by Onderhond, November 18, 2009 10:03 AM
Reading the reactions beneath the 4Bia 2 review it seems that I'm not the only one who waited a long time before actually sitting down to watch Alone. Since I just saw it yesterday, here's my take on the film....
by Onderhond, November 10, 2009 6:40 AM
Belgians have a hard time recognizing their own talent. That's a fact of life. We're simply not good at promoting our own stuff, even when it's obviously quite awesome. We don't expect to make things that matter in the global...
by Onderhond, November 2, 2009 10:56 AM
In the category "better late than never", my review of Adrift in Tokyo (Tenten) Satoshi Miki is a rising star in the Japanese film scene. His first film established him as a somewhat strange and atypical director, Adrift in Tokyo...
by Eight Rooks, October 30, 2009 5:02 PM
The Battle of Changping was one of the decisive military engagements between the rival dynasties of Warring States period China; it all but wiped out the losing side, and still ranks as one of the deadliest confrontations in history....
by X, October 24, 2009 5:45 PM
And to think that the movies make it seem like a stepping stone on the way to adulthood, particularly movies like this. You know, the idea that, once men get past their adolescent fervor, they no longer think about a...
by Ard Vijn, October 22, 2009 12:34 PM
The herons are not what they seem... Even though the marketing hints at yet another long-haired ghost movie made to cash in on the decade-old successes of "Ringu" and "The Grudge", Lee Yong-Ju's "Possessed" isn't that at all. In fact,...
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by Todd Brown, October 16, 2009 10:33 AM
[Our thanks to Teresa Nieman for the following review.]One of the best movies I saw this year, Adrift is a mesmerizing and achingly beautiful portrait of romantic frustration, and life in Hanoi--in that order. It opens on a couple's...
by Todd Brown, October 16, 2009 10:28 AM
[Our thanks to Teresa Nieman for the following review.] Hirokazu Koreeda is one of today's most consistently excellent filmmakers, with his recent movies Still Walking and Nobody Knows being critical hits worldwide. Because of this, it seems strange to...
by Ben Umstead, October 11, 2009 11:45 AM
Set in an unspecified French speaking African nation mired by civil war, Claire Denis' White Material skirts around much of the social and political commentary that comes with many films shot on the African continent by semi-outsiders. It is in...
by Todd Brown, October 8, 2009 7:37 AM
Brace yourself for disappointment. As painful as it is to say, Shinya Tsukamoto's Tetsuo The Bulletman is far indeed from being the triumphant return to the iconic world that created a rabid cult around Tsukamoto. Worse than that, not...
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