The Two Sicarios
After seeing Sicario: Day of the Soldado, I thought I knew how I felt about it. I found it robust ...
After seeing Sicario: Day of the Soldado, I thought I knew how I felt about it. I found it robust ...
Thanks to reader Bryce for point us to the news that Josh Brolin has let slip a few interesting tidbits ...
OLDBOY is a provocative, visceral thriller that follows the story of an advertising executive (Josh Brolin) who is abruptly kidnapped ...
I was remiss in the first two Oscar columns of the year in that I neglected to mention Kate Winslet ...
Slim pickings for awards prospects when Jonah Hex is the best antidote for Sex and the City 2. But those ...
So far, there have been no standing ovations and no loud booing. The only film that got mildly booed was ...
Cannes is a many layers deep experience. Every time you think you've nailed one layer, peeled it back, stuffed it ...
Josh Brolin on the cover of the Men's Fashion Issue of this weekend's NYTimes Magazine. (click to supersize). Though the ...
Casting has been announced role by role for weeks, but as Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps continues to consolidate ...
Joel and Ethan Coen directed this Cinema Paradiso Ranchero riff on No Country for Old Men as part of the ...
Pete Travers gives the film four stars, writing: Milk is Van Sant's best film, which is saying a lot, since ...
It’s quite a thing to watch a film like Milk coming off such an historic election year. Yes, they’re all ...
Phil Bronstein, editor of the SF Chronicle (and Sharon Stone's ex) writes up the premiere of Milk. He writes of ...
Focus Features has added a nice set of stills from Milk on the official site. Love the way the Azure ...
J. Hoberman, Village Voice: "A painful movie to endure." Alonso Duralde, MSNBC: "Whatever your preconceived notions, W. manages to be ...
It's something to finally see Rove squirming under the microscope. The New York Times talks to Oliver Stone and actually ...
Todd McCarthy delivers the first mainstream review. "...considering Stone's reputation and Bush's vast unpopularity, a relatively even-handed, restrained treatment of ...
New W. poster variations invite the inevitable comparison. Hear no evildoer. See no evildoer. Speak no evildoer.
I'll say this: The trailers and posters for W. are getting progressively more sophisticated and interesting. The more it veers ...
(thanks to Craig Kennedy via Nick Plowman for the chain-reaction tip.) Excuse me while I go off someplace to be ...