AltWeeklies Wire

Disturbing Ambiguitynew

This Korean take on Dangerous Liaisons is beautiful and well-acted -- and be sure to stay until the very end.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

Stop in the Name of Lovenew

Leave it to the French to fashion an anguished psychological thriller that, in its last moments, also turns out to be a tender love story.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

Psychic Friends Networknew

That droning sound you hear is White Noise.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marc Savlov  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

DiG This!new

DiG! transcends the typical "rock movie" format and aspires to something greater: an examination of why we create and what we receive from art.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marrit Ingman  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

Few 'Sideways' Glancesnew

The critics' No. 1 choice turned out to be Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Austin Chronicle  |  Marjorie Baumgarten, Steve Davis, Kimberley Jones and Marc Savlov  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

Renaissance Mennew

Filmmaker Rodney Evans builds a bridge between generations, linking young, gay African-American artists of today with those of the Harlem Renaissance. The film's subject proves so rich with potential that Evans doesn't know what to do with it all.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

Gripping Hotel Rwanda Salutes Unlikely Heronew

Just as Schindler's List recounted the unexpected heroism of the apolitical industrialist-turned-savior of Holocaust-era Jews, Hotel Rwanda salutes an obscure hotel manager who rescued 1,200 lives during the Rwandan genocide of 1994.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  01-06-2005  |  Reviews

The Good, Bad and the Uglynew

The latest in Hollywood, art and indie films: Capsule reviews that say, "We're as mad as hell, and we're not going to take it anymore."
Boulder Weekly  |  Thomas Delapa  |  01-05-2005  |  Reviews

Schlock and Awe -- 2004 at the Moviesnew

Whatever your state's color, 2004 was a pale year at the movies, marked by such busts as The Alamo (forgettable) and Alexander, Oliver Stone's not-so-great epic on the Greek conqueror.
Boulder Weekly  |  Thomas Delapa  |  01-05-2005  |  Reviews

The Devil Made Her Do It: TV Highlights, January 12-20

The Child of Darkness dons a bikini in Point Pleasant. Also reviewed are Unforgivable Blackness, Jonny Zero and more.
Isthmus  |  Dean Robbins  |  01-05-2005  |  TV

Split Decisionnew

Clint Eastwood's boxing melodrama doesn't quite live up to its awards-season accolades. But Hilary Swank's effort is a steely knockout.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  01-05-2005  |  Reviews

War-Torn and Lovelornnew

Jean-Pierre Jeunet's latest is what a sweeping epic of love and war should be: beautiful and ugly all at once, dramatic on a grand, yet thoroughly calibrated, scale.
Gambit  |  David Lee Simmons  |  01-04-2005  |  Reviews

2004 Was a Good Year in Theaters and for DVDsnew

Because of some high-quality DVD releases, a person could have had a very good movie year in 2004 without ever setting foot in a movie theater.
Chico News & Review  |  Juan-Carlos Selznick  |  01-04-2005  |  Movies

Father of African Cinema Produces a Beautiful Polemicnew

The 81-year-old Senagelese director's film about girls fleeing ritual circumcision has a moral center that is painfully clear. It also expresses each character's humanity.
SF Weekly  |  Melissa Levine  |  01-04-2005  |  Reviews

Den of Iniquitynew

This delightful Spanish drama is worth seeing for its calm, apt depiction of its principal characters, a gay "bearish" uncle and the nephew he parents. An opening scene of sex between men has been bowdlerized from the American print.
Houston Press  |  Melissa Levine  |  01-03-2005  |  Reviews

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