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  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “We all come from dust, and to dust we’ll all return,” THAT COLD DEAD LOOK IN YOUR EYES (REVIEW)

    Leonard (Frank Raharinosy) could be one of the worst chefs in New York City. His boss (Max Casella) tells him his lemon chicken “tastes like prostate cancer.” 

    His navigation of life and his personal relationships is no better, as Leonard has lost his girlfriend Marie (Nora Arnezeder) within the first few minutes of the film, as he became too judgmental regarding her close

    November 17, 2021
  • Interviews

    “It’s amazing because you don’t know what the story is going to be, and I love that risk”: Jesse Moss on MAYOR PETE

    After making the documentary “Boys State,” about a Texas program wherein adolescent males practice what it might be like to experience a real electoral campaign, filmmaker Jesse Moss turned his attention to a man running for real. For several months he and his crew followed then-South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg on his ultimately unsuccessful bid to win the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

    November 12, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “RED NOTICE” in so many words | OUR REVIEW

    With a budget of almost two-hundred million dollars and twenty-million-dollar salaries for its three stars, the new Netflix release “Red Notice” exploded onto the streaming service this past weekend.

    Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Gal Gadot, and Ryan Reynolds are the three big-name stars that are a studio head’s dream cast. What does two-hundred million and three of the biggest Hollywood heavy-hitters get you?”

    November 8, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    Eleanor Lambert is all poise in the slow-brewed thriller “TIME NOW” | OUR MOVIE REVIEW

    The past. Guilt, tragedy, regret, what we wish we could leave behind stays with us, sometimes becoming our life's burden.

    In the new film “Time Now,” Jenny (Eleanor Lambert) returns home to Detroit years after a falling-out with her family, when her brother Victor (Sebastian Beacon) dies in a car accident.

    To make sense of her brother’s life in the city, Jenny interacts with his inner

    October 29, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    THE LABYRINTH OF CINEMA, the final film from Nobuhiko Ōbayashi and a love letter to cinephiles

    Experimental filmmaker Nobuhiko Ōbayashi was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer in 2016. His team of doctors feared the director had only three months to live.

    Ōbayashi defied the odds (although he was very ill) and made two more films before his death (three years after his diagnosis), 2017’s “Hanagatami” and this year’s “Labyrinth of Cinema” which was completed in 2019.

    October 25, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “Introducing, Selma Blair” and “Mass” | REVIEWS

    The actress Selma Blair had a promising career in Hollywood going at the turn of the millennium, appearing in major roles in “Cruel Intentions” and “Hellboy,” among many others. She seemed to be on an upward trajectory, appearing in dozens of other films and television shows. However, in recent years the actress was cruelly struck with a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, making it difficult for her to walk or, many times, even to speak.

    October 22, 2021
  • News

    DOPESICK ON HULU: “This con was so outrageous that I thought we’ve got to dramatize this” (OUR INTERVIEW WITH DANNY STRONG AND BETH MACY)

    Over a twenty-year stretch, half a million people have died from opioids, according to the CDC. And one of the crisis’s major killers is OxyContin, which earned the already-wealthy Sackler family billions of dollars.

    Even though the family’s firm, Purdue Pharma, is now in bankruptcy proceedings and ordered by courts to pay billions in penalties and compensation, members of the Sackler

    October 17, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    Ben Whishaw, dominant and poised, mesmerizes in “SURGE” | REVIEW

    Alienation is unhealthy, it is not good for the psyche. Fading into the background with no friends or acquaintances, people who go unnoticed would do almost anything to have their voice heard and for someone to see them. Loneliness and an uncaring world can drive some people to madness.

    In Aneil Karia’s “Surge,” we meet one such person, a man at the breaking point.

    October 14, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    FROM THE SLASHER FLICK DOSSIERS : “There someone inside your house” (REVIEW)

    The slasher film has always been one of the most popular genres in horror films. It can be argued that slasher horror was born of “Psycho.” If that film was the grandfather of the slasher genre, the spark was lit fourteen years later with Bob Clark’s 1974 treasure “Black Christmas” and became a full-blown inferno of popularity when filmmaker John Carpenter made “Halloween” in 1978. After the phenomenal success

    October 11, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    MOVIE REVIEW: “The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlain”

    There is no comprehensive government data on the topic of police brutality, no real accountability.

    According to the Lancet more than half of all police killings since 1980 do not appear in official government data. The undercounted police killings of Black Americans, particularly, is odious.

    October 5, 2021
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