Written by Joe Bader
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“Friends with Kids,” written and directed by, and starring, Jennifer Westfeldt, is not “Bridesmaids.” Sure, it shares four cast members with the hilarious 2011 comedy, along with some of the profane language, but none of the characters needs to utilize a sink for a purpose other than normal usage. It doesn’t exactly break new ground, but does a fine job of poignantly navigating the familiar.

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Written by John T. Trigonis
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Film Review: Dreams on SpecFilm Review Rating for Dreams on SpecWhat does it mean to be a Hollywood screenwriter? Many of the rising star screenwriters in writer/director Daniel Snyder’s 2007 documentary Dreams on Spec don’t actually know. They are “just” screenwriters struggling to maintain their lifestyles while fostering their own dreams for an optioned script or even a career as a working screenwriter.

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Written by Patricia Fox
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In "My Week with Marilyn,” director Simon Curtis attempts what many before him have tried as well: to capture the “real” Marilyn Monroe, an American icon who remains a fascinatingly elusive phantom some 40 years after her death. Curtis turns in a nuanced film that shows Monroe in a whole new light—not only as the sexy yet innocent, coy yet truthful image she usually represented onscreen, but also as a woman who strived to be a great actress and not just a star.

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Written by Tom Beaver
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Film Review: KrisisFilm Review: KrisisOne of the many merits of "Krisis," a lean, sharp sixty-two minute documentary about the recent turmoil in Greece, is the nagging awareness that we’re viewing a varied reflection of what is happening (or SHOULD happen) here in North America.

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Written by Joe Bader
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Film Review: Hugo

Film Review: Hugo

 

 

 

 

Martin Scorsese wants you to love movies and moviemaking like he does, and that is the point of “Hugo,” a meandering film about an orphan who lives in a 1930s French train station. Unfortunately, he also wants you to heap adoration on underappreciated filmmakers, for which he was Exhibit A for 20 years. The latter ultimately makes what is an excellent technical film a self-aggrandizing and wandering story.

Read more: Film Review: 'Hugo' (DVD)
 
Written by Deborah Osment
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wanderlustStar Rating for Wanderlust ReviewIf you think “American Pie” was too classy and the Three Stooges too intellectual, “Wanderlust” just might be the tour de farce you’ve been waiting for all these years.

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Written by Patricia Fox
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"Margin Call” tells the story of the beginning of the mortgage backed securities debacle, based loosely on the Lehman Brothers fall from financial grace. The film, directed and written by J.C. Chandor, is nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature and Best Best First Screenplay, as well as a prestigious Oscar nomination in the Original Screenplay category. Although the narrative and dialogue are tight, the story is rather obtuse. Is it brilliant dialogue layered with subtext or just ramblings of characters that are more than slightly paranoid?

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Written by Patricia Fox
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Directed by Jonathan Levine, “50/50” is a contender for Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress (Angelica Houston) and Best First Screenplay (Will Reiser) in the Independent Spirit Awards 2012. It tells the story, at times hilariously, of Adam (played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt), a young twenty-something who recently learned he has a rare form of spinal cancer that gives him a fifty-fifty chance for survival.

Read more: Film Review: '50/50' (DVD)
 
Written by Patricia Fox
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Film Review: The Rum Diaryfour_slates_out_of_five“Rum Diary” is the highly anticipated film adaptation of the novel written by the much worshipped, or at least repeatedly “toasted/toked,” counter-culture journalist/novelist Hunter S. Thompson. Fans of “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” will be pleased with the over-the-top, yet inventive, substance abuse antics of its characters and those viewers used to a more conventional plot will be able to follow pleasantly, and coherently, along with its narrative structure.

 

Read more: Film Review: 'Rum Diary' (DVD)
 
Written by Joe Bader
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Safe HouseSafe HouseSafe House,” from director Daniel Espinosa, owes a lot to the Jason Bourne movies. And by a lot, I mean royalty checks. Unfortunately, the characters are far more generic and some silly plot twists might have been better suited for the entertaining but inane 24.

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Written by Jamie Paszko
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Film Review: Anonymousrating3_5

"Is this movie true?” an audience member bellowed during the end credit sequence in Roland Emmerich’s “Anonymous,” an Elizabethan costume drama that speculates on an issue that has intrigued academics and writers for centuries, namely: who actually created the body of work credited to William Shakespeare? And the answer to that question is a resounding…Who knows? Much like many other conspiracy theories there is certainly compelling evidence to build a case, but no one really knows for sure.

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Written by Deborah Osment
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“Declaration of War” (“La guerre est declare”) is the story of a young couple who are suddenly forced to confront a serious illness in their infant son when the child is diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. The film, directed by Valérie Donzelli, is the personal story of Donzelli, who plays Juliette, and co-writer and co-star Jérémie Elkaïm, who plays Romeo. It is not, however, the film that the filmmakers think they’ve made.

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Written by Joe Bader
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Extremely Loud and Incredibly Closefour_slates_out_of_fiveEverything about Stephen Daldry’s “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” was constructed for the awards season. Big names? How about Oscar winners Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock? Character idiosyncrasies? One character does not speak and another may have Asperger Syndrome. Heavy topics? The child protagonist’s father died in the World Trade Center. And yet, the movie falls just shy of such decoration, largely due to some story weaknesses.

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Written by Alex Sukhoy
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Film Review: The Ides of March

 

 

 

“The Ides of March” is a testosterone packed political thriller starring Ryan Gosling and George Clooney. Clooney plays Ohio governor Mike Morris, an ambitious family man and politician who has hired Stephen (Gosling) to be his wunderkind media manager, helping him win the top prize: the White House.

Read more: Film Review: 'The Ides of March' (DVD)
 
Written by Joe Bader
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Film Review: ContrabandContrabandEarly on in “Contraband,” the forgettable action “thriller” featuring Mark Wahlberg, you can’t help but notice how much Wahlberg (and his movie wife Kate Beckinsdale) stand out from the rest of the seedy-looking cast. This is a bad thing. We are meant to think that Wahlberg was once the ringleader of a Central American smuggling operation, yet somehow avoided scars, addictions, local eccentricities, and the police? Such dissonance occupies much of this remake of “Reykjavik-Rotterdam,” a 2009 Icelandic film starring “Contraband” director Baltasar Kormákur.

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Written by Scott Gleine
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The Guardrating3                              

 

 

It would usually seem unfair to compare two siblings who are working in the same craft. However, when it comes to the McDonagh brothers and screenwriting, comparisons are hard to avoid. Celebrated playwright and Oscar winner (for the live action short “Six Shooter”) Martin McDonagh made his feature film debut a few years ago with the underrated dark comedy “In Bruges.” His brother, John Michael McDonagh, has now made his first foray into writing and directing with “The Guard,” which played at the L.A. Film Festival. Though their respective films certainly have plenty of differences, there is an undeniable knack for witty dialogue and dark humor that is shared by the brothers in their writing style.

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Written by Pamela Alexander-Beutler
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With "Midnight in Paris," Woody Allen delivers one of his best films in years, having made a beguiling homage to the City of Lights and the literary greats that lived there in the 1920s.

 

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Written by Deborah Osment
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Sherlock Holmes: A Game of ShadowsIn "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows,” it is clear that the team of Robert Downey Jr., Guy Ritchie and producer Joel Silver have completely taken over the playground, delivering an impeccably timed, fun joyride employing equal parts wit and action.

Read more: Film Review: 'Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows'(DVD)
 
Written by Tanyeno Wotorson
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Film Review: Corman's World Exploits of a Hollywood RebelCult filmmaker, director and mentor of such talents as Ron Howard, Martin Scorsese, and Peter Bogdanovich - Roger Corman, is the intoxicating main subject of “Corman’s World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel,” directed by Alex Stapleton. Stapleton’s ode to the gentleman who made not-so-gentle films such as “Gas-s-s-s,” “The Terror,” “The Raven,” and Creature from theHaunted Sea – is simultaneously affectionate and convincing.

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Written by Deborah Osment
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At first glance, "Bag It" seems anachronistic: Who doesn’t already know that we shouldn’t use plastic bags? Within minutes, however, we find ourselves falling down the rabbit hole into a world in which plastic is not only far more pervasive than previously suspected but is the number one consumer item in the world.

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Written by Tom Beaver
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True objectivity nuanced by inspired artistry can and often does yield illuminating results. Any subject rendered without judgement is allowed its dignity and therefore, regardless of suspect content, elevated. Werner Herzog's wonderful “documentaries” display a spirit and bravery that most filmmakers shy away from. Herzog appears to make his own rules while eschewing conventional narrative. This kind of craftsmanship inevitably sculpts completely unique moments in time.

Read more: Film Review: 'Bombay Beach'
 
Written by Rick Passmore
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Film Review: Super 8

Film Review: Super 8 

 

                                 

 J.J. Abrams has made a successful career out of sci-fi and suspense, slating such works as the TV series “Lost” and 2009’s hit “Star Trek,” but in his latest venture, “Super 8,” he pays homage to mentor and producer Steven Spielberg and creates a very memorable and exciting hybrid of “E.T.” and “Cloverfield.” The line between the two very different types of films, however, occasionally has a hard time meshing throughout the 112 minute runtime.

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Written by Rick Passmore
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Film Review: The Art of Getting ByFilm Review: The Art of Getting By

As the indie film circuit grows in popularity, so does the amount of films that feel like they were penned by screenwriters trying to channel their inner film undergrad. While enjoyable, “The Art of Getting By” feels like its title, as the characters never really go any deeper than what is expected of them and the story becomes extremely predictable by the halfway mark.

Read more: Film Review: 'The Art of Getting By' (DVD)
 
Written by Joe Bader
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Film Review: 30 Minutes or Less

 

 

“30 Minutes or Less” begins with a beat up old Mustang flying through the streets of Grand Rapids with driving that might have made Steve McQueen proud. Unfortunately, the rest of the movie would probably have made him wish he was locked back up in the prison camp from “The Great Escape.”

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Written by Richard Passmore
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Film Review: Another EarthFilm Review: Another Earth

 

 

                              There are times when what is offered up in the title of film, or even its trailer, is nothing more than an illusionist’s trick on audiences. Such is the case with “Another Earth,” a film that had such a unique initial premise, but then becomes a dull, pedantic attempt at character study. What could have been something amazing devolves into a hapless piece regarding emotion and resolve.

Read more: Film Review: 'Another Earth' (DVD)
 
Written by Doborah Osment
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Film Review: The Skin I Live InFilm Review: The Skin I Live InPedro Almodóvar’s latest, “The Skin I Live In,” is another of his tightly scripted, beautifully shot, brilliantly acted kaleidoscope rides and anyone who loves film and filmmaking should see it.

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Written by Jason Chase Tyrrell
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Film Review: Killing Bono Film Review: Killing BonoImagine watching one of your best high school mates live out your grandest dreams while your life spirals towards obscurity and oblivion. This was the case for Neil McCormick, a talented but ego driven Dublin youth desperate for the success his pal Bono found, and the result is the bittersweet “Killing Bono”, a solid translation of his memoir. Like a bad car wreck, you know how it ends, but the endearing characters and wholly deserved ascension U2 achieved keep you from looking away.

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Written by Joe Bader
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Film Review: Tower Heist

 

It may be hard to fathom that Brett Ratner, director of the loud and explosion filled “Rush Hour” films and “X-Men: The Last Stand,” could possibly be linked with current world events, but it has happened in his latest action-comedy, “Tower Heist.” That being said, it is certainly mere coincidence that this fast-paced and somewhat entertaining movie could be released during the Occupy Wall Street movement rather than prescience.

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Written by Pamela Alexander-Beutler
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Film Review: Crazy Stupid Love

"Crazy Stupid Love" is a hilariously funny film that is both smart and wise, in which first-rate actors are given a top shelf script and allowed to do what they do best.

Read more: Film Review: 'Crazy Stupid Love' (DVD)
 
Written by Jason Chase Tyrrell
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Film Review: The Doublerating2_5                                                                                 The chilly relationship between Russia and the U.S. fed a slew of spy movies through the years, until the toppling of the Berlin Wall and our focus on the Middle East turned our attentions elsewhere. “The Double”, the directorial debut of accomplished screenwriter Michael Brandt starring Richard Gere and Topher Grace does its level best to restoke those fires, with regrettably lukewarm results.

 

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