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  • Featured Review, Interviews, News, This Month's Reviews

    Once upon a time, the twisted twins Jen and Sylvia Soska – INTERVIEW

    In the last decade twin sisters Jen and Sylvia Soska have doggedly pursued film ventures in the horror genre. Armed with ingenuity, a DYI ethos and a pledge to frighten honest, hard-working people, the Soskas have acted in, directed, screenwritten and produced movies that would give Lloyd Kaufman and Eli Roth a run for their money.

    The Soskas have directed such films as “Dead Hooker

    January 26, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    MOVIE REVIEW: “CHURCH & STATE”

    “Church & State” examines the remarkable true story of an inexperienced gay activist who, in partnership with a Salt Lake City law firm and members of the local LGBTQ community, successfully ended Utah's ban on gay marriage.

    Mark Lawrence, a middle-aged gay man, led the charge for gay marriage equality in Utah. He’s a bit of an acquired taste (he’s so off-putting to some that it made him

    January 25, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    MOVIE REVIEW: “1917”

    Sam Mendes’s name for his film is right. It hits you in the face with the mud, blood and gloom that was there, heavily, relentlessly, during that terrible year following three years of horror and followed by an even worse one. Out of this war that Mendes described as “a chaos of mismanagement and tragedy,” he has made a war movie like none other. Eschewing regular scripts for war films, the storyline is about how to stop a battle

    January 21, 2020
  • Interviews, This Month's Reviews

    Talking with Sky Bergman. Her short “Mochitsuki” screens at SBIFF on Sunday

    Sky Bergman is a filmmaker and teacher based in San Luis Obispo, California, a university town known for being the home of Cal Poly (California Polytechnic State University). In 2017 Bergman brought her documentary “Lives Well Lived,” which shared the wisdom of a group of gloriously happy senior citizens, to the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. It’s a wonderful film—which I hasten to even describe as “little”—that sheds light

    January 19, 2020
  • In Theaters Now, Movies

    short film REVIEW: “READY FOR MY CLOSEUP”

    As a film reviewer/ connoisseur I see most of the films that come out each year. As the decades go on, the pleasure of seeing so many is still there and always will be. There is nothing like seeing a film in the cinema. Even with today’s annoying audiences (cell phones are one of the biggest nails in the cinema experience coffin!), I still love being in a movie theater.

    While there are many

    January 17, 2020
  • News

    OPINION: What happened to chronology?

    Introducing in a narrative flashbacks, fragments of dreams, partially remembered scenes has always been part and parcel of cinema. Examples abound. Look at classic films. The childhood sled scenes in “Citizen Kane” are indispensable. As is the famous flashback explaining the Gregory Peck character’s trauma in “Spellbound." The process works, when it is used within reasonable limits. When repeated endlessly

    January 15, 2020
  • Interviews

    INTERVIEW: CAMILLE BROWN, director of “A Christmas Winter Song”

    Camille Brown recently achieved a distinction, one that has become a tradition. A female-directed film on Lifetime seems like a rite of passage for any woman behind the camera. Yet a Christmas movie makes it all the more special. “A Christmas Winter Song” aired throughout the month of December, is currently on-demand and will likely remain part of the network’s future holiday line-ups. I was fortunate enough to interview Brown.

    January 6, 2020
  • News

    FESTIVAL NEWS: SBIFF35 will open with the Shelly Love-directed “A bump along the way”

    The Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBIFF) earlier this week announced the lineup for the 35th edition, which will run January 15 to 25, 2020. The festival will feature forty-seven world premieres and seventy-one U.S. premieres from fifty countries.

    During a press conference SBIFF’s executive director Roger Durling said, “for 35 years, SBIFF has been a reflection of the city

    January 1, 2020
  • News, This Month's Reviews

    BEST OF 2019: Anthony Francis presents his favorite movies

    2019 started out as a bumpy road. By summer I worried that I wouldn’t be able to make a full top ten. By year’s end, however, some fine work started to shine.

    1. (an absolute tie of the two most original and cinematically pleasing films of the year!): “The Irishman” (directed by Martin Scorsese) / “Once Upon a Time In Hollywood” (directed by Quentin Tarantino). Both films

    December 31, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    MOVIE REVIEW: “Star Wars : Episode IX – The Rise of Skywalker”

    The circle is now complete. Forty-two years after George Lucas forever changed Hollywood (and the lives of moviegoers around the world!) with the original “Star Wars,” director J.J. Abrams brings it all home with “Star Wars Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker.”

    I was there opening weekend in 1977. When the music blared and the opening crawl began to roll, I knew I was in for

    December 30, 2019
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