FREAKY TALES (no distrib): The writer/directors Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck have returned from their profitable but unbeloved sojourn in the land of Captain Marvel to their indie roots with Freaky Tales. While heartfelt and entertaining, the effort is also intensely derivative. Fleck was a child of 1987 Oakland, where Freaky Tales takes place, and it’s a […]
THE BALLAD OF WALLIS ISLAND (Focus/Universal – March 28): A low-key British charmer. A decade ago, Herb (Tom Basden) had a successful run as part of a folk duo with Nell (Carey Mulligan), which ended when they broke up both personally and professionally. Now, Herb is still trying to establish himself as a solo […]
> Although Fox Searchlight didn’t actually acquire Steve McQueen’s film Shame until last Saturday, in a sense the marketing campaign for the film began when the producers made it clear that the film would not be edited for US release, and would be distributed with an NC-17 rating. This quickly became the most memorable fact […]
> Although Sundance still has several days to go, and surprises could spring up at any time (yesterday The Surrogate, a drama with John Hawkes as a man in an iron lung who decides to lose his virginity to a sex therapist played by Helen Hunt, came out of nowhere to win a huge $6M […]
Michael Shannon is brilliant in ICEMAN, but it has to be said that he’s brilliant in just about the same way that he was in Take Shelter, in Revolutionary Road, on Boardwalk Empire, and even in The Runaways (although at least there he got to be funny). For an actor who only became known to a wide audience 3 years ago […]
LONE SURVIVOR: Buy A Ticket – A Powerfully Visceral Tale of War Peter Berg’s LONE SURVIVOR, which was shown at the AFI Film Festival tonight in advance of its release late next month, is a docudrama in the truest sense: based on the memoir by Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell, it exists with one aim […]
THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (Focus/Universal) – Opens November 7 – Worth A Ticket There’s a benefit but also a burden to being clear-cut “Oscar bait.” At this point we all know the kinds of movies the Academy looks upon with favor: serious biographies, period pieces, leading actors who contort themselves in one way or […]
For this audience member, it was the day Toronto moved into high gear. MOONLIGHT (A24 – October 21): Barry Jenkins’s second film, after his little-seen but much-praised Medicine For Melancholy, is a validation of film festival culture and a reminder of the power of film as personal expression. (Although the source material is a […]