A key, perhaps, to the labyrinth.
Every Indiana Jones film tells us, upfront, how to read and experience it.
Will we be a land of Charles Kinbotes?
Deprived, so suddenly and unexpectedly, of his place to write, Glenn Kenny created a new one.
Keith Uhlich guested on yesterday’s Movie Geeks United! podcast, chatting about the Sarasota and Tribeca film festivals, Speed Racer, and more.
The world seems a little brighter, a little sunnier each day we wake up together.
A new day dawns and, from this side of the web, it seems business as usual.
For me, movies approximate a dream state.
This is the inaugural installment of a new feature compiling links to reviews of new and recent theatrical films playing in North America.
Glorious Southern fried sloth, in epic widescreen.
An alternately grim and amusing parable, but give me Cassavettes instead.
Keith Uhlich appears on Blog Talk Radio to discuss this year’s Oscar nominations.
Whenever the film’s observational aesthetic threatens to become too distanced and clinical, Miller throws a wrench in the works.
There’s much more wrong than right with The Savages, an off-putting entry in the daddy’s-dyin’-who’s-got-the-will genre.
Is it a dream that two of cinema’s holiest of grails arrive on Region 1 DVD on the same day? If so, don’t wake me up.
If you don’t know Mick Jones from Steve Jones then you’ve no business watching Julien Temple’s film.
Simon J. Smith and Steve Hickner’s film is a satire afraid of its own sting.
Stop sawing logs, this is the definitive Twin Peaks DVD box set.
It’s easy to see why so many are impressed by Cristian Mungiu’s much-lauded Cannes prizewinner.
Redacted revels in a mixed, often muddled sense of humor and horror.