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GERALD PEARY
Latest Articles
Review: The Inbetweeners
Based on the popular British telly series
Based on a popular British telly series and directed by Ben Palmer, The Inbetweeners sends its four randy, clumsy, post-high-school twits on a journey to the hedonistic vacation resort of Malia on the Mediterranean island of Crete.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| September 04, 2012
Review: Compliance
Behind the Milgram experiments
Filmmaker Craig Zobel ( Great World of Sound ) takes an infamous 2004 rape case — in which a caller claiming to be a cop talked a McDonald's manager and later her fiance into assaulting a teenage worker — and uses this as a basis of a thoroughly disturbing, sometimes mean-spirited indie narrative film.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| August 31, 2012
Review: The Imposter
Bart Layton's documentary
The premise of Bart Layton's documentary is sublimely preposterous.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| August 29, 2012
Review: A Cat In Paris
Jean-Loup Felicioli and Alain Gagnol's French cartoon
Jean-Loup Felicioli and Alain Gagnol's nicely hand-drawn and colored French cartoon was a 2012 Academy Award nomination for best animated film.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| June 26, 2012
Review: Whore's Glory
Painted ladies
Austrian documentarian Michael Glawogger takes his camera into three pitiable spots where there is open prostitution, and where painted ladies, desperate for a living wage, service the most craven clientele.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| June 12, 2012
Review: Nobody Else But You
Nothing special
A dried-up French crime novelist (Jean-Paul Rouve) finds sudden inspiration for a new mystery in the true-life story of a TV weathergirl (Sophie Quinton).
By:
GERALD PEARY
| June 05, 2012
Review: Elena
Domestic servitude
Andrei Zvyagintsev's film, a Special Jury Prize winner at Cannes 2011, becomes more than a domestic melodrama: a grim, effective allegory of the daily whirl in Putinland.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| May 30, 2012
Review: I Wish
The estrangement of two brothers
Two elementary school brothers living in southern Japan are forced to live in different cities due to the estrangement of their parents.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| May 22, 2012
Review: Surviving Progress
How mankind has gone wrong
Despite prestigious talking heads like Margaret Atwood, Jane Goodall, and Stephen Hawking, there is nothing new here beyond what every conscientious liberal already knows is wrong with the world.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| May 15, 2012
Review: Headhunters
Slick entertainment
Roger (Aksel Hennie) is an Oslo yuppie with a gorgeous, blonde wife, a top-drawer job as a corporate headhunter, and a lucrative side employment stealing fancy paintings.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| May 08, 2012
Review: Elles
Dubious and exploitative
How did the Polish filmmaker Malgoska Szumowska dupe the classy Juliette Binoche to participate in such a dubious, exploitative film?
By:
GERALD PEARY
| May 08, 2012
Review: This Is Not A Film
Artistic provocation
It can't be a film, because the acclaimed director Jafar Panahi ( The Circle , etc.) has been ordered not to make any by the Iranian theocrats who have also sentenced the dissident filmmaker to an upcoming jail sentence.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| May 01, 2012
Review: Turn Me On, Dammit
High school alienation
In the nowhere Norwegian mountain town of Skoddeheimen, Alma, 15, is bored with her surroundings, alienated from her mom, and so horny that she pays for a telephone sex service.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| April 24, 2012
Review: Monsieur Lazhar
Subtle, wise, and beautifully rendered
A Montreal elementary school is traumatized by a suicide in the classroom of a popular instructor.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| April 18, 2012
Review: Hipsters
Nice try, Russian musical
The first Russian musical in half a century, Valery Todorovsky's Hipsters gets rubles for trying, but what's on screen is thin and obvious, the characters one-dimensional, the musical numbers and satire vapid.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| April 10, 2012
Review: The Dish & the Spoon
Chance indie encounters
Dumped by her husband, an enraged young woman, Rose (Greta Gerwig), drives around coastal towns in the Delaware winter swearing revenge against her straying spouse and an ill fate for the gal who lured him away.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| April 10, 2012
Review: The Kid with a Bike
Warmth in juvenile delinquency
This Grand Prix winner at Cannes 2011 is among the best films by Belgium's Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| April 03, 2012
Review: The Salt of Life
Wacky humor mixed with melancholy
The Salt of Life deftly sprinkles wacky humor in with the melancholy, and Di Gregorio is a winning talent, both as the amusing star actor and as the film's co-writer and director.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| March 14, 2012
Review: The Forgiveness of Blood
Joshua Marston's thoughtful, subtle feature
American filmmaker Joshua Marston ( Maria Full of Grace ) traveled to Albania to write and direct this thoughtful, subtle feature about the victims of a blood feud, with an all-Albanian ensemble.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| March 07, 2012
Review: Addiction Incorporated
Charles Evans Jr.'s muckraking documentary
Much of the first half of Charles Evans Jr.'s muckraking documentary is annoyingly gimmicky, relying on unneeded graphics, animation, and imitation-Errol-Morris effects to tell the tale of a Philip Morris scientist, Victor DeNoble, who became a key government witness against his old employer.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| February 21, 2012
Review: The Oscar Nominated Short Films 2012: Animated
Standouts
One film stands out among the Animated Shorts, Amanda Forbis and Wendy Tilby's Wild Life .
By:
GERALD PEARY
| February 08, 2012
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EXCLUSIVE: Debut Single off Slaine's “The Boston Project” - “Loyalty” feat. Kali & Twice Thou
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| February 15, 2013 at 3:38 PM
Q&A #7: GOP Senate Field
Talking Politics
| February 15, 2013 at 12:40 PM
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Dispatches from the 34th Montreal World Film Festival
Scenes from the Plaza Classic Film Festival