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

    “Dolemite” is his name. Get used to it.

    “Dolemite is My Name”, the new film from the immensely-talented Craig Brewer, is a pleasant surprise and certainly one of the most entertaining and emotionally satisfying films I have seen this year.

    The wildly-vulgar character of Dolemite was the brainchild of struggling seventies comedian Rudy Ray Moore. Moore's material was too raw for the major record labels of those days, but the

    November 2, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    Brad Pitt sets off in search of a father in mesmerizing “Ad Astra”

    “Ad astra,” the new film by James Gray, is more meditation than story. The title (one half of the latin phrase “per aspera ad astra” or “through hardships to the stars”) is apt given the amount of time travel and the fascinating hardware that allows it, though the tale meanders, causing some confusion. With various stellar transportation modes, it takes us from one distant planet to the next without a clear mission statement. Basically, the quest

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

    “The Lighthouse,” a mind-bending, psychologically-intense thriller

    A devious and creepy psychological film in the horror/thriller genre has made its way into cinemas in the form of Robert Eggers’s second feature, “The Lighthouse.” His first film “The Witch” was a masterpiece of tone and tension and staked its claim as one of the finest horror films of the past twenty-five years.

    Now comes Eggers’s latest film, one that is sure to shock, enthrall, and completely divide

    October 27, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    “FIRST LOVE” (this is why I go to the movies!)

    A Takashi Miike film. Don’t be afraid. Jump into his cinematic world. While he isn’t always perfect, good or bad, his films hold unique and fascinating wonders for cinephiles.

    “First Love” ("Hatsukoi" in the original Japanese, is Miike’s best film since 2010’s “13 Assassins.” This is a wild ride but just wild enough. Being a Miike film, we are treated to scenes

    October 23, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    “Joker,” a morality-defying, two-hour drop down a man’s impaired psyche

    I’m always skeptical when a film receives too much hype. With the on-again, off-again quality of American fare, I try not to set my hopes too high, especially when it comes to a film about the D.C. Comics's The Joker, by the director of “The Hangover” series.

    It is with great pleasure that I report that, while the film itself isn’t the cinematic masterpiece that some have christened it, Todd Phillips’s “Joker” is one of the finest films of 2019 with Joaquin Phoenix delivering one of the great performances of modern cinema, and definitely his personal best.

    October 13, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    Almodovar delivers moving tribute to cinema and love with “Dolor y gloria”

    And here's me breathing a sigh of relief. Almodovar has made another masterpiece, a work of art. “Dolor y Gloria" is sublime! I’d become disillusioned with the El Deseo jefe. “Broken embraces,” “La Piel que lo habito” were colorful, if shoddily-written films that lacked substance and felt saturated with fabricated emotions. Those were films, I could but only deduce, made by a filmmaker in existential decline. But with "Dolor y Gloria,”

    October 2, 2019
  • Featured Review, News, This Month's Reviews

    BFI London Film Festival lineup announced

    The 63rd BFI London Film Festival has announced its jury line-up for this year’s Festival Awards.

    The Official Competition jury is led by acclaimed Colette (LFF 2018) and Still Alice director Wash Westmoreland, whose latest film Earthquake Bird screens in this year’s Festival; the First Feature Competition (Sutherland Award) jury will be headed up by Austrian director Jessica Hausner

    September 26, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    “3 From Hell” : The Satans are coming

    Rob Zombie’s latest film “3 From Hell” is the third film in his Firefly Clan trilogy and quite simply one of his best ones. This is a blood-soaked homage to the seventies grindhouse films that Zombie grew up admiring and the kind of wild genre craziness that became a major influence on both his music and directorial style.

    This is intense genre filmmaking on high levels. Zombie has been coasting for some years

    September 25, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    “Tattoo of revenge,” tipping the scales of justice down in Murderville

    Mexico City in the nineties was a place where the harshest crimes went unpunished due to money and a corrupt police force.

    Aida (an excellent and tortured performance from Diana Lein, an actress to watch!) serves up revenge for young women who have been raped and maltreated and weren’t able to find resolution on their own.

    Working out of the back of a nightclub, the women

    September 19, 2019
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “BULL” (directed by Annie Silverstein)

    How screwed up is America? In Annie Silverstein’s “Bull,” when young Kris (Amber Havard) gets arrested for breaking and entering and she’s offered a deal, she replies, “can’t you just send me to juvie?” The level of resignation that Kris, or other people like her in real life, must feel, is both baffling and dismaying. In Trump’s America, people like her who go through difficulties just shrug it off, hope for the best and

    September 16, 2019
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