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Reviews
Review: Rust And Bone
One image from Jacques Audiard's overwrought melodrama suggests what a shimmering, mysterious movie it might have been.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| December 18, 2012
Review: This Is 40
I'm at a loss to empathize with the middle-aged plight of Pete (Paul Rudd) and Debbie (Leslie Mann), supporting players in Judd Apatow's Knocked Up , now front and center in the writer/director/producer's kinda-sorta sequel.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| December 20, 2012
Review: Hyde Park On Hudson
Lurking beneath Hyde Park on Hudson , the latest film to repurpose historical icons for Oscar-bait melodrama, is a screwball comedy trying desperately to break though.
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| December 13, 2012
Review: Playing For Keeps
Gabriele Muccino's misogynistic family sports film stars Gerard Butler as has-been Scottish footie star George Dryer, a man who once "got more ass than a toilet seat," according to screenwriter Robbie Fox, who bends it like Beckham to present George as the willing victim of oversexed soccer moms making advances toward their kids' new coach.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| December 12, 2012
Review: The Central Park Five
Rough justice
It wasn't the Mississippi Delta but enlightened, liberal New York City where, in 1989, five Harlem and Bronx teenage boys, black and Latino, were arrested, bullied by the police, and intimidated into making false confessions that they had raped and brutally injured a female jogger in Central Park.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| December 13, 2012
Review: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Short subject
Some things were meant to be shorter, like Hobbits, and The Hobbit.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| December 13, 2012
Review: The Comedy
Many in the audience rankled as Rick Alverson's The Comedy played in competition at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| December 05, 2012
Review: Deadfall
To his credit, director Stefan Ruzowitzky seems to be attempting a critique of patriarchy, since all the men are assholes and the women are victims.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| December 06, 2012
Review: Killing Them Softly
Though Andrew Dominik shot his follow-up to 2007's The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford in N'awlins, it's a Boston movie through-and-through.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| December 05, 2012
Review: The Collection
Marcus Dunstan's second outing brings back Arkin (Josh Stewart), the only man to have escaped the masked figure's meat grinders.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| December 05, 2012
Review: My Worst Nightmare
Dream casting
The storyline of Anne Fontaine's French comedy is mainstream: a yuppie art dealer, Agathe (Isabelle Huppert), finds her condescending values challenged and her sexuality opened up by a crude but "natural" laborer (Benoît Poelvoorde).
By:
GERALD PEARY
| December 03, 2012
Review: The Waiting Room
If people believe Mitt Romney's assertion that emergency rooms are a solution for the uninsured, this is a powerful rebuke.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| November 27, 2012
Review: Mahler On The Couch
Couch potato
Mahler on the Couch , from the father-and-son directing team of Percy and Felix Adlon, offers some creative speculation, with flashbacks detailing the crisis points of the marriage and snatches from the anguished first movement of Mahler's unfinished Tenth Symphony.
By:
JEFFREY GANTZ
| November 27, 2012
Review: A Royal Affair
Chances are a movie about 18th-century Danish history might not be a grabber. But this one could have been, had director Nikolaj Arcel cut the length by about 15 minutes, injected some zest into the narrative, and perhaps done some recasting.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| November 23, 2012
Review: Rise of the Guardians
A true surprise, this feature directing debut from storyboard artist Peter Ramsey isn't the lump of coal I expected. Instead it's a computer-animated crowd pleaser featuring unique interpretations of mythical childhood characters reinvented as the kiddie equivalent (well, kiddie-er) of The Avengers .
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| November 23, 2012
Review: The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2
As vampire/teen heartthrob Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) embraces his bride, Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart), for the first time since she died (and awoke as a new member of the bloodsucking Cullen clan) while giving birth to the rapidly aging Renesmee (Mackenzie Foy), he smiles and says, "We're the same temperature finally."
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| November 21, 2012
Review: Tristana
Papist plot
Though one was an atheist and the other a churchgoer, both Luis Buñuel and Alfred Hitchcock were obsessed with their Catholicism.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| November 21, 2012
Review: 2012 British Arrow Awards
These British imports come from varying corners of the marketplace, from phone companies to soft-drink makers, and seek to appeal to international jet setters, the child in all of us, or even to the daring bit of ourselves that would like to piss off Chef Gordon Ramsay.
By:
MONICA CASTILLO
| November 21, 2012
Review: Red Dawn
High-school football players trade Friday-night lights for AK-47s when North Korea invades Spokane in this remake of John Milius's 1984 hit, whose rallying cry is no longer "freedom" but "family."
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| November 21, 2012
Review: Hitchcock
At his lowest, Hitch refers to an early edit of Psycho as "stillborn." That description also applies to this film.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| November 21, 2012
Review: Life of Pi
Pi-Eyed
Pi Patel promises a story that will make you believe in God.
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| November 23, 2012
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| March 24, 2013 at 11:09 AM
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March 21, 2013 at 12:59 PM
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| March 18, 2013 at 3:22 PM
See this film series: The Belmont World Film Series @ Studio Cinema in Belmont
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| March 18, 2013 at 11:00 AM
See this film: This is Spinal Tap [with post-film talk by expert from Acoustical Society of America] @ the Coolidge
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