The Phoenix
Boston
Portland
Providence
|
WFNX Radio
Live Radio
On Demand
|
About
-->
Blogs
Phlog
On The Download
Talking Politics
Outside The Frame
Laser Orgy
All Blogs
Editors' Picks
Editors' Picks
All Listings
News
News Features
Politics
Editorial
Flashbacks
Sports
News Blog
Cover Archive
Music
Find...
Concerts
Music Features
Reviews
Albums
Music Blog
Band Guide
Movies
Movie Features
Movie Reviews
Film Blog
Contests
Food + Drink
Find...
Restaurants
Dining
On The Cheap
Bars and Drinking
Arts & Entertainment
Find...
Theater Events
Comedy Shows
Readings
Museums & Galleries
Comedy
Books
Dance
Theater
Television
Video Games
Photos
Horoscope
Contests
Puzzles
Comics
Failure
Big Fat Whale
Hoopleville
IdiotBox
The Best
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies
Movies
>>
Reviews
Review: Sundance Shorts (2012)
The Sundance mission
As Robert Redford's Sundance Institute turns 35, these 10 short films make good on its mission to "champion the risk-takers and pioneers whose stories reflect and shape our world."
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| January 15, 2013
Review: Bad Boys/Furyo Shonen (1961)
One of the fathers of the Japanese New Wave, Susumu Hani followed up a series of documentary shorts with this, his improvisational first feature depicting life in a reform school.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| January 15, 2013
Review: A Haunted House
This latest Marlon Wayans vehicle is a send-up of the "found footage" genre, from Paranormal Activity to The Devil Inside, and if the name of its director — Michael Tiddes — makes you chuckle, then is this the movie for you!
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| January 15, 2013
Review: Indelible Lalita
Over time, the vicissitudes of the human body can wreak havoc with one's sense of identity.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| January 08, 2013
Review: Texas Chainsaw 3D
Forget the various sequels, remakes, and prequels of Tobe Hooper's seminal horror movie, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre .
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| January 08, 2013
Review: Gangster Squad
Not-so-mod Squad
In the history of Hollywood violence, Gangster Squad scored a footnote when it was pulled from a September release, after the Aurora shooting for a scene in which gangsters machine-gunned their way through the Grauman's Chinese Theatre screen.
By:
ANN LEWINSON
| January 10, 2013
Review: Nothing But A Man (1964)
Civil rites
Michael Roemer's modest, eloquent, New Wave-y micro-movie — made independently in 1964 — is essential viewing for its matter-of-fact look at an average black man's struggle for dignity in the Deep South in the early '60s.
By:
MICHAEL ATKINSON
| January 08, 2013
Review: Bestiaire
Although there is no narration or manipulative music track, Denis Côté's long-take documentary look at Parc Safari in Hemmingford, Quebec, screams out (quietly) on the side of animal rights.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| December 31, 2012
Review: Parental Guidance
Billy Crystal and Bette Midler star in what could have been a decent comedy, if director Andy Fickman hadn't made it such a tearjerker.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| January 02, 2013
Review: The Impossible
In J.A. Bayona's neo-disaster-film, everything but the carnage is cheap.
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| December 31, 2012
Review: Zero Dark Thirty
Dark passage
Densely detailed, superbly shot and acted, illuminating and thrilling, it is the best film of 2012.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| January 09, 2013
Review: Promised Land
In the tradition of Arbitrage and Thank You for Smoking , where the people who contribute to making life miserable are seen as just regular guys, Gus Van Sant, along with screenwriters Matt Damon and John Krasinski, collaborate in this ambiguous homily about the energy crisis and environmental pollution.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| December 27, 2012
Review: Jack Reacher
"Who is Jack Reacher?"
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| December 27, 2012
Review: Not Fade Away
Fade to Black
Can a movie be intimate and rock-and-roll at the same time?
By:
JAKE MULLIGAN
| January 02, 2013
Review: Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away
A pixie-haired girl (Erica Linz) catches the eye of a strapping young aerialist (Igor Zaripov) in a traveling circus, and the two are transported to a dimension that's made up of set pieces from every Cirque du Soleil show under the, well, soleil.
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| December 21, 2012
Review: Hitler's Children
Israeli filmmaker Chanoch Ze'evi is the probing interviewer behind this chilling, unsettling documentary.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| December 21, 2012
Review: Django Unchained
Spaghetti southern style
Tarantino reconfigures that classic American genre, the Western, setting his new film in the Deep South, creating what he terms a "Southern," while infusing it with the spaghetti sensibilities of Sergio Leone (director of Tarantino's favorite film, The Good, The Bad and the Ugly ) and, more so, the genre grit of that other Sergio, Corbucci (director of 1966's Django , naturally).
By:
BRETT MICHEL
| December 28, 2012
Review: Barbara
In this brilliant Cold War political drama set in the GDR in 1980, a doctor, Barbara (the extraordinary Nina Hoss), is exiled from East Berlin to a provincial town by the Baltic Sea because she has requested to move to the West.
By:
GERALD PEARY
| December 18, 2012
Review: Les Misérables
For his adaptation of the kitsch-fest known as Les Miz, Tom Hooper ( The King's Speech ) bets heavily on his cast, and mostly wins.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| December 20, 2012
Review: The Guilt Trip
Seth Rogen and Barbra Streisand make a snappy comic duo in this road movie about a tetchy mother-son relationship.
By:
BETSY SHERMAN
| December 20, 2012
Review: Rust And Bone
One image from Jacques Audiard's overwrought melodrama suggests what a shimmering, mysterious movie it might have been.
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| December 18, 2012
<< first
...
< prev
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
next >
...
last >>
4 of 112 (results 2226)
Most Popular
The Current Issue
Table of Contents
Cover Archive
Masthead
|
Authors
|
Contact us
Blogs
Where To Follow Me
Talking Politics
| March 24, 2013 at 11:09 AM
Mo Takes His Turn
March 21, 2013 at 12:59 PM
[Q&A] KMFDM's Sascha Konietzko on art, Columbine and having balls
On The Download
| March 18, 2013 at 3:22 PM
See this film series: The Belmont World Film Series @ Studio Cinema in Belmont
Outside The Frame
| March 18, 2013 at 11:00 AM
See this film: This is Spinal Tap [with post-film talk by expert from Acoustical Society of America] @ the Coolidge
March 17, 2013 at 12:00 PM
More:
Phlog
|
Music
|
Film
|
Books
|
Politics
|
Media
|
Election '08
|
Free Speech
|
All Blogs
-->