AltWeeklies Wire

Dancing Girls and Day-Glo Sarisnew

An exotic dancer tests the strength of three couples in this entertaining Bollywood romantic comedy.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

The Rhythm Methodnew

Michael Winterbottom creates scenester porn in which he records the evolution of a man and a woman's relationship through sex and music -- exclusively.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marrit Ingman  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Meet the Parentsnew

With this film built on a host of remarkably nuanced Southern characters, first-time filmmaker Phil Morrison announces himself with assurance and uniqueness of vision.
Austin Chronicle  |  Kimberley Jones  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

The Personal and the Politicalnew

City of God director Fernando Meirelles makes his English-language debut with this bracing, heartbreaking conspiracy thriller set in AIDS-ravaged Kenya.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marrit Ingman  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Enter at Your Own Risknew

A crack team of cave divers encounters untold horror in the form of bloodthirsty sea slugs.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Healers and Head Casesnew

In this adaptation of Patrick McGrath's novel, Natasha Richardson and Ian McKellan wonder if the patients have taken over the asylum.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Thrill-Seeking Teen Learns Hard Lessonnew

During A Tout de Suite's lulls, you may speculate just how many aspiring actresses were seduced during the audition process: "Why don't we read the rest of the script in my hotel suite, mon cherie?"
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

FIlm Mines the Rich Vein Between Regional Differencesnew

By the end of Junebug, characters keep their folksy woodcarvings and their mutual dependency to themselves, refusing to go under the big-city microscope of an "outsider" art gallery owner.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Film Plays a Two-Faced Gamenew

In the 11th hour, Pretty Persuasion tries to cop a relevant, downbeat, socially concerned attitude, but after the previous piggish rutting in kink, who exactly does Marcos Siega think he's fooling?
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Felicia Feaster  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

You May Never Check Out of 2046new

Compared to his breakthrough works such as Chungking Express, Wong Kar-Wai's latest film, 2046, proves even more elusive and enigmatic, yet the film seduces audiences rather than repels them.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Spout at the Devil

Random observations on the randomly constructed silliness of The Exorcism of Emily Rose
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  09-01-2005  |  Reviews

Drift Woodnew

The latest film aspiring to skewer the cruelties of high-school life commits a fatal error: It forgets to side with the students.
Westword  |  Melissa Levine  |  08-31-2005  |  Reviews

Family Affairnew

Before it became a sociological, racial, political and cultural landmark, The Cosby Show was just good TV.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Vincent Williams  |  08-31-2005  |  TV

An Interview with Fernando Meirellesnew

Appropriate to the maker of a globe-trotting conspiracy thriller with a firm foot in the Third World, Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles was thoroughly international in his outlook while discussing The Constant Gardener during a recent visit to Seattle.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  08-31-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Beyond Bordersnew

Globalization is the new villain in an effective international thriller.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  08-31-2005  |  Reviews

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