The Best of Dallas’ Asian Film Fest

Distribution companies for Asian cinema have been in steady decline over the last decade, often citing illegal downloads and lackluster international market response when they fold. For lovers of the genre, this means fewer funds are being put toward the creation of new films, making it tougher for innovative talent…

In Take This Waltz, What Happens in Nova Scotia…

Take This Waltz, director Sarah Polley’s second feature, is much like her first, 2006’s superb Away From Her, in that it thoughtfully probes the pitfalls of coupledom and third-party threats. Five years into their marriage, Torontonians Margot (Michelle Williams) and Lou (Seth Rogen) have regressed fully into sexlessness, heat and…

Jonathan Demme’s Neil Young Journeys, Another Journey Worth Joining

Not to knock films as fantastic as his Rachel Getting Married, The Silence of the Lambs and Something Wild, but there’s something wilder — or at least, more directly stimulating and pure — about Jonathan Demme’s live-performance docs. The 68-year-old auteur immortalized a Talking Heads show (and David Byrne’s oversized…

Student Filmmakers Screen Work Tonight, Make You Feel Old and Lazy

Bart Weiss is a man of many camera angles. He’s the artistic steering power behind the Dallas Video Festival (which enters its 25th installment this September), serves as President of the Board of Directors of the Association of Independent Video and Filmmakers, and sits on the Board of Directors of…

5 Amazing Movies at this Week’s Asian Film Festival of Dallas

Distribution companies for Asian cinema have been in steady decline over the last decade, often citing illegal downloads and lackluster international market response as the culprit when they fold. For lovers of the genre, this means that fewer funds are being put towards the creation of new films, making it…

Spider Becomes a Man – and a Joy

The Amazing Spider-Man, an inexcusably good reboot-thing from director Marc Webb, celebrates the heartwarming arachno-genetic bar mitzvah in which a boy becomes a spider, and a spider becomes a man, a rite of passage last observed in Sam Raimi’s uneven but often pretty great trilogy in the aughts. And there’s…

Woody Allen Takes a Roman Holiday to Fantasyland

In Woody Allen’s new film, To Rome With Love, people — like, really young people — still talk, improbably, about “neuroses.” Horny, middle-age businessmen actually stand around the water cooler and ogle the hot secretary, as in the Playboy cartoons of the ancients. In the Allen Legendarium, Freudian psychiatrists never…

Savages: Oliver Stone’s Drug-trade Drama Settles for Sensation

“Welcome to the recession, boys,” says John Travolta’s DEA-double-agent profiteer in Oliver Stone’s Savages, based on Don Winslow’s novel. Savages is a movie of its moment, though both its good guys and bad guys (if there’s really even a difference) are unquestionably the 1 percent of their industry — that…

In Beasts of the Southern Wild, a Child – and Child Performer – Thrive Despite Adverse Conditions

A zealous gumbo of regionalism, magical realism, post-Katrina allegory, myth and ecological parable, Beasts of the Southern Wild, the southern Louisiana-set debut feature of 29-year-old Benh Zeitlin, rests, often cloyingly, on the tiny shoulders of Quvenzhané Wallis. Her character, Hushpuppy, the film’s 6-year-old (also Wallis’ age during filming) protagonist and…

D-FW On DVR: Dallas, Hating-Loving NBC, Louie and The Newsroom

The tense moments came fast and furious during the fourth episode of the new Dallas this week, making us salivate – no, downright drool – for the moment that J.R. finally reclaims control of Southfork Ranch. We’re supposed to be rooting for the bad guy, right? Because it’s a hell…

Magic Mike Reveals Its Cast but Is No Revelation

When Channing Tatum stood up and revealed his bare ass to the camera a minute or two into Steven Soderbergh’s Magic Mike — which the actor conceived of and produced based on his own experience as a teenage dancer in an all-male exotic revue — the audience in my screening…

Seth McFarlane’s Ted is Unbearable Stuff

Fans of Seth MacFarlane’s Fox mainstay Family Guy who wish he would run afoul of FCC regulations every week might be pleased with Ted, the story of a 35-year-old man and his foul-talking teddy bear. Plushies, too, might be turned on by the pot-smoking, whore-banging CGI toy ursus of the…

D-FW On DVR: Dallas Takes A Turn

After last week’s uneven, unintentionally comical premiere (“I never SENT you an EEEEEE-MAIL.”), TNT’s re-launch of Dallas hit a gusher on Wednesday (isn’t that what the oil people say when they do well?). J.R. Ewing, like, TOOK-OVER took over. Asses were kicked, names taken, delicious one-liners uttered. He began his…

Seeking a Friend for the End of the World: The End Can’t Come Soon Enough

Apocalypse movies are a venerable enough genre (and reliable enough as box-office cash spigots) to support a few lightweight, funny-sad-romantic entries every once in a while. Given the right touch, this approach can be just the antidote to the idea-free, effects-laden blockbusters and art-house pity parties that dominate the form…

Your Sister’s Sister: Sometimes, Broken if Better

Beginning with a bilious toast and ending with a group hug, Lynn Shelton’s Your Sister’s Sister, her fourth film, expertly makes us squirm for about half its running time only to soothe us with empty pop-psych declarations. In Shelton’s previous feature, the bolder Humpday, two straight guys, in a moment…

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter: Sucking in the 1800s

The logical outer limit of the whole horror-as-metaphor thing, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter shoehorns the entire personal history of the 16th president into mega-budget The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires chop-socky/grind house schlock, and casts the seditious South as a nation of slave-sucking undead. “History,” narrates Abe (Benjamin Walker),…