Wetlands Star Carla Juri Brings Refreshing Humanity to NSFW Role

The Wetlands film poster proudly states it’s “the most WTF, NSFW movie at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.” The mind jumps to curiosity or disgust almost immediately, but that’s unsurprising coming from David Wnendt’s film based on Charlotte Roche’s sexually charged novel of the same name. It’s a story about…

Fall Movie Preview: Seven Best Horrors and Thrillers

Every year, it’s like a movie-making tradition to release a slew of horrors and thrillers right around the fall season — particularly the month of October. So why would this year be any different? Hollywood has been stepping up its game when it comes to the quality of films in…

Fall Movie Preview: Five Best Dramas

Yesterday, we highlighted nine comedies, musicals, and animated movies to keep in your rear view as we plunge into the best time of the year for movies. Now it’s time to shed light on dramas — you do want some drama, yes, yes, yes, yes drama. We’ve narrowed it down…

Five Must-Watch Concert Documentaries

Concert films come and go all the time, with most of them not leaving much of an impression on the world after they premiere. But some of them do last, and those are the ones that offer engaging and often different experiences to the norm. Some even transcend the limitations…

The Last of Robin Hood Wrestles With a Star’s Underage Love

If older man/younger woman matchups make many people uncomfortable, the older man/much younger woman combo tends to make them apoplectic. It would be impossible for Nabokov to publish Lolita today, now that all of life, and all of art, must be arranged, categorized, and restricted as a way of protecting…

Elvis Lives in The Identical — and So Does His Boring Twin

The Identical is Elvis-slash-fiction that could have been written by a spinster church organist. Its premise is intriguing: What if Jesse Presley, Elvis’ twin brother who was stillborn at birth, was in fact secretly given to a traveling minister (Ray Liotta) and his infertile wife (Ashley Judd)? What happens next…

Zombie Comedy Life After Beth Is a Bit Too Stiff

Every other year or so, someone comes down the indie-movie pike with an idea for an unconventional zombie movie — as opposed to the workaday ones, where the dead simply return to life and chew on limbs and stuff. Life After Beth, the debut film from writer-director Jeff Baena, strives…

Gump Returns, Still With Nothing to Say

Forrest Gump has turned 20 and is celebrating its birthday with a weeklong IMAX release. It’s a significant milestone for the six-time Academy Award winner. Today, 1994 is as far away from the present as the Vietnam War was from it. Forrest Gump was a fable without a moral, the…

The Dog: Meet the Man Who Held Up the Bank in a Classic

John Wojtowicz may be the perfect embodiment of Maslow’s ideal of self-actualization. The inspiration for Al Pacino’s character in Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon and now the subject of Allison Berg and Frank Keraudren’s fascinating documentary The Dog, Wojtowicz was many things: soldier, bank robber, libertine, and both “Goldwater Republican”…

MIFF Director Jaie Laplante Talks MIFFecito Lineup at Tower Theater

In celebration of the reopening of Little Havana’s beloved art house, Tower Theater, the Miami International Film Festival has announced a four-day mini-film festival featuring exclusive premieres, an opening night party, guests, and a seminar. The festival’s director Jaie Laplante has dubbed the little festival MIFFecito in the spirit of…

The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story: Barely Scandalous

“I’m so excited, I’m so excited, I’m so, I’m so… scared!” Jessie Spano immortalized those words on Saved by the Bell. It also perfectly summed up how most felt before the premiere of last night’s Lifetime docudrama The Unauthorized Saved By The Bell Story. Unlike the more scandalous and indulgent Beverly Hills 90210, Saved…