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  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “Tel Aviv on Fire,” an acid and humorous take on Palestinians, Israelis and DYIsm

    This Israeli film by Sameh Zoabi, an Arab Israeli, comes to us boasting a number of awards but that doesn’t prepare us for the treat of this thoroughly enjoyable and unpretentious story. “Tel Aviv on Fire” is one of those gems—think “The Band’s Visit” or “Tony Erdmann”-- that grab and delight from the opening scene to the very end, with nary a slackening of rhythm. Salam (Kais Nashif, a well-known Palestinian actor

    July 30, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    Marc Maron excellent as Mel in “SWORD OF TRUST”

    Low-key independent character pieces are director Lynn Shelton’s specialty. With films such as “Humpday," “Your Sister’s Sister," “Touchy Feely," “Laggies," and the undervalued “Outside In," Shelton creates projects that seem gimmicky on a surface level and infuses them with deeply personal meditations on the human condition. Her uniquely easygoing writing style has proven Shelton to be one of the most interesting writer-directors in film today. 

    July 27, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    A SEARCH FOR ADVENTURE AT SEA, BUT NOT JUST: “MAIDEN”

    Documentary filmmaker Alex Holmes brings to the screen the true adventure of the first all-female crew to enter the Whitbread Round the World race. To achieve their goal to enter and be respected in the race, Tracy Edwards and her all-woman crew stood up to the sexism in the 1989 sailing world which was equally as harsh as their 33,000-mile ocean journey. The main focus of “Maiden” is on Edwards, and rightfully so.

    July 18, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: “YESTERDAY” was great fun to watch. Then the self-indulgent pathos began

    Danny Boyle’s “Yesterday” is a delight almost to the end. How can it not be? First of all, perfect pitch by both Himesh Patel (Jack) and the too-lovely-for-words Lily James (Ellie). Patel is Jack Malik, a store employee who, through a blackout on earth and being hit by a bus, wakes up in an alternate world where he is the one and only person who knows the Beatles. A third-rate musician who kind of strums a guitar to accompany

    July 15, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    EASY RIDER TURNS 50 – Half a century later, still riding, still searching

    In 1969 when a surge of protests against discrimination, the Vietnam War (at its most intensive then) and outdated political and social mindsets was taking place, in came a low-budget, counterculture, film that would speak for a generation and give filmmakers new artistic freedom. The film’s success would cause a seismic shift in the Hollywood system and see studios wrest power back from the producers and hand it

    July 14, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    A BEAUTIFUL MIND: AUTHOR TONI MORRISON IN “TONI MORRISON: THE PIECES THAT I AM”

    “The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order. It’s good, you know, when you got a woman who is a friend of your mind.” This is the striking quote that begins this wonderful documentary that looks at the legacy and life of this consummate author and scholar.

    “Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am” is a straightforward documentary that works due to the power

    July 8, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    UNDER THE INFLUENCE: “Midsommar,” directed by Ari Aster

    Ari Aster has not only proven himself to be a great director of horror (as he did so expertly in his 2018 feature debut “Hereditary”) but a great filmmaker as he takes his new film, “Midsommar” to the level of Art. According to Aster, a very bad breakup led to the creation of this spine-chilling nightmare, one made even more frightening due to the fact that it all takes place under the bright light of the sun. Our director gives us nowhere

    July 4, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    OH MY LOVE! Leonard Cohen, his muse Marianne, front and center in “Marianne & Leonard: Words of love”

    “...when your woman becomes her own content, and you become her content, that’s love.”

    “Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love” is a soulful documentary examining the relationship between a pure artist and his often-ignored partner, who became the most important person in his life. For many, the relationship between an artist and their work is more important than

    July 1, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    EXTRA! Rossellini’s “Europe ’51” or one woman’s journey from bourgeois ennui to personal fulfillment (1952)

    In "Europe '51" Irene (Ingrid Bergman) is a society woman who searches for life’s meaning after the accidental death of her son. She’s a worldly and superficial woman, but her son’s death will push her to seek others and help those in need in a bid to achieve a kind of holy state. The first scene of the film is told in perfect cadence and Stendhalian efficiency: Irene, lady of the house, is holding a dinner party. The guests arrive, they’re plied

    June 23, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “WHEN THEY SEE US,” a sobering reminder of an America we’d rather not think about

    At the heart of Ava DuVernay’s “When They See Us" is the fate of Antron McCray (Caleel Harris, Jovan Adepo), Kevin Richardson (Asante Blackk, Justin Cunningham), Yusef Salaam (Ethan Herisse, Chris Chalk), Raymond Santana ( Marquis Rodriguez, Freddy Miyares) and Korey Wise (Jharrel Jerome). The five black men from Harlem were wrong arrested and convicted for the supposed rape of

    June 23, 2019
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