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Reviews
Review: Cape Spin: An American Power Struggle
The story of the Cape Wind clean-energy project
When you've got the Kennedys and the Koch brothers on the same side of an issue, it's hard to know what to think.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| June 13, 2012
Review: Lola Versus
Bottoming out
Will Greta Gerwig ever be in another film in which she doesn't wear ugly underwear? Will there ever be a movie about heartbroken women where they don't find consolation in food?
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| June 14, 2012
Review: Safety Not Guaranteed
An act of nostalgia
For a generation weary of Zooey Deschanel's manic pixie and of staring down a future of student loans and dreary internships, Aubrey Plaza, the deadpan alt-comic who could have stepped out of the pages of Ghost World, may be the next dream girl.
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| June 14, 2012
Review: Rock of Ages
Soft mock
In retrospect, 1987, the year in which this adaptation of Chris D'Arienzo's hit Broadway show is set, might have been the moment that pop culture shit the bed.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| June 15, 2012
Review: Prometheus
Ridley Scott's monumental and busy return
The best films in the Alien series, Ridley Scott's original and James Cameron's pluralized follow-up, didn't bother much with pondering the meaning of it all. The only film that did so, Alien 3 , is the worst.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| June 07, 2012
Review: Bel Ami
The film adaptation of Guy de Maupassant's 1885 novel
The title is the term of endearment given to a charming young reporter by a series of influential Parisian women.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| June 05, 2012
Review: High School
Inane and ignorant
A pot comedy that won't reward even the most easily satisfied stoner, High School is just as inane and ignorant as the Reefer Madness -style films it aims to satirize.
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| June 05, 2012
Review: Hysteria
Tanya Wexler's enjoyable, fictionalized period piece
Struggling physician Mortimer Granville (Hugh Dancy) has struck pay dirt assisting Dr. Robert Dalrymple (Jonathan Pryce), whose London waiting room is packed with bourgeois housewives suffering from "hysteria."
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| June 05, 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: Peace, Love & Misunderstanding
Summer of free love
When her husband (Kyle MacLachlan) asks for a divorce, New York corporate lawyer Diane (Catherine Keener) takes her teenage children, brainy vegan Zoe (Elizabeth Olsen) and Werner Herzog-wannabe Jake (Nat Wolff), up to Woodstock to meet her estranged mother (Jane Fonda), an unreconstructed hippie who lets chickens roam the house, grows pot in her basement, and still practices free love.
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| June 07, 2012
Review: Double Trouble
Inept martial arts comedy
David Chang's inept martial arts comedy confirms the genius of Jackie Chan.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| June 05, 2012
Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted
The franchise matures
The franchise that began as a tame kiddie pleaser about four pampered zoo animals lost in the wild has matured and sharpened its teeth, perhaps thanks to Noah Baumbach ( The Squid and the Whale ) collaborating on the script.
By:
TOM MEEK
| June 07, 2012
Review: Snow White and the Huntsman
Not the old clichés
Hers is not the old clichéd path towards romance, but the new clichéd path towards becoming a kickass girl warrior.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| June 07, 2012
Review: Follow Me: The Yoni Netanyahu Story
Jonathan Gruber and Ari Daniel Pinchot document Yoni's life story
Whatever your opinion of the policies of Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, you can't deny that his brother Yoni was a hero, a courageous man whose conflicts and triumphs mirror those of his homeland.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| May 29, 2012
Review: The Whole World Waiting
Fifteen immigrant and refugee teenagers tell their stories
They thought America was a glittering land of wealth and fame . . . they were wrong. Fifteen immigrant and refugee teenagers tell their stories of coming to New England and share their perspectives in The Whole World Waiting , a compilation of documentary vignettes lushly shot by David Meiklejohn at locations in and around Portland, Maine.
By:
DEIRDRE FULTON
| May 29, 2012
Review: Moonrise Kingdom
Wes Anderson paints his masterpiece
Wes Anderson should always make movies featuring characters who are pubescent or younger — like Rushmore , which until this film was his best.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| June 20, 2012
Review: Chernobyl Diaries
Tried and true formula
More akin to a meander through a haunted house than a fulfilling feature film, the latest work from Paranormal Activity auteur Oren Peli (he produces, Bradley Parker directs) relies on his tried-and-true formula of favoring atmospheric terror over visceral scares.
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| May 29, 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: For Greater Glory
Never-ending war
Bring coffee, because director Dean Wright's dramatization of the 3-year-long Cristero War (1926-9) seems to last longer than the Mexican conflict itself.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| May 29, 2012
Review: The Intouchables
Traveling well
French comedies rarely travel well, but The Intouchables , the first film from the writer-director team of Eric Toledano and Olivier Nakache to be commercially released here, has earned its status as an international blockbuster.
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| August 29, 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
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