Articles in Friday Film Review
The Wild Hunt
The 2000s and early 2010s have been a good time to be a nerd, with “nerd culture” becoming seemingly more prevalent in the pop-cultural landscape every day, especially where movies are concerned. Genre movies are …
Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernnon
Even before the Scream franchise came along, the “slasher” sub-genre of horror had been wallowing in the pit of self-parody for quite some time. The Friday the 13th films had become toned-down camp and A Nightmare on Elm Street’s headliner Freddy Krueger had made the (admittedly small) leap from figure of menace to sweater-clad punchline. In lieu of innovation…
Hesher
The 90s was a strange decade, known for producing two things in particular (where America is concerned anyway). The first is some of the finest Saturday morning cartoons ever conceived by man (I mean Cadillacs and Dinosaurs, need I say more) and Angry Young Men. The young men (and women) who were coming into adulthood in the 90s were best described by Tyler Durden as the middle children of history. The roles of those who came before them seemed so clear. Their grandparents were the hero-gods of WW2. Hard to live up to that, and while some of their parents tried to replicate that glory with disastrous results, many others spent their time spreading peace, love and LSD…
Gantz
Whaaa, Thomas is writing about some weird, obscure Japanese movie? What strange universe have we stumbled into. Yes, Captain Sarcasm, the review today is Gantz, a strange Japanese film based of a strange Japanese comic that was also made into a strange Japanese cartoon and I really should just move on from this joke shouldn’t I? In a stra….bizarre way, Gantz reminds me of the recent film Drive, in that it takes a premise that sounds like a cut-and-dry action film and approaches it with more of a quiet, subdued atmosphere than you would really expect given the setup…
Hugo
It seems Martin Scorsese has put me in an awkward position, the ingenious little man that he is. His new film Hugo is indeed very good but sadly it’s not great. And the reason why it isn’t great is hard to explain without spoiling what is basically the big middle-of-the-movie twist. I could always write my review dancing a merry jig around the issue and end up not actually telling you why this is an enjoyable piece of film making and not much more…
Cults, death and poop jokes: 2011 in Film
Recently I had dinner with my friend Alex and as we were enjoying some Korean BBQ the conversation turned, as it often does with Alex and I, to film.
“So, you gonna do a best of the year review for your column?” Alex asked.
“I always do,” I replied, watching with childish glee as my salmon cooked on the grill in front of me.
“So what’s on your best of list for 2011?” Alex responded in between bites of his bibm bahb…
Reality Bites? More like Reality Rocks
As I get older, certain films remain just as meaningful to me as when I first saw them. Others, well, not so much. I always find it fascinating…
Depictions of Marilyn
Watch out Forget the Box because I’m about to reveal something shocking: I’m a white girl, and I like Marilyn Monroe. Ok, so MAYBE I’m not totally original in my favorite star of yesteryear… but in a world where trashy movie stars come and go, there’s a reason why us cinephiles worship those who manage to transcend time and continue to live onscreen long past their expiration date. Was Marilyn Monroe the world’s greatest actress…
Why it’s worth saving this Community
Because I watch it at home, curled up on the couch in my ugliest t-shirts and mismatching socks, television and I have a bond that film will never understand. Sure film may have flashy moments up on a big screen and we’ll occasionally meet up at my place, but television is…
Viva La Femme Fatale
This week Friday Film Review explores one of the most interesting female archetypes in the history of cinema; the sexual and mysterious Femme Fatale. Seemingly out of nowhere she appears, standing seductively in the doorway. Sometimes she has a veil, always she has a cigarette. As the cigarette either hovers close to or dangles from her lips, she entrances the hero with her story of woe. You want to believe she’s telling a straight story, but then again what kind of fun would that be? Who is this beautiful, dangerous woman of mystery…
Choose Life, Choose Trainspotting
Hello, my name is Steph and I am a junkie… a film junkie. While I may not go head first into the worst toilet in Scotland to watch a film, I have most definitely devoted an unhealthy amount of hours to staring at screens in darkened rooms, wrapped up in a fantasy world I will never be part of. This is the brilliance of director Danny Boyle’s (127 Hours, Slumdog Millionaire) second-ever feature; while any reasonable person would never watch Trainspotting and say to themselves “Hey! Let’s all go do some heroin!” it’s damn near impossible not to be affected by this story of a gang of junkies in 90′s Edinburgh…
As your attorney, I advize you to immediately swallow this blog post!
Hunter S. Thompson (a.k.a. Dr. Gonzo) was one of the most influential political and social writers of this past century, but there’s more to him than his excellent sense of humor and run-on style of a life teetering off the edge.
Nobody would cover a story quite like Hunter Thompson. His personal involvement in his stories made him an outsider scoping the outer frontier of journalism and he would become the leading figure in the movement known as new journalism. That said, because of his fame there are many incarnations of characters based on Hunter Thompson in pop culture…
Welcome to Grey Gardens
Grey Gardens, voted number 9# on the list of best documentaries of all time by the International Documentary Association, came about by accident. The original project was a documentary about Lee Radziwill and her sister, a lady you might know from the history books as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. But as the filmmakers began working on the project they realized a much more interesting film lay in the lives of Jackie’s aunt and first cousin, “Little” and “Big” Edith Beale. The Beale’s enjoyed an extremely priviledged and lavish early life…
Fear and Loathing on the Blog Writing Trail: Why Depp is King
In the battle of which actor plays a better Hunter S. Thompson, aka America’s doctor of gonzo journalism, I’d long thought the answer was obvious. I’d seen Bill Murray in Where the Buffalo Roam once many years ago, and underwhelmed with the film never picked it up again. I’ve watched Johnny Depp play in Fear in Loathing in Las Vegas meanwhile countless times, and am still always ready and willing to go back for more. But when I actually sat down to write this article I realized; comparing the work of Bill Murray and Johnny Depp and arguing why one is better is not an easy task…
Shocking News: Film Geeks Love the Internet!
This week Friday Film Review explores the best websites for web-savvy cinephiles. Are you interested in exploring anything and everything film related on the web, but don’t know where to start? Well aren’t you lucky you’re reading Friday Film Review today, because we are going to look at some of the best movie websites out there right now…
Broken English is a charming film about one woman’s unyielding quest for happiness
Are we really only complete when we’re in love? Are we spoiled goods if we don’t find “the one” by a certain point in our lives? These are the questions asked by writer/director Zoe Cassavetes in her delightful feature Broken English. Nora Wilder (Parker Posey) is a thirty something New Yorker who has plenty of things going for her: a job at a swanky Manhattan hotel and great friends like Audrey (Drea De Matteo). Although something Nora doesn’t have is a relationship. Instead she has a sea of men in her life…













