Article Archive for December 2011
By Matt Sills
Turn on the TV during the holiday season, and you’ll find the same old movies you see every year: It’s A Wonderful Life, A Christmas Story, Elf, Home Alone, and Christmas Vacation to …
By Richard von Busack
Sweden’s Tomas Alfredson follows up the best vampire movie of the last few years with Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. It’s about a different breed of parasites: justifiable (sometimes self-justifiable) as Britain’s last …
By Richard von Busack
ONLY Steven Spielberg could do what is done in War Horse. Only he could have authorized the expensive World War I re-creations: a sumptuous cavalry charge, with officers Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom …
By Matt Sills
This Christmas weekend will see six movies get a wide release, each trying to beat the other to a pulp at the box office. Big time directors like David Fincher and Cameron Crowe …
By Richard von Busack
Show up early and get into the sweet spot in a 70mm Imax Theater meaning, near the center and back a row or two. Not only will you be the first person …
By Richard von Busack
After concluding an exceptionally busy year, the Irish/German actor Michael Fassbender is sure to be short-listed for the Oscar nominations for his role as the sex addict Brandon in Shame.
The poster, showing …
Don’t believe everything you see in the movies – for $39 you can easily learn to kick a bunch of pompous action movie stars into last week. This knowledge will come to you thanks to …
By Richard von Busack
In setting up the career of the ultimate arch-villain, Arthur Conan-Doyle may have introduced him wrong-way round. We don’t witness the moment of discovery when Sherlock Holmes first pieces together the vastness …
By Richard von Busack
Sometimes a movie is particularly irritating just because it’s about 10 degrees away from something that might have worked.
In Young Adult, Diablo Cody gets away from the arch slang of Juno: Oscar-winning …
by Richard von Busack
TAKESHI KITANO’S new film is almost plot-free but rich with incident, visual skill and loads of violence. Outrage shows the Japanese filmmaker at the top of his craft. The action consists essentially …