In Any Day Now, a Real-Life Travesty Becomes a Cinematic One

Gay-male weepies have left a long trail of tears, stretching back to the sobbing, self-loathing queens of The Boys in the Band and including high-prestige pictures like Philadelphia (1993) and Brokeback Mountain (2005). The genre, most prominent during the first decade of the AIDS pandemic, has used melodrama to bid…

In Hyde Park on Hudson, it’s Patriotic to Pleasure a President

It’s dispiriting that a film about the romantic life of Franklin D. Roosevelt, who cultivated a small coterie of mistresses, should exhibit so little interest in what so engaged its hero: the women’s individual hearts and minds. Instead, Hyde Park on Hudson quickly introduces us (and FDR) to the president’s…

Find Your Special Purpose: Texas Theatre Will Screen The Jerk in 35mm

There’s a moment of realization in the Apatow-produced television series Freaks and Geeks where young, gangly Sam Weir realizes he hates his popular cheerleader girlfriend. They’re sitting in a movie theater, she’s heavily primped and wearing an angora sweater. He’s nervously attempting to find common ground by sharing his favorite…

The Hobbit Gets Neither There Nor Back Again

Welcome back to Middle-Earth. It has been nearly a decade since writer-director Peter Jackson last set foot on J.R.R. Tolkien’s hallowed ground, signing off on a spectacular trilogy of films adapted from the British author’s Lord of the Rings novels. There were box office billions and well-earned Oscars aplenty and…

Five Must-Have Pieces of Scarface Memorabilia, For the Holidays

When living in Miami, I was surrounded. Every South Beach bodega window displays look the same, outfitted with grotesquely (read: AMAZING) tacky odes to Tony Montana. Rifles, framed “art,” and joint rollers branded with His Image face the streets — a city’s twisted welcome to out-of-towners. Since Scarface is turning…

Eleven Programming Ideas for D-TV, D Magazine’s New TV Station

D Magazine announced yesterday that it will team up with the local TV station KTXD and rebrand it D-TV. The new station will continue to broadcast KTXD’s current offerings, including the news show The Texas Daily and the lifestyle show Texas Living, which will be renamed D Living. It will…

The Trouble With Hitchcock

Early in Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock (played by Sir Anthony Hopkins) walks the red carpet at the premiere of his 1959 chase film, North by Northwest. “You’re 60 years old!” shouts a reporter to the corpulent master of suspense, then nearing his 40th year of filmmaking. “Shouldn’t you quit while you’re…

Killing Them Softly Rings a Bell … Over and Over

An adaptation of George V. Higgins’ 1974 novel Cogan’s Trade, Andrew Dominik’s Killing Them Softly anatomizes a self-policing underground economy of junkies, killers and administrators to indict a present-day mainstream world by suggesting that the criminal satellite economy and the “straight” superstructure are functionally the same. Dominik’s last film, the…

The Way We Die Now

Part of the renascent body-count action industry, Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning mere existence might shock many Americans. “There are four Universal Soldier movies?” those shocked Americans would say. They might also be taken aback by the bracing violence that marks the film from stem to stern: the gangland-style execution…

Comedian and Former Dallasite Wyatt Cenac is Leaving The Daily Show

The Daily Show with Jon StewartGet More: Daily Show Full Episodes,Political Humor & Satire Blog,The Daily Show on FacebookSo. Good. After four great years, Dallas-raised writer/comedian Wyatt Cenac has announced that he’ll be leaving his position as correspondent on The Daily Show. His final report will coincide with the last…

11 Holiday Films That Haven’t Been Totally Ruined by the Holidays

Every year Hollywood cranks them out — saccharine remakes of A Christmas Carol or It’s a Wonderful Life, with minor plot tweaks and overused actors. They’ve ruined the dial, filling it with cinema’s version of re-gifting. Meanwhile, original movies that were great the first few hundred times play on a…

10 Vampirey, Teen-Angsty Things That are Cooler Than Twilight

Tweens, shut-ins, cat ladies and frustrated housewives too timid for 50 Shade of Grey entered their final throes of Twilight-related delirium last week. Apparently, not all vampires live forever. As fans search for another fantasy franchise to fill the emotional void, the rest of us see simply the end of…

Path of Khan

“I can’t think of a more pathetic situation for an actor than to do a film and not connect to it,” Irrfan Khan says. “And I pray to God that I never face that situation.” Khan might not be one of the most prominent stars in Bollywood, especially not when…

Life of Pi: The Story of How Important Life of Pi Is

A stacked-deck theological inquiry filtered through a Titanic-by-way-of–Slumdog Millionaire narrative, Life of Pi manages occasional spiritual wonder through its 3-D visuals but otherwise sinks like a stone. It’s no shock that Ang Lee brings to his high seas adventure graceful and refined aesthetics devoid of any unique signature or pressing…

Mostly Cloudy

Silver Linings Playbook, which stars Bradley Cooper as a manic-depressive man-child attempting to get his life back together after a breakdown, won the Audience Award at the Toronto International Film Festival in September and subsequently shot to the top of most Oscar prognosticators’ Best Picture short list. The film’s pre-release…

Christ, It’s Another Red Dawn

America has had its national traumas — its Antietams and Pearl Harbors and 9/11s — but what we haven’t faced since the Battle of New Orleans is a proper ground invasion, a shooting war with a foreign occupying army. Rather than accept this as good fortune, the absence of this…