“The Anniversary Party is terrific – a testament to the true talent of its pair of triple-threats…” At first glance, several elements of The Anniversary Party raise serious warning flags. It was shot on digital video. It stars Jennifer Jason Leigh (an exceptional actress whose talents are often hidden by heavy-handed method acting or buried … Continue reading
Monthly Archives: April 2013
Talent
“Based on the notion that all of us can claim some talent or another, the spirited one-man show combines multiple characters with lively doses of improvisation for a rousing, albeit brief, bit of merriment.” Audiences first met talent agent Ida Parker in actor-comedian Skot Hess’ critically lauded show, BJ: The Trail of a Transgender Country … Continue reading
Talk to Her
“If you’ve heard anything about the latest from Pedro Almodovar, most likely it had something to do with the Giant Vagina.” If you’ve heard anything about the latest from Pedro Almodovar, most likely it had something to do with the Giant Vagina. Yes, yes, yes, there’s a giant vagina. Everybody go ahead and get excited, … Continue reading
Tears of the Sun
Seemingly timed to coincide with a U.S. invasion in Iraq, this jingoistic ode to military machismo from director Antoine Fuqua often feels like little more than pro-war propaganda. Bruce Willis plays Lt. A.K. Waters, a laughably stoic Navy SEAL sent to “extract” bosomy American doctor Lena Kendricks (Monica Bellucci) from a war-torn area of Nigeria, … Continue reading
The Emperor’s Club (Q Syndicate)
In his impassioned lectures on Greek and Roman emperors, venerated professor William Hundert (a sublime Kevin Kline) expounds on how a man’s character, above all, determines his success. Hundert, who lives by his own lessons, teaches at St. Benedict’s Academy, an idyllic sanctuary of eager students and equally enthusiastic instructors, where every pupil’s primary goal … Continue reading
The Emperor’s Club
Honor System Inspirational boys-school drama makes the grade Despite a superficial similarity between Dead Poets Society and The Emperor’s Club (including their markedly comparable titles), this morality tale set at an all-boys school presents quite a different story than Robin Williams’ inspirational weeper. Less concerned with seizing the day than pursuing integrity, it focuses on … Continue reading
The Banger Sisters
“I love movie scenes where characters enter a bathroom armed only with a pair of scissors and emerge with a new look José Eber would be proud of…” I’ve always loved the scenes in movies where characters enter a bathroom armed with only a pair of scissors or a bottle of Clairol and emerge with … Continue reading
The Claim
“The Claim isn’t an unpleasant movie, just a boring one…” Inspired by the novel “The Mayor of Casterbridge” by Thomas Hardy, The Claim is an epic morality tale that takes place in Kingdom Come, a snowy Sierra Nevada claim town, twenty years after the Gold Rush of 1849. Although the setting is somewhat unique, the … Continue reading
The Closet
“Make no mistake: The Closet is silly, silly, silly…” Once a year, all over America, thousands of otherwise “ordinary” men and women dress up in flamboyant clothing of the opposite gender, consume excessive amounts of drugs, flout the values of civilized society, and conduct themselves in intentionally shocking, offensive and totally self-indulgent behavior. All of … Continue reading
The Crimson Rivers
“The Crimson Rivers has almost everything it takes to be a first-rate thriller…all it lacks is a satisfying ending.” The Crimson Rivers has almost everything it takes to be a first-rate thriller. It takes place in a suitably eerie, remote valley. Plenty of creepy shadows permeate its otherwise lush cinematography. It features a goosebump-inducing score. … Continue reading