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Author Archives: Roger Moore
Movie Review: A Hungarian doctor discovers the need for antiseptics in the Oscar hopeful “Semmelweis”
The medical biopic“Semmelweis“would make a fine double feature paired with the recent Netflix medical history drama “Joy.” Set a century apart, they’re both about a male-dominated medical profession struggling with issues of childbirth. “Joy” is about the long process of … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged hungary, ignaz-semmelweis, medical-history, movie-review, oscars
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Documentary Preview: “Becoming Led Zeppelin”
The one apparent “drawback,” if one can call it that, to this doc is the “authorized” nature of this doc of a band not without its share of “lore” and controversy. Morgan Neville (“Piece by Piece,” “20 Feet from Stardom,” … Continue reading
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Netflixable? The Postwar Poor in Italy ship their kids North on “The Children’s Train”
World War II put lots of children, all over the world, in mortal danger. Those families that could often put them on trains to escape it. From the Kindertransport of Jewish children from Nazi controlled corners of Europe to the … Continue reading
Movie Preview: Gillian Anderson, Jason Isaacs are tested by life and a long walk along “The Salt Path”
Hiking, camping, sight-seeing, battered by the elements and homeless in the UK. So…Dorset to Somerset it is. Coming soon, plainly not soon enough for me.
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Movie Review: A Prodigal daughter comes home to find she’s been replaced — “You are Not Me”
The Spanish thriller “You Are Not Me” takes its sweet, creepy time getting around to stating the obvious. Set and shot in rural Valencia, it’s about a doctor/daughter who’s come home for the holidays, bringing her wife and Black adopted … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged lesbian-couple, movie-review, rosemarys-baby, satanism, spain, spanish-horror-film
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Movie Review: Palestine’s hope for Oscar recognition? “From Ground Zero” takes us inside Gaza
When tragedy hits artists, artists create. So when the civilians of Gaza were consumed by the conflict that ignited between Hamas and Israel, Palestinian artists — documentarians and diarists, influencers and animators — set out to describe their experience on … Continue reading
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Tagged gaza, israel, middle-east, movie-review, oscars, palestine, politics
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Movie Review: A Boxer readies Body and Soul for the “Day of the Fight”
“Day of the Fight” is a sentimental and soulful “fight picture,” a movie that follows a former champ through every bit of personal business he feels he has to take care of before his “comeback” that night. The actor-turned-director Jack … Continue reading
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Tagged boxing-picture, film, jack-huston, joe-pesci, michael-pitt, movie-reviews, nicolette-robinson, perlman
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Classic Film Review: Bronson Brawls and an action auteur is born — Walter Hill’s “Hard Times” (1975)
There’s a gentility about “Hard Times,” a bare-knuckle brawling drama set during the Great Depression. It’s a genre piece populated with veteran character actors playing archetypes bound by their own code, playing their parts in a story so pre-ordained that … Continue reading
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Tagged 70s-cinema, charles-bronson, coburn, movie-review, movie-reviews, walter-hill
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Movie Review: Struggling Siblings reconnect, or try to — “Scrap”
Thirtyish Beth smiles and gives her five-year-old daughter a squeeze. “Gremlin, you know I will always take care of you.” As we’ve heard Beth lie like she breathes, we doubt that, even if the little girl she named Barbara but … Continue reading
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Tagged homelessness, indie-dramedy, la-film, movie-reviews, single-mom
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Netflixable? Parole violators don’t stand a chance against “Officer Black Belt”
Absurd on its surface and dark hearted to say the least, “Officer Black Belt” is a violent thriller that flirts with being a Korean action comedy. If you can get by the murderers, rapists and many child molesters brought to … Continue reading
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Tagged action-comedy, korean-drama, martial-arts-thriller, movie-review, netflix, sex-crimes
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