Tonight’s Free Rooftop Film is Trainspotting

THIS VIDEO IS NOT SAFE FOR WORK DUE TO BOOBS Before Slumdog Millionaire and 28 Days Later, Danny Boyle dragged us into Scottish drug addiction with Trainspotting. It’s a perfect encapsulation of club life flirting with damnation, but more importantly it proves the Ewan McGregor is still a heart throb…

Watch Free Films This Weekend At Dallas’ New Studio Movie Grill

The new Spring Valley location of Studio Movie Grill marks the company’s seventh dinner theater in Texas and tenth in the country. To celebrate the newest edition to Dallas’ dine-and-watch theater family, Spring Valley’s SMG is offering admission for only $1 throughout opening weekend (October 12 to the 14). Still…

Seven Psychopaths is a Great, Nasty Time at the Movies.

Perhaps you’ve lost faith in movies about amusingly digressive criminals. Maybe you believe it’s no longer possible to be pleasurably jolted by inventive swearing, from-no-place head shots, and post-everything structural flourishes. Certainly you have no reason to expect blood-splattered poetry or throat-clearing laughter from yet another movie in which Los…

With Argo, Ben Affleck Asks Us To Love Hollywood Again

Perhaps more than any other male American star of his generation, Ben Affleck understands the narrative advantage of having Hollywood on your side. The Good Will Hunting co-screenwriter and co-star won an Oscar at age 25 in large part because he and collaborator Matt Damon, as struggling actors who created…

Waits Variations: Six Ways of Looking at Tom Waits, Character Actor

In Martin McDonagh’s Seven Psychopaths, a prune-faced, simian-mouthed sexagenarian sits by the road in an old suit and brown-patterned tie, and cradles a white bunny in his arms. This is precisely what we’ve come to expect of a Tom Waits entrance. Waits has long been one of Hollywood’s favorite sight…

The Self-Limited Vision of Andrea Arnold’s Wuthering Heights

English filmmaker Andrea Arnold’s atypical, impressionistic approach to Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights is her adaptation’s main hook. As with Fish Tank and Red Road, Arnold’s last two feature-length dramas, the new Wuthering Heights is very much about the act of looking. The novel’s tempestuous plot is thus unmercifully filtered through…

Wuthering Heights: Black Like Me

British filmmaker Andrea Arnold’s remarkable new adaptation of Wuthering Heights comes packing some redoubtable weapons, including the most atmospheric ultra-realism the story has ever seen, an awesome sense of the Yorkshire landscape and no small payload of brooding poeticism. But undoubtedly, its coup de grâce has everything to do with…

Tonight’s Free Rooftop Movie: Dazed and Confused

Last Wednesday we kicked off a new weekly film series at the Sundown, that amazing rooftop bar next door to the Granada. Not only did a few of you show up, so many came that folks cuddled on each other’s laps to conserve space. It was a great evening in…

Texas Theatre Will Show Skyfall in 35mm.

There are certain big budget releases that will lure any pale, arthouse-lover to the local multiplex. Bond flicks definitely reside in that category. But this November you won’t have to resort to such pedestrian circumstances. Nope. Texas Theatre announced on Twitter that it’s getting a 35mm edition of the film…

How to Survive a Plague Recounts a Stirring History of ACT UP

In his filmmaking debut, journalist David France assembles a thoroughly reported chronicle of ACT UP’s most vital era, from the direct-action group’s founding in 1987 (six years into the AIDS epidemic) through 1995. Expertly compiled from hundreds of hours of archival footage — depicting fractious meetings, infamous demonstrations like 1989’s…

With Frankenweenie, the Tim Burton You Liked is Back

Ever since Mars Attacks!, Tim Burton has mostly been in the adaptation business, rendering dark and becurlicued Sleepy Hollows, Alice in Wonderlands and Charlie and the Chocolate Factorys. With Frankenweenie, he adapts his own work — the first animated short he ever produced for a major film studio, and the…

Five Reality TV Shows We Wish Would Crash Our Parties

The Sundown’s rooftop deck was packed with well-wishers last night. We piled up to congratulate the Granada’s crew on eight great years in Dallas. What nobody predicted before arrival was that a tiny cluster of girls would require much of the available space. Yes, Courtney Loves Dallas was filming during…

A Free Rooftop Film Series For Patio Season? Let’s Party.

We are patio addicts. They’re where we atone for Saturday night’s sins through hungover brunch confessions. We occasionally take our dogs to outdoor happy hours, just so they know the awesome stuff we do without them. And starting this Wednesday we’ll occupy one of the nicest patios in town for…

Looper Makes Time Travel Thrilling Again

Early on in Rian Johnson’s time-travel thriller Looper, Joe (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) sits at a diner and chats with his self from 30 years in the future (Bruce Willis). When the younger Joe asks the older one about the specifics of temporal displacement, the latter dismisses the question, telling his interlocutor…

In Hotel Transylvania, A Comic Dracula Still Kills

Casting a tapered, vase-slender silhouette and speaking in a Transylvanian accent with a touch of Borscht Belt, Hotel Transylvania’s de-fanged Count Dracula is introduced in an 1895-set prologue while serenading his infant daughter. No menacing carnivore, this Nosferatu has sworn off fatty human blood, is more scared of humans than…

Cartoons, Not Animation

“I hate realism,” director Genndy Tartakovsky said last week over the phone. “In America especially, we’re very narrow-minded as far as animation goes. There is only one kind of movie, and that’s that big, family-oriented, four-quadrant, please-everyone kind of film. But if I wanted realism, I’d watch a live-action movie…

David France on the History and Survival of ACT UP

“Death wasn’t being responded to as a public health problem,” David France says. “It was dealt with with sniggers. It was left to religious leaders to explain or respond to the epidemic. And they responded by calling it the wrath of God.” He adds: “That’s the hostility we all saw…