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DVD Review: Four Eyed Monsters
Four Eyed Monsters (2005)–**** I don’t ever really remember not having the Internet. When working at my day job, I find myself emailing co-workers in other states rather than calling them. It’s my first impulse when I want to communicate, though the older coworkers prefer phone. I’d recommend Four Eyed Monsters to them for two reasons. First, it’s a damn fine film, intimate and funny. Second, it’s a film so aware of life in the digital age that it,...
Read MoreFriday the 13th IN 3D
To celebrate Friday the 13th and to profess my love of the new REAL D, digital 3-D theatres, here is a clip I found on YouTube from Friday the 13th, Part III in 3D. Here’s hoping Paramount Pictures goes buck wild one of these days and rereleases a digitally restored (or digitally revised as some people would say) version of the Friday the 13th, Part III in 3D. Heck I may even start an online petition. We know how...
Read MoreQuickie: Shortbus
Shortbus (2006)–**** The lives of a various New Yorkers converge on an underground sex club called Shortbus. John Cameron Mitchell’s sophomore feature is a fitting follow-up to Hedwig and the Angry Inch. With the same irreverent sense of humor and slightly more complex narrative, Mitchell achieves emotional honesty so effortlessly it’s impossible not to love each of the flawed, beautiful characters. Mitchell’s concern for those characters and his lack of pretension even allows him to pull off graphic sex...
Read MoreMovie Review: Grindhouse
Grindhouse (2007)–** “Is the movie that I am watching as interesting as a documentary of the same actors having lunch together?” That’s how Gene Siskel described his gauge for critiquing films. When it comes to something like Grindhouse, where the actors aren’t much more than Hitchcockian prop pieces and five separate directors take on some part of the film, there’s another question we should ask: Was this film made to be shown outside of any of the directors’ living...
Read MoreDVD Review: Death of a President
Before he made Death of a President, director Garbriel Range directed a faux documentary about a transportation stoppage in London. That film, The Day Brittan Stopped, was a proactive what-if scenario based on a premise so utterly uninteresting the film hasn’t even been released on DVD. You can stream the film on the BBC Web site, which is how I saw Range’s uncontroversial transportation documentary. Considering just how interesting and engaging a film about cars stuck on a highway...
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