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Reviews
Review: Happy People: A Year In The Taiga
What Robert Flaherty did with title cards in his silent Nanook of the North , Werner Herzog manages with declamatory voiceover in Happy People : romanticization of the austere, self-reliant lives of hunters and trappers in the icebound north.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| February 12, 2013
Review: Safe Haven
Somewhere along the way Nicholas Sparks went from being just a bestselling author of preachy schmaltz to a full-on franchise (he produces the movies of his books).
By:
TOM MEEK
| February 14, 2013
Review: The Last Reef 3D: Cities Beneath The Sea
The Last Reef , like Cameron's environmental epic, is the vehicle for a message, a call for cutting carbon emissions that are destroying the Earth's coral reefs — home to wondrous life forms, including crocodile fish, giant sea worms, and Finding Nemo –fan favorite, the clown fish — as the seas become more acidic.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| February 13, 2013
Review: Tabu
F.W. Murnau's indelible Tabu (1931), a last gasp of the silent era about young lovers cast out of their Polynesian paradise, gets a postcolonial gloss in Portuguese filmmaker (and former film critic) Miguel Gomes's similarly two-part meta-movie.
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| February 13, 2013
Review: White Zombie
Working stiffs
This Kino Classics release is worth it if only for historical purposes, since it demonstrates that from the start zombie films embodied the Marxist paradigm of capitalism (Lugosi) versus labor (zombies).
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| February 12, 2013
Review: A Good Day To Die Hard
A Good Day To Die Hard is a movie for people who like blowin' stuff up, evidently a favorite pastime of director John Moore, whose action scenes make about as much sense as his script, which was likely written on a cocktail napkin.
By:
JORDAN RIEFE
| February 15, 2013
Review: Escape From Planet Earth
On the distant planet Baab, in this animated feature, lives a family of aliens who must learn to cherish one another.
By:
JORDAN RIEFE
| February 14, 2013
Review: Beautiful Creatures
Mis spelled
Throughout his adaptation of Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl's YA novel, Richard Lagravenese drops the names of books that would have provided a more rewarding way of spending a couple of hours than watching this movie.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| February 11, 2013
Review: 56 Up
Upwardly immobile
56 Up is still moving and philosophic, though not as exciting as earlier episodes, which had more drama.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| February 05, 2013
Review: Bullet To The Head
Veteran director Walter Hill's return to the screen looks, sounds, and feels like an '80s action movie beefed-up for modern audiences with heaping helpings of messy blood squibs.
By:
MONICA CASTILLO
| February 05, 2013
Review: Side Effects
Placebo effect
Ironically, the filmmaker who started his career with sex, lies, and videotape , a film boosting female sexuality and empowerment, now ends it with a so-so thriller that resorts to the same old misogyny.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| February 08, 2013
Review: Oscar Nominated Shorts: Documentary
Brief encounters
For this year's program of Oscar-nominated documentary shorts, it's best to bring tissues. Things can get emotional.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| January 30, 2013
Review: Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters
From the occult-infested mind of Dead Snow director Tommy Wirkola comes another craptastic orgy of gore — one that's way better than it has any right to be.
By:
SHAULA CLARK
| January 30, 2013
Review: Movie 43
Don't subject yourself to this crap, which is credited to nine writers and 12 directors, among them Farrelly, Steven Brill (the auteur behind Adam Sandler's Little Nicky ), Steve Carr ( Paul Blart: Mall Cop ), and (sigh) Brett Ratner.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| January 30, 2013
Review: Parker
I didn't think any action hero could sustain as much damage as Arnold Schwarzenegger did in The Last Stand , but Jason Statham as the title thief in this adaptation of the Richard Stark (a/k/a Donald E. Westlake) novel Flashfire might have him beat.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| January 30, 2013
Review: Stand Up Guys
Has Al Pacino ever looked so small?
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| January 30, 2013
Review: The Oscar Nominated Short Films: Live Action and Animated
Highlights of the live-action shorts include the beautifully direct performances by Somali refugees in "Asad," a contemporary story (with folkloric undertones) of a boy who wants to be a pirate; the del Toro–esque fantasy setting of "Death of a Shadow"; the blend of dark comedy and gritty drama in the New York story of a little girl and her black-sheep uncle, "Curfew"; and the warmth of memory giving way to cold reality for an elderly man in "Henry."
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| January 30, 2013
Review: Hors Satan
God works in strange ways, especially when Bruno Dumont directs him. Or is that the devil?
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| January 30, 2013
Review: Warm Bodies
Reheated bodies
A zombie named R (Nicholas Hoult, who rarely has dialogue, speaking through voiceover for most of the film) eats the brains of dutiful young Perry (Dave Franco) and then creates a hostage situation cum romance with Julie (Teresa Palmer), the girl that Perry left behind.
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| February 01, 2013
Review: A Liar's Autobiography
Graham Cracked
The discovery of tapes of Graham Chapman reading from his 1980 A Liar’s Autobiography has made it possible for the expired Monty Python member to star, posthumously, in his own biopic.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| January 25, 2013
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Attend this film party: The Brattle's Pre-Oscar Bash
Outside The Frame
| February 19, 2013 at 3:00 PM
EXCLUSIVE: Debut Single off Slaine's “The Boston Project” - “Loyalty” feat. Kali & Twice Thou
On The Download
| February 19, 2013 at 11:44 AM
[dance party review] Three-channel abstracting: Dubfire @ Bijou 02.15.13
February 19, 2013 at 10:30 AM
Christopher Shea's Berlin Diary, part two
Outside The Frame
| February 15, 2013 at 5:11 PM
Free Fun Shit: Feb 15-21: Slumbrew social, Central Square roast, Chinese New Year celebration, Crabbie's ginger beer tasting + more
Phlog
| February 15, 2013 at 3:38 PM
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