Like a lot of ambitious series, ABC’s Lost doesn’t hit a home run every week.
If you’re in the area, stop in and check it out, or at least look me up so we can talk movies.
Happy birthday, Mr. Corman.
Being a kid in the 1970’s had its advantages, the least of which was not being responsible for the horrific clothing your parents made you wear.
The film deftly sketches psychological portraits of some desperate but recognizable human types.
If there’s one thing I know for sure about David Chase, it’s that he likes surprising viewers.
A wise man once said that art is a negotiation between the found and the made.
The results may surprise you.
There aren’t many people hiking on this particular trail.
Unfortunately, most festivals aren’t as well-funded as, say, the one pictured below.
Scorsese, De Niro, and Paul Schrader buffs will want to check out the documentary The Plot to Kill Reagan.
Ice Age 2: The Meltdown offers one comic-epic splendor after another.
You needn’t have watched every Best Picture winner to vote.
Veronica Mars at times seems unaware just how much of its energy is bound up in the relationship between the title character and her ex-boyfriend.
Harvey Keitel’s performance is one of the most committed in movie history.
Criminals try not to take their work home with them, but somehow it sneaks in anyway.
Alex Karpovsky’s debut feature will screen at the Harvard Film Archive on March 31.
David Chase and his writers are so cynical about people that they make Luis Buñuel seem like Frank Capra.
Wim Wenders, it seems, really, really, really loved The New World.
In the immortal words of pioneering film theorist Vachel Lindsay, this is fucking awesome.