Gimme the Loot

<i>Gimme the Loot</i>

Many TV shows and movies feature a pair of close friends, but rarely are those onscreen friendships healthy. Usually, the characters are feeding off each other’s problems and bickering with each other. In a refreshing change-up, Gimme the Loot features two leads who work to build each other up despite their differences....  read more

Reality

<i>Reality</i>

“Never give up!” These words are repeatedly shouted by Enzo, a character who has fame and fortune as a former reality show star. It’s meant as advice to Luciano (Aniello Arena), a fishmonger who desperately wants to follow in Enzo’s footsteps and appear on Italy’s version of the reality television series, Big Brother. Doggedly, Luciano pursues his dream and as he seems to get closer to the possibility, he unravels. Poignant, potent, and heartfelt, Reality is an incisive character study that shines a light on how TV and the allure of money and fame can distort our perception of ourselves...  read more

Stoker

<i>Stoker</i>

“To become adult is to become free.” Eighteen-year old India Stoker (Mia Wasikowska) intones these words over Stoker’s opening images—a series of beautifully composed shots of her standing on the side of a desolate road gazing out at something we can’t see....  read more

From Up on Poppy Hill

<i>From Up on Poppy Hill</i>

Adapted from the graphic novel by anime master Hayao Miyazaki (Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away and Howl’s Moving Castle) and directed by his son Goro (Tales from Earthsea), From Up on Poppy Hill is a lush and lyrical ode to a generation pivoting between the painful past and the promise of the future. Set in 1963 in the harbor city of Yokohama, the hand-drawn 2D ’toon captures a moment in time when Japan is still struggling to recover and rebuild in the wake of World War II while eagerly preparing for the Tokyo Summer Olympics. Against this backdrop, high schoolers Umi...  read more

Upside Down

<i>Upside Down</i>

One of the basic tenets of screenwriting is to show, not tell. Upside Down violates this rule in the first minute, and it’s no wonder; the sci-fi romance from writer/director Juan Solanas is the epitome of high concept....  read more

Couldn’t You Wait?: The Story of Silkworm

<i>Couldn’t You Wait?: The Story of Silkworm</i>

It’s practically a sub-genre unto itself at this point: Don’t-Call-Them-Indie Rock Docs Featuring Artists Whose Body of Work Remains Virtually Unknown to Mainstream Audiences. (The Devil and Daniel Johnston, Scott Walker: 30th Century Man, Dig! are just a few recent entries.) Seth Pomeroy’s Couldn’t You Wait?: The Story of Silkworm is the newest offering sure to confuse Netflix’s categorizing algorithm....  read more

Somebody Up There Likes Me

<i>Somebody Up There Likes Me</i>

At first glance, Somebody Up There Likes Me might be mistaken for a debut film from a recent graduate of the Wes Anderson School of Offbeat Filmmaking, but the pedigree of its director is concurrent with that of Anderson. The film, which premiered at last year’s SXSW, is director Bob Byington’s fifth writing/directing effort. His first was 1996’s Shameless, which, ironically enough, is the same year Anderson came along with his debut feature, Bottle Rocket....  read more

The End of Love

<i>The End of Love</i>

With his wife as his partner, Mark (Mark Webber) might have handled parenthood fine. Alone, he has neither the maturity nor the wherewithal to rise to the task. The End of Love studies a man in disarray after his wife’s death, trying to care for his 2-year-old son yet lacking (or unwilling to use) any of the tools needed to do so. He soon finds himself alone and lost in a haze of young adulthood....  read more

Ginger & Rosa

<i>Ginger & Rosa</i>

We’re all shaped by our environments. Whether it’s the family we grew up in or the times we find ourselves, there’s no denying the massive influence that outside factors have in contributing to the people we’ll become. That’s never more true than in our formative adolescent years, a point that’s hammered home in writer-director Sally Potter’s Ginger & Rosa, a coming-of-age period tale about a young woman who discovers that her worldview might not be as freely chosen as she’d like to think....  read more

About Sunny

<i>About Sunny</i>

Supposedly based on writer/director Bryan Wizemann’s own real-life experiences, it’s difficult to not give the sustained note of misery that is About Sunny a complete pass out of utter pity....  read more

The Silence

<i>The Silence</i>

Swiss director Baran bo Odar’s debut feature film, The Silence, is a particularly tense thriller about the murder of children and the price paid for all involved because of those who mutely bear witness to such a crime. The film begins somewhere in rural Germany, where two men come across a young girl riding her bicycle through a wheat field. One of the men rapes and murders her, while the other looks on in either horror or impotence; it’s unclear at this point. Shortly thereafter, the passive participant wordlessly boards a bus and disappears from his partner’s life. Flash-forward to...  read more

Oz the Great and Powerful

<i>Oz the Great and Powerful</i>

Oz the Great and Powerful may well be the first movie since Avatar to fully exploit 3D’s potential as a “wonder delivery device” for the entire length of the movie.  read more

Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey

<i>Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey</i>

Everyone loves a story in which a likable underdog triumphs and finds success; it’s a formula that’s been proven to be a hit with film audiences over and over again. The latest example of this is the story of Arnel Pineda, who was plucked out of obscurity from his life playing in cover bands in the Philippines to become the new frontman of Journey. Ramona S. Diaz’s documentary, which played at the Tribeca Film Festival last year, offers an engaging, sweeping overview of Pineda’s story, which is buoyed by the cheesy but classic sounds of Journey and Pineda’s soft-spoken, humble...  read more

Beyond the Hills

<i>Beyond the Hills</i>

Writer-director Cristian Mungiu’s follow-up to his Palme d’Or-winning film 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days once again centers on best friends ensnared in a draconian institution. But whereas his 2007 film dealt with a modern issue (securing an illegal abortion) in an urban setting, Beyond the Hills addresses ancient conflicts of faith vs. free will and the needs of the community vs. the desires of the individual, in the isolated setting of a rural Orthodox convent.  read more

Jack the Giant Slayer

<i>Jack the Giant Slayer</i>

It’s easy to imagine the film as a piece of Ikea furniture, with instructions reading “Insert herö-A and heröine-B into plöt pöint C.”  read more

Koch

<i>Koch</i>

Released on the very day that its subject passed away at age 88, Koch is a fitting eulogy for the 105th mayor of New York City. The title may have been held by three men since Ed Koch’s three-term run from 1978 to 1989 but for many New Yorkers, it still belongs to Koch, “the people’s mayor.” Directed by former Wall Street Journal reporter Neil Barsky, the documentary charts both the triumphs and fiascos of the beloved figure while celebrating his singular personality. Quick with a quip and infamously blunt, Koch remained politically active right to the end while reflecting...  read more

A Place at the Table

<i>A Place at the Table</i>

Years ago, a friend of mine who immigrated from Iraq told me that one of the biggest shocks in arriving wasn’t how people behaved, but the overabundance of choices, in of all places, a supermarket. The fact that she would be nearly paralyzed by the amount of choices made me appreciate the “super” in supermarket. The dark side to all those choices and why a nation should be ashamed is featured in the poverty documentary A Place at the Table....  read more

Escape from Planet Earth

<i>Escape from Planet Earth</i>

You know there’s usually a juicy backstory when advance screenings for a film aren’t offered to press, there’s a lawsuit from the former production team and the final writing credits alone are nearly as long as a true indie film’s entire crew. Such is the case with The Weinstein Company’s animated sci-fi adventure Escape from Planet Earth, which quietly slipped into theaters this past weekend....  read more

Stand Up Guys

<i>Stand Up Guys</i>

There’s something about Stand Up Guys that’s both brilliant and poignant. The film, directed by Fisher Stevens and written by Noah Haidle, is the story of a group of men who reunite for a final night of depravity....  read more

Identity Thief

<i>Identity Thief</i>

Melissa McCarthy presents a familiar problem. The comedienne du jour who made her bones in Bridesmaids and the television series Mike & Molly is a force of funny, a comet that everyone is trying to catch. She is that rare commodity, an actress who is so good at her craft that she can play her role without the crutch of desirability, and her combination of appeals makes her a filmmaker’s dream. She’s sympathetic enough to bring pathos to characters who would descend into cartoonish single dimension in lesser hands, but versatile enough to make even the most basic gags shine...  read more

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