Author Archives: Roger Moore

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About Roger Moore

Movie Critic, formerly with McClatchy-Tribune News Service, Orlando Sentinel, published in Spin Magazine, The World and now published here, Orlando Magazine, Autoweek Magazine

Documentary Review: Meditating meetings with E.T. — “Close Encounters of the Fifth Kind”

In recent years, the UFO community has relished various military and governmental agencies’ confirmation that they’ve been looking into Unidentified Flying Objects and that they’re taking the subject seriously, even releasing some credible and incredible close encounter footage to demonstrate … Continue reading

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Netflixable? In Spain, beware “The Fury of the Patient Man”

Jose doesn’t look out of place, hanging in “The Bar,” having a drink and playing cards with the boys. The goatee may make him stand out. And the fact that we never see him smile. Not ever. He’s tight with … Continue reading

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Movie Preview: A meteor event in close “PROXIMITY”

Aliens? In LA? Go figure. May.

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Netflixable? Don’t run toward the “Dark Light”

    A juvenile in jeopardy, impressively dark and gloomy production values and a leading lady who delivers bug-eyed alarm with the best of them give “Dark Light” a fighting chance. It’s a creature feature with a silly but scary … Continue reading

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Movie Review: How “Winter Flies” when you run away from your Czech home

If only every comedy had the surprise twist that the Czech road picture “Winter Flies” saves for its finale. It’s simple, and simple-minded, and it so upends expectations that it leaves you the way every comedy should — tickled. It’s … Continue reading

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Documentary Review: Netflix’s “One of Us” exposes the horrors of escaping Hasidism

The portrait of the Hasidic community that’s emerged in films paint it as an insular, secretive and virulently patriarchal cult — a combination of the worst theocratic fundamentalism of the Amish, Islam and Mormonism. Documentaries such as “93 Queen” capture … Continue reading

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Movie Review: “Train to Busan” shows how Korea handles the zombie invasion

With its sequel, “Peninsula,” in the can and slated for release whenever the REAL viral invasion lets up (Fall?), I guess I’d best catch up on “Train to Busan,” the movie that inspired it. “Train to Busan” (2016) didn’t reinvent … Continue reading

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Netflixable? French teachers contend with “Dangerous Minds” in “School Life”

    The school monitors treat the morning Meet and Greet with the kids as an insult contest. Unstylish back pack? Just make sure your “parachute” doesn’t open in the middle of class. Asian kid’s late? Don’t they have buses … Continue reading

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A 20 year low at the Box Office?

How many theaters will close? How many promising films will wind up move to 2021? From The Hollywood Reporter –“If theaters are closed for three months, domestic grosses may struggle to hit $7 billion, a 20-year-plus low.” https://t.co/ReHNvED9jz https://twitter.com/THR/status/1249141270724960259?s=20

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Movie Review: Shea and Shannon square off over mortal sins in “The Quarry”

    Georgian Scott Teems, who first gained notice with the Faulkneresque Southern Gothic “That Evening Sun,” gives the genre a Hispano-Southern Gothic updating with “The Quarry,” a dark and blood-stained morality tale set in remote, rural “Reconquista”Texas. The script, … Continue reading

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