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AnthonyFrancis

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

    Elizabeth Moss in “Shirley” gives career performance

    “A fictional biography” is a phrase that usually doesn’t work when it comes to films. Of course, when telling the story of a real person or event, some dramatic license is necessary and sometimes warranted. The new film, “Shirley,” tells the story of horror writer Shirley Jackson that features events that never took place. And that is just fine. Jackson is best known for her 1960 horror novel

    June 1, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    MOVIE REVIEW: “The Droving”

    With the current style of Hollywood thrillers that tend more toward flashy camerawork and preposterous chase scenes and situations, one feels appreciative when a film comes along that creates the proper atmosphere to fit its subject matter. Director George Popov’s latest UK-set film is a mood piece with a supernatural motif that is one of the more aesthetically-pleasing thrillers I’ve seen in quite a while.

    May 27, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    MOVIE REVIEW: “Abe” is a film for the whole family that sidesteps the drawbacks of being a family film

    It is rare in today’s filmmaking world that inspiring films about youth have something profound to say. Most films that claim to speak to today’s kids tend to condescend to their audience and crowd their screenplays with clichés, ofttimes rendering their content superficial and phony.

    Fernando Grostein Andrade’s “Abe” is the special film that takes care to get to the heart of its subject.

    May 22, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    MOVIE REVIEW: As Frank Tassone Hugh Jackman hit the right note in “Bad Education”

    The culture of money, positions of power and white privilege has never been more prominent. With a little power (be it in the corporate world, Hollywood, or any place where the suits rule) one can twist and bend the rules for their own personal gain. Many times, this is done with great hypocrisy, as those in power will judge and advise others while secretly committing acts of fraud, theft, and other illegal and amoral crimes.

    May 17, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    REVIEW: “Capone,” there was nary a word out of Tom Hardy’s Fonzo (but grunts and moans? Plenty)

    Every mobster’s life is filled with the ghosts of the past and the nightmares of the dead that come back to haunt them. It is a dangerous life ruled by guns and muscle and stained in blood. Men like Al Capone were monsters and far from the sometimes-glamorous portrayals that we have seen countless times before. Gangsters are murderers who, we can only imagine, are ultimately haunted by their deeds when their

    May 16, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    REVIEW: “Spaceship Earth” is a timely documentary that trains the spotlight on the climate change crisis

    2020 America is not the time or the place for the intellectual. We are living in a time that is aggressively pushing back against science and rational thinking. Extremely important environmental issues are being sidelined and/or dismissed by too many people in positions of power.

    But there was a time, a time when idealists would come together to collectively find ways

    May 7, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    “True History of the Kelly Gang,” a defiantly vicious, one-man rogue’s gallery of style and substance

    Being historically accurate in film is tough. Dramatic license is […]

    May 4, 2020
  • In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    TRIBECA SHORTS : Alejandra Parody’s “Gets good light”

    (in this series we present five short films selected by the 2020 Tribeca Film Festival)

    This is an important time in America. This country has always been blanketed under the hypocrisy of touting itself as the “land of the free” and one where “all men are created equal,” while our government creates policies and procedures to ensure that people of color and any minority

    April 1, 2024
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    How the music uncorked the full artistic potential of William Friedkin’s “To live and die in L.A.”

    The eighties were a fruitful time for the fusion of films and pop music. Never was there a time when the pop charts and the weekly box-office complimented one another as often as they did then. It got to the point where a film’s popularity would sometimes depend on the success of its soundtrack. Eighties-era MTV was a willing participant in the crossover promotion of big Hollywood films, as a hit video from a film’s soundtrack

    April 21, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    REVIEW: Lucía Garibaldi’s polished and hypnotic “The Sharks”

    “The Sharks” ("Los Tiburones" in the original Spanish title) is something special. Uruguayan writer/director Lucía Garibaldi's feature-length debut is a coming of age tale that gets to the heart of its subject without judgment or forced and phony life lessons. This is a careful and organic look at a teenager on the cusp of becoming a woman.

    Almost overwhelmed

    April 13, 2020
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