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The Last King of Scotland (2006): B
Having previously helmed the non-fictional One Day in September and semi-documentary Touching the Void, director Kevin MacDonald now makes the leap into full-fledged dramatic filmmaking – while nonetheless retaining his interest in historical subject matter – with The Last King of Scotland, an “inspired by true events” tale of young Scottish doctor Nicholas Garrigan (James…
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The Last Kiss (2001): C-
Utilizing an intertwined multi-character narrative so laughably contrived it borders on self-parody, The Last Kiss (L’Ultimo Bacio) repackages messy human dilemmas into something neat, tidy and oh-so-manipulatively inspiring. Gabriele Muccino’s knotted tale follows four close friends, their wives/lovers/one-night stands, and one older married couple as they struggle to navigate various romantic predicaments, all of which…
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The Ground Truth (2006): B-
For much of its first half, The Ground Truth is a documentary in search of a theme, with director Patricia Foulkrod leveling cursory criticisms against the Iraq war’s execution, the armed forces’ marketing campaigns and xenophobia-laced basic training procedures, and the media’s soft-peddling coverage of non-combatant fatalities, all in the hope that one will stick.…
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Alice (1988): B+
There’s a reason that Jan Svankmajer’s reimagining of Lewis Carroll’s seminal children’s fable is titled simply Alice – namely, because the bizarre, unsettling and occasionally terrifying world that his pint-sized heroine (Kristyna Kohoutova) magically enters is anything but a delightful wonderland. Melding live-action with stop-motion animation, Svankmajer remains largely faithful to his source material’s narrative…
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Code Unknown: Incomplete Tales of Several Journeys (2000): C+
German provocateur Michael Haneke operates in a vein similar to the villain of Code Unknown’s movie-within-the-movie The Collector, trapping his characters in meticulously constructed, confining scenarios in order to punish them. The difference, however, is that whereas the nefarious Collector’s plot against star Anne (Juliette Binoche) is seemingly perpetrated for no reason, Haneke has a…
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Sherrybaby (2006): C
Laurie Collyer’s Sherrybaby is the feminine flip-side to Ryan Fleck’s Half Nelson, less because its narrative centers on a Caucasian heroin junkie working with African-American children, and more because it’s a similar bit of trite indie melodrama bolstered by a searing lead performance. As Sherry Swanson, a recently paroled addict determined to win back custody…
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Versus (2000): C
Proving the old adage about less being more, Versus piles on so much geektastic pandemonium that it quickly results in sensory overload. Taking an exhausting kitchen-sink approach to genre hybridization, director Ryuhei Kitamura melds yakuza, samurai, and zombie films via this tale of an escaped convict (Tak Sakaguchi) who, having been broken out of jail…
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Labor Day Changeover
August is gone and the Fall movie season is right around the corner, meaning that it’s time for studios to dump their final summer films into theaters and then start preparing to roll out their Oscar hopefuls. My latest batch of reviews reflects this transitional release period, as I spent the past week checking out…
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Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006): B+
In many respects the Southern sibling of 2004’s Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, Will Ferrell’s latest act of comedic absurdity Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby is also, beneath its product placement-pockmarked façade and heavy layer of ludicrousness, a loving send-up of 21st century American pop and political culture. Delivering a barrage of…
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Tidal Wave of Positivity
I can’t remember the last time I wrote so many positive reviews in a week – and I’m not simply referring to these three new ones, but also the two (for Battle in Heaven and Pedro Almodóvar’s latest Volver) located directly below this post. Of course, after the largely disappointing summer that just was, I’m…
