The Hobbit: The Desolation of Tolkien

Well, it’s better–at least more entertaining–than last winter’s first Hobbit film. So there’s that. But, like Gandalf and his fellow wizards and elf lords catching vague feelings of growing darkness in the wind, for us long-time Tolkien fans (and us fans of Peter Jackson’s decade-old Lord of the Rings film trilogy) there’s a creeping sense … More The Hobbit: The Desolation of Tolkien

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire: You Say You Want a Revolution?

There are times—and they come at me more frequently these days—when I feel out of step with everything and everyone. Don’t worry, I’m not going to go into full sobbing mental breakdown right here in the first paragraph—I’ll save that for later. But when I see the movie-going public go ga-ga for a dull, corporate … More The Hunger Games: Catching Fire: You Say You Want a Revolution?

Interview: The 25,000 Mile Love Story’s Star and Filmmakers

From 2000 to 2005, Swiss endurance athlete Serge Roetheli and his wife Nicole traveled 25,000 miles around the world, from Europe, down around Africa, across the Middle East and South Asia, through East Asia and Australia, then over to South America and up into North America before finishing up back in Europe. The catch? Serge … More Interview: The 25,000 Mile Love Story’s Star and Filmmakers

Interview: The Armstrong Lie Writer-director Alex Gibney

Documentarian Alex Gibney has made a name for himself by examining the murky morality of our leaders and institutions. His films’ topics have included the Bush Administration’s war in Iraq (2007’s Taxi to the Dark Side), the scandals that brought down political figures (2010’s Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer and Casino … More Interview: The Armstrong Lie Writer-director Alex Gibney

Interview: The Motel Life Co-directors Alan and Gabe Polsky

Brothers Alan and Gabe Polsky made their mark in 2009 producing Werner Herzog and Nicholas Cage’s fairly awesome (and I’m so not kidding about that) Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans. But what the brothers really wanted to do was direct, and this month brings to theaters and VOD their directorial debut The Motel … More Interview: The Motel Life Co-directors Alan and Gabe Polsky

Ender’s Game: Playing at Shock and Awe

I was struggling a bit with my reactions to the new film adaptation of Ender’s Game. No, not because of the loud, kinda silly, kinda self-righteous, kinda deserved finger wagging and soap-boxing about novel author Orson Scott Card’s outspoken anti-gay brain vomitings. (To be clear, Card’s views on marriage equality deserve derision and mockery, but … More Ender’s Game: Playing at Shock and Awe

Interview: Wolfskinder Writer-director Rick Ostermann

The historical drama Wolfskinder is set in East Prussia (present-day northern Poland) in 1946. The film by first-time feature writer-director Rick Ostermann follows fictional orphaned brothers Hans (13-year-old Levin Liam) and Fritz (10-year-old Patrick Lorenczat) as they and other children struggle to survive in the wilderness. But while fictional, Wolfskinder is based on the real-life … More Interview: Wolfskinder Writer-director Rick Ostermann

Interview: We Are What We Are Director Jim Mickle

In the atmospheric horror film We Are What We Are, a small family in upstate rural New York town struggles to maintain their private religious tradition. Mild Spoiler Alert: They’re cannibals, their modern-day practice rooted in a devout, strict mixture of Biblical faith and frontier survivalism that became tradition. Though the Parkers–including a stern father (Bill Sage) and his … More Interview: We Are What We Are Director Jim Mickle