Most Popular
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The Talk of the Green Iguana
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
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The She-Zebra
Will Erin Meehan be the first female ref in the NFL?
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Are We There Yet?
Jeez, can we just embrace the electric car already?
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Guitar Zero
Maybe the next generation won't even play instruments. Clapton and Hendrix? So passé.
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Accidental Hit Man
Sure, Paul Brandreth talks like a wiseguy. But is he a cold-blooded killer?
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Your Mom Thinks Hes Hot (6)
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Man-Child in the Promised Land (5)
Pop star Sean Kingston hopes the party's just begun
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The Talk of the Green Iguana (3)
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
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Guitar Zero (2)
Maybe the next generation won't even play instruments. Clapton and Hendrix? So passé.
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Shooting the Moon (2)
Aim high or aim low, you're bound to hit something, even if it's the sleep button
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Geek Chic
No More Heroes is hip, bloody, and indispensable.
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Hell Yes
Dante's inferno rages on in Devil May Cry 4.
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Text Adventure
Words get in the way of an otherwise stellar Lost Odyssey.
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Thinning Crowds
It's always dead at The Club
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Move Along, Kids
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Sun-Sentinel Monkey Business
05:32PM 03/10/08 -
Why Was Melissa Britt Lewis Killed?
09:06AM 03/10/08 -
Owen Wilson, Hat Visit FTL
09:18AM 03/08/08 -
Last Night: Ani DiFranco at Langerado
04:00PM 03/10/08 -
Concert Review: Blitzen Trapper at Langerado
02:54PM 03/10/08 -
New Video from the Roots--Who Also Ripped up Langerado
10:40AM 03/10/08
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Recent Articles By Robert Wilonsky
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Move Along, Kids
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Personal Foul
Will Ferrell's umpteenth sports comedy is only half-bad. His half.
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Straight to Video
Michel Gondry attempts to celebrate DIY filmmaking but comes up short, stale, and flat
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How the West Was Wasted
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The Thrill of the Hunt
Two hardened journalists and a newbie go after a war criminal in this dark and dirty winner
Recent Articles By Jordan Harper
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Move Along, Kids
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How the West Was Wasted
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Tomorrow's Misery Today
Children of Men, Color Me Kubrick, The Shield: Season 5, Candy
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Dance of the Penguin
That whole talking animal genre? Let's be done with it.
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Camel Light
National Features
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Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
For days after Hurricane Rita, a Texas prison was hell on earth.
By Chris Vogel -
SF Weekly
The Candidate
Our columnist knows Ralph Nader's running mate all too well.
By Matt Smith -
The Pitch
How Not To Be a Rap Star
First of all, lay off the Ecstasy.
By Nadia Pflaum -
Village Voice
Project Runaway
What becomes a gossip columnist most?
By Michael Musto
Margot at the Wedding
(Paramount)
Margot (Nicole Kidman, or someone who looks just like her) is a fiction writer whose tales are based, uncomfortably and unkindly, on the real-life family for whom she seems to care very little. Hence sister Pauline's (Jennifer Jason Leigh) late discovery that Margot's a "monster" — late to her, not to the audience, which gets glimpses of her cruelty early and often. Noah Baumbach reunites the siblings in a gray, dreary Hamptons, where Pauline's about to marry sour slacker Malcolm (Jack Black, tamped-down and ill-tempered). Margot has in tow the son she's close to ruining, unless he makes his escape. Sharp, funny, and painful — that's Baumbach's signature of late, and it's writ large in this overlooked dramedy (absent extras except for a chat with the filmmaker and Jason Leigh) that's worth another glance. — Robert Wilonsky
American Gangster: Unrated Extended Edition
(Universal)
Director Ridley Scott's take on the true-life tale of Harlem heroin-kingpin Frank Lucas didn't need to be 18 minutes longer; sounds more like a threat than a selling point, though the theatrical take's available here as well. The movie plays in either state like a cross between Super Fly (or Scarface) and Munich, with Denzel Washington as the high-livin', mother-lovin' dope dealer and Russell Crowe as the rumpled supercopper, ringleading other officers charged with taking down Lucas and his killer kinfolk. Occasionally thrilling but also TV-show familiar, American Gangster's a flashy procedural as tragic epic — and Scott's damned proud of his accomplishment, down to the detail of the period garb, as evidenced in the lengthy making-of starring the real-life Lucas as his own sorta-repentant self. — Wilonsky
Lust, Caution
(Focus)
Ang Lee has always liked taking movie genres — say, kung-fu flicks or westerns — and turning them on their ear. Here, he's tackled the erotic thriller, but those looking for Body Heat will be as disappointed as those who expected gunplay from Lee's Brokeback Mountain. Oh, there's sex all right — sex as graphic as anything your nephew can find on Google. (Prudes: There's also an R-rated version, in addition to the original NC-17 cut.) Slow but rarely dull, Lust, Caution revolves around political machinations in 1940s China. Western viewers might feel they're lacking context, especially as the line between good and bad grows ever more blurry. But at the center of the film is the relationship between Tony Leung and Tang Wei, whose sex scenes reveal what their lie-filled dialogue can't. — Jordan Harper
Excellent Cadavers
(First Run)
Here in America, the Mafia is dead in both fact and fiction: The Sopranos are finished, and RICO beat the New York boys like a goombah on a snitch. But in Palermo, it's the prosecutors who took the hit, as this poorly made but fascinating documentary illustrates. Covering the brave battles and tragic end of an anti-mob lawyer in Sicily, Excellent Cadavers is grim, full of grainy footage of streets strewn with corpses and interviews with marked men. Bad news is, the film's based on a book and narrated by its author, who reads with all the brio of Laurence Olivier (post-death). A note to journalists and documentary-makers: Unless your name is Hunter S. Thompson, you aren't the story. Get out of the way, and hire an old British guy to read the narration. — Harper
Margot at the Wedding
Nicole Kidman
American Gangster
Denzel Washington
Lust, Caution
NC-17
Excellent Cadavers
the mob in Sicily
Margot at the Wedding
American Gangster
Lust, Caution
Excellent Cadavers









