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Tag Archives: Reviews
Documentary Review: “Bonnie Blue: James Cotton’s Life in the Blues”
The bluesman James Cotton was the son of a sharecropping Mississippi Baptist preacher and a mother who played the harmonica. And when they died when he was quite young, he picked up his mother’s harmonica and used it to play … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged blues, documentary-review, james-cotton, music, Reviews, rock
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Movie Review: Whatever you do, Don’t Give “Jade” a Blade
“Cool” is the lifeblood of an indie thriller. Park your tale in a novel “cool” setting. Serve up a “cool” heist/scheme/plot, preferably with epic brawls, chases or shootouts. Cast a cool heavy. But even if you ignore or narrowly miss … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged action-film, b-movie, movie-review, Reviews, samurai-sword, shaina-west, thriller
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Movie Review: Meet your compliant and cuddly new AI robotic “Companion”
“Companion” is a horrific and caustically cautionary sci-fi thriller about how the digitized alternatives to dating might go wrong. Very wrong. Signing on an impressive cast, writer-director Drew Hancock takes a big, roundhouse swing at “coupling” in a distracted, instant … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged horror, jack-quaid, movie-review, Reviews, sophie-thatcher
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Movie Review: “The Damned” Fishermen face Consequences for their Cruelest Mistake
“The Damned” is a thriller built on one of the oldest formulas in fiction. First, there are many, as Dame Agatha taught us, “And Then There were None.” Ah, but what a setting this 19th century fable has — the … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged film, horror, movies, Reviews, the-damned
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Movie Review: Bisset still has her shimmer in “Loren & Rose”
A screen legend gives better than a lackluster indie script deserves in “Loren & Rose,” a movie about a movie-maker befriending a once-famous actress he needs to get his new movie made. Maybe there’s a bit of art-imitates-film-life in this … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged drama, film, jacqueline-bisset, movies, Reviews
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Movie Review: A 1970 “radical” family working through their issues — “Three Birthdays”
“Radical” politics — sexual, racial and otherwise — Vietnam, the first Earth Day, the sexual revolution, “female solidarity” and Kent State are the backdrop of “Three Birthdays,” a downbeat family melodrama about the day “The Sixties Died.” Writer-director Jane Weinstock … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged 1970, black-power, books, josh-radnor, kent-state, politics, Reviews, sexual-politics
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Movie Review: Tragic, Scandalous and Recent History Remembered — “Nickel Boys”
In “Nickel Boys,” first-time feature director RaMell Ross almost overwhelms performance with technique. Characters are obscured, faces hidden, glimpsed from the legs down to their shoes, passing by in the blur of memory. By the time we set our eyes … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged brandon-wilson, ethan-herisse, movie-review, nickel-boys, ramell-ross, Reviews
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BOX OFFICE: It’s Bombs Away for MLK Day as toothless “Wolf Man” and “One of Them Days” has One of Them Weekends
I felt as if I could test the echoing accoustics of my local multipex Thursday evening when I went to see and review “Wolf Man” and “One of Them Days” (and “The Room Next Door”). The cinema was that empty. … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged box-office, film, keke, movie-review, movies, one-of-them-days, oscars, Reviews, wolf-man
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Movie Review: Almodóvar Ponders Death and the Lives Preceding it from “The Room Next Door”
In his mid ’70s, it’s only natural that the great Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar should turn his attentions to reflecting on lives lived, and questions of how one wants life to end with his latest film. But in boiling down … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged almodovar, john-turturro, julianne-moore, movie-review, Reviews, tilda-swinton, woodstock
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Classic Film Review: Brit Noir, Warner Bros. style — “They Made Me a Fugitive (I Became a Criminal)” (1948)
Here’s a flashy, violent British film noir in the classic Warner Bros. fashion, an on-the-lam thriller set in the postwar U.K. underworld where a war hero pays the price for going wrong. “They Made Me A Fugitive,” the film that … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged british-cinema, film-noir, movie-review, movies, Reviews, trevor-howard, tubi, warner-bros
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