic star.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  04-29-2008  |  Reviews

Getting to Know Our Captors: Errol Morris Connects the Pictures to Their Takers

Documentarian Errol Morris effectively takes the viewer inside the atmosphere of psychological and physical abuse doled out by American military personnel at Abu Ghraib by connecting the hundreds of damning photos taken by soldiers to their context.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  04-28-2008  |  Reviews

What Do '88 Minutes' and 'Baby Mama' Have in Common?new

The unforgiving advance of time, leading to great panic and momentous life-or-death decisions. Both films are also funny -- but only one is meant to be.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Al Hoff  |  04-28-2008  |  Reviews

'Zombie Strippers' Lives Down to Its Namenew

Writer/director Jay Lee's Zombie Strippers is a fascinating whatzit, and presumably the first cheeseball boobie-filled gore-fest ever to be based on a Eugene Ionesco play.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Sean Burns  |  04-28-2008  |  Reviews

'The Forgotten Woman' Highlights Indian Widowsnew

Photographer turned filmmaker Dilip Mehta lets his lyrical camerawork and subjects tell their sometimes heart-wrenching stories of poverty and neglect, which aren't easy on the eyes. The film depicts the most marginalized people in Indian society, widows who are abandoned by their families and relatives once their husbands die.
The Georgia Straight  |  R. Paul Dhillon  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Helen Hunt in the Director's Chairnew

After laboring for years both as costar and a producer of Mad About You, she has had a sporadic, post-tube life on the big screen, with 1997's As Good as It Gets the obvious highlight. And almost since then she has been trying to turn Then She Found Me into a movie.
The Georgia Straight  |  Staff  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Jellyfish''s Etgar Keret: The Wizard of Idnew

Writer/director shoots from the hip about his low-budget movie and his high-budget life.
L.A. Weekly  |  Ella Taylor  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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