AltWeeklies Wire

Heart Attacksnew

Reality TV and disaster movies were nothing compared to Mother Nature in 2005, so it’s only fitting that a hurricane tops the list of the year’s most memorable television programming.
Boston Phoenix  |  Joyce Millman  |  12-23-2005  |  TV

Avner's Listnew

Munich's purpose is not to illuminate but to manipulate, to reduce the irresolvable issues surrounding a horrible truth into a comforting platitude.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  12-23-2005  |  Reviews

The Quare Fellownew

The finished product might be overdone and in bad taste, but like the best of director Neil Jordan’s work, it does satisfy.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  12-23-2005  |  Reviews

Rake's Progressnew

Casanova has cleaned up his act in Lasse Hallstrom’s engaging romantic-comedy version of his life; he's tamed down the debauchery to a tepid but bawdy "R" and learned to respect women and family values.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  12-23-2005  |  Reviews

Walking the Indie Linenew

Star Wars and Batman and Harry Potter and Narnia and King Kong may have made the big bucks in 2005, but for the most part it was indie and low-budget films that made the biggest impression.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  12-22-2005  |  Reviews

Oh, Joynew

This holiday film of dangling plot lines is hard to like, harder still to hate.
Dallas Observer  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  12-22-2005  |  Reviews

Rhythm Around Usnew

Jose Saavedra sings about what he sees in the world surrounding him.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  12-21-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Miracle Movienew

While its box-office take has been disappointing, King Kong itself enthralls.
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

Bourgeois Charmnew

Electric Shadows makes for a nice romance, but it could have been much more.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

L'Chaimnew

This Israeli comedy is a wholly original movie that's set and filmed entirely within the insular realm of Jerusalem’s ultra-orthodox Hasidim.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

Run Jackass, Runnew

This Farrelly brothers comedy purports to have a message about treating the intellectually challenged as regular human beings, which is about as disingenuous as a comedy about seeing past a person’s body size that stars Gwyneth Paltrow in a fat suit.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

Girls, Interruptednew

Well, we’re not in Chicago anymore, or even its soundstage approximation, but that hasn’t stopped Oscar-nominated director Rob Marshall from fashioning another epic spectacle out of two squabbling women in (a sort-of) show business.
Austin Chronicle  |  Kimberley Jones  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

The Life of a Persian Polymathnew

Houston-based, Iranian-born filmmaker Mashayekh relates the story of the pioneering 11th-century mathematician, astronomer, and poet, and reminds Western audiences that there’s more to Iran and the Middle East than suicide bombers and hummus.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

See Dick and Jane Run Agroundnew

The original version of this comedy was little countercultural, a lot class-conscious, and a touch subversive; this remake is all farce when what is needed is satire.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

No Bargain at Any Pricenew

This unasked-for sequel fuses the original concept with the well-worn formula of the family-vacation romp.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marrit Ingman  |  12-21-2005  |  Reviews

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