Aubrey Plaza fans rejoice, the indie actress gives one of the best performances of her career in Lawrence Michael Levine’s “Black Bear.”
Read more‘Ammonite': Frigid Erotica in the Midst of Foggy Ocean Vistas [Review]
In 1840s England, acclaimed fossil hunter Mary Anning (Kate Winslet) meets Charlotte (Saoirse Ronan) a young woman suffering from Melancholia (oldspeak for depression) and sent by her husband to convalesce by the sea alongside the famous palaeontologist. The friendship is frosty at first, we soon come to realize it’s not just Charlotte who is depressed, but her new strolling buddy as well — a loner with no interest in conversing with the people around her, including her mother (Gemma Jones) who happens to work with her at the fossil shop she manages. Charlotte soon develops a high fever, Mary starts to care for her bed-stricken roomate, and as Charlotte’s spirits improve, so do Mary’s, to the point where lust comes into the equation.
Read more‘Another Round': Mads Mikkelsen Wants To Be A High-Functioning Alcoholic [Review]
Director Thomas Vinterberg was part of the Dogme 95 movement, which unearthed, among other people, Lars Von Trier. However, both filmmakers couldn’t be more different. Yes, Vinterberg employs the same shaky camerawork and improv-style dialogue as von Trier, but in a much more accessible and conventional fashion. Despite all that, Vinterberg has managed to give us two very good movies out of the eight he’s so far directed in his career: his 1998 debut “The Celebration” and 2013’s “The Hunt.”
Read moreDissecting The New York Times' Greatest Actors of the 21st Century List
I’m late to the ballgame here, but I was really trying hard not to comment on N.Y. Times film critics A.O. Scott and Manohla Dargis’ piece titled “The 25 Greatest Actors of the 21st Century (So Far)“. The list was clearly motivated by woke aspirations and I honestly don't think it should be taken any more seriously than a random film blogger’s own list of the best actors working today (cue mine below), alas, it’s The Times, which means people are uniformly taking these acting picks to heart.
Read moreDavid Lynch May Be Starting Production on Netflix Mini-Series Titled ‘Wisteria'
It’s been 3 years since Lynch’s “Twin Peaks: The Return” changed the TV landscape forever, but, more importantly, signaled the return of a true master. How could Lynch follow up an achievement as monstrous as ‘The Return’? Well, how about making another TV series.
Read moreJohn Waters' Top 10 Films of 2020 Topped By ‘Butt Boy'
I can never get enough of director John Waters — just the sheer fact that he is responsible for making “Pink Flamingos,” one of the most tasteless movies ever created, ranks him way up in my books.
Read more‘The Prom': Netflix Musical Strictly For Ryan Murphy Fans? [Trailer]
I’m not a fan of Ryan Murphy’s art, but I do have to give him credit for being so prolific and gathering up this huge fanbase over the past few years. His deal with Netflix has resulted in a gluttonous amount of shows (and movies) already, “Ratched,” “Hollywood,” “Boys In The Band” and “The Politician”. Despite the negative reviews, he keeps chugging along, again, mostly due to his passionate following.
Read moreMike Mills' ‘C'mon C'mon': A24 Aiming for Sundance 2021 Premiere
Sundance 2021: What to Expect
Every November, as Thanksgiving nears, I tend to start looking at the possibilities that may show up at the Sundance Film Festival. This upcoming 2021 edition of the Park City event will be the first in-person one I miss in almost a decade. No worries, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Sundance has hibernated into digital format for the coming edition.
Read moreWatch: Criterion's New 40 minute Documentary on the Making of ‘The Irishman'
I received some backlash for my A- review of Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman” last year. Part of the flack is, I guess, having my review quoted on the film’s Wikipedia page - That just set my email into overdrive. I first saw Scorsese’s film at the New York Film Festival world premiere in September of 2019, despite some reservations I thought it was a fantastic achievement, calling it “Scorsese’s eulogy to Gangster cinema.”
Read more2020: What Could Have Been ...
Looking back on the 25 most anticipated movies of 2020 list we posted back in February, only 8 of the 25 titles chosen got released this year. Pathetic. This will now surely amount to an incredible array of marquee titles being released in 2021 (if normalcy actually seeps into our world, but who knows about that).
Read moreNetflix Could Break an 85-Year Record at the Oscars With 5 Best Picture Nominees
One major studio that hasn’t suffered through this neverending pandemic is Netflix. In fact, the streaming giant’s arsenal of content this year could give them the most best picture nominations from any studio in history, a record held by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, which scored five nods at the ninth Academy Awards in 1937.
Read more90-Year-Old Clint Eastwood's ‘Cry Macho' Begins to Shoot
Clint Eastwood has proven time and time again how he’s still a major attraction for moviegoers. “Richard Jewell,” “The Mule,” “Sully” and “American Sniper,” were all released within the last six years, with a considerable amount of tickets sold. It also helped that the films themselves were fantastic, straight-shooting dramas that could only be made by an old-school veteran of the craft such as Eastwood.
Read more‘Hillbilly Elegy': Ron Howard Adapts's Dull Adaptation of Southern-Set Memoir [Review]
J.D. Vance’s bestselling memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy” is adapted to rigorous Oscar-bait effect by Oscar-nominee Vanessa Taylor (“The Shape of Water”). The result is the kind of big studio crowd-pleaser that used to be the norm in the ‘90s, but is now mocked by our meta generation.
Read more‘Happiest Season': Blissfully Melancholic Queer Rom-Com is Easy to Digest [Capsule]
Clea DuVall’s “Happiest Season” can be viewed as a radical holiday movie, in that it uses, hell mimics, the innumerable heterosexual Christmas movie cliches that came before it, but forges them through the lenses of a queer perspective. Yes, it’s the token emblem of your average holiday romantic comedy, but it’s the unadorned authentic touch brought forth by DuVall (“The Intervention”) that turns “Happiest Season” into a slightly likable affair.
Read moreAbortion in Movies: All the Pros and Cons in American Films
Hollywood influences decision making options for many individuals through seeing and hearing. A good number of people will take action based on something they saw or heard on TV at home or in a movie theater.
Read moreJoaquin Phoenix Set to Star in Ari Aster's ‘Beau is Afraid'
Ari Aster turned heads at Sundance 2018 with his incredibly realized neo-horror film “Hereditary.” The following year he polarized movie fans with his love/hate statement “Midsommar,” a film I was lukewarm on, upon initial viewing, until I finally caught up with the 3-hour director’s cut at home and had a total 180 opinion reversal.
Read more‘Ma Rainey's Black Bottom': Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman Herald Stagey Jazz Drama [Review]
Earlier in the week, we had first reactions to Netflix’s upcoming awards season contender “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” based on August Wilson’s play, and, suffice to say, the film features Oscar-worthy performances from Viola Davis and, most intriguingly, the late Chadwick Boseman.
Read moreCannes 2021 Could Be Historic
Maybe it's too early to speculate about the 2021 edition of the Cannes Film Festival, but this pandemic won’t last forever, there is a light at the end of the tunnel and it is realistic to believe that we may be watching films on the Croisette in 7 months time, especially with a Vaccine just right around the corner. With all that being said, if we consider all the holdouts from this year’s canceled event, and add them to all the current productions set to wrap in the next few months, you have the makings for one hell of an official competition next year.
Read moreBest Movies of 2020: Critics Poll Incoming ...
Will the winner be Chloe Zhao’s “Nomadland”? Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet”? Charlie Kaufman’s “I’m Thinking About Ending Things”?
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