items tagged with Ben Foster
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2011-01-30 22:16:31
INSIDE JOB
You might not think that director Charles Ferguson’s Inside Job, the newly (and deservedly) Oscar-nominated documentary about 2008’s global economic meltdown, would offer much in the way of participatory, audience-goosing entertainment. After all, this isn’t exactly a Michael Moore doc we’re dealing with here. Employing dozens of lucid, well-reasoned interviews with financial experts and reams of statistics and graphs, Ferguson’s strong, angry, yet level-headed explanation of our current financial crisis is the polar opposite, in temperament and tone, of a Fahrenheit 9/11 or Capitalism: A Love Story. But while the experience of the impeccably photographed, sharply edited Inside Job is a mostly dead-serious one, damn but my audience appeared to have a good time at it – or, perhaps it’s more appropriate to say, a cathartic time.
Read More About Schadenfreude-Ian Slips: “Inside Job,” “Dogtooth,” And “The Mechanic”...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2009-10-04 22:34:10
CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY
Watching the early scenes of Capitalism: A Love Story, I found myself thinking, none too happily, that the bloom was finally off the rose, and that my fondness for Michael Moore documentaries had, at last, reached its end.
Read More About Moore And More: “Capitalism: A Love Story,” “Pandorum,” And “Zombieland”...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2007-10-31 16:01:16
DAN IN REAL LIFE
There are movies you enjoy and movies you don't, and then there are movies that you detest so thoroughly that you watch them more actively than most films you love; your anger keeps you alert.
Read More About Horrors!: "Dan In Real Life," "Saw IV," And "30 Days Of Night"...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2007-09-12 08:28:57
3:10 TO YUMA
James Mangold's dramatic Western 3:10 to Yuma, the remake of a Glenn Ford oater from a half-century ago, is a tough, effective, frequently powerful piece of work. Yet despite its authentic period design and supremely intelligent performances, it feels a little lightweight; a few hours after seeing it, you may not remember much about the experience except having had a good time. Especially considering Hollywood output of late, 3:10 to Yuma is hardly a disappointment, but for all of its thematic richness, the movie is rather generic - it's a modern-day action blockbuster in Old West attire. The film is everything except moving, and I have a sneaking suspicion that Mangold desperately wants it to be.
Read More About Moral Minority: "3:10 To Yuma" And "The Brothers Solomon"...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2007-01-17 08:14:20
STOMP THE YARD
Before seeing Stomp the Yard, in which a young hip-hop dancer from Los Angeles adjusts to fraternity life at Atlanta's Truth University, I didn't know much about step dancing. But after watching director Sylvain White's inspirational drama, I discovered that there are apparently two distinct types - there's great step dancing and then there's really great step dancing. Though the movie is ostensibly a coming-of-age story wherein our hero, DJ (Columbus Short), finds respect and love during his first year of school, it's really just 8 Mile or Bring It On for the dance world, as warring frats compete to see whose moves out-step whose. (Step dancing - frequently practiced at African-American universities - is a combination of marching and precise choreography, generally accompanied by chants and, in this movie's case, taunts.) Yet it's pretty easy to guess which groups of dancers will be considered the greatest in Stomp the Yard - it's whichever dancers go next.
Read More About Out Of Step: "Stomp The Yard," "Alpha Dog," And "Curse Of The Golden Flower"...
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