Tom Hiddleston Wants to Wear Jeans for Once

Tom Hiddleston can pull off extreme looks. In The Avengers, he strutted around in Loki’s two-foot horned helmet. For Midnight in Paris, he finessed F. Scott Fitzgerald’s prim finger waves. And in his latest, Jim Jarmusch’s vampire romance Only Lovers Left Alive, Hiddleston lounges bare-chested in velvet-cuffed robes. The only…

Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival 2014: Six Must-See Films

Still mad you didn’t meet James Franco last year when he promoted the Miami Gay & Lesbian Film Festival’s screening of his film Interior. Leather Bar.? Don’t fret. Franco’s impish grin and squinty gaze may be gone, but he’s not the only creative genius making LGBT films. The world-renowned festival…

Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival: Director Andrew Putschoegl Talks BFFs

Films like BFFs disprove the myth that a majority of film festival offerings are nothing more than pretentious, self-indulgent arts projects. BFFs is a funny, cute film with well-developed characters who endear themselves to the audience. “The film is firmly in the ‘dramedy’ realm,” says the film’s director Andrew Putschoegl…

Miami Designer Ozcar Garcia-Lopez Opens Up About Winning Under the Gunn

Who ever said, “Nice guys finish last” is an asshole. Just ask couture designer and season one winner of Lifetime’s Under the Gunn, Ozcar Garcia Lopez. The Coral Gables native, who admittedly says that he can’t stand dramatic confrontations, gained praises from mega-star judges, Heidi Klum, and Neil Patrick Harris,…

In Hateship Loveship, Kristen Wiig Dials It Way Back

Watching Kristen Wiig on Saturday Night Live, you maybe sometimes wondered if she was from outer space, perhaps some planet where women have big foreheads and tiny hands and sing like chickens on helium. As sheltered housekeeper Johanna in Liza Johnson’s proudly frustrating Hateship Loveship — a pun on the…

Jodorowsky’s Dune: The Dune That Died

The most perfect works of art are those suspended between conception and realization, the ones that seize you up with how great they’re gonna be. (Well, those and Busby Berkeley numbers.) Alejandro Jodorowsky’s daft, daring, surrealist, possibly impossible adaptation of Dune, Frank Herbert’s spice-mining science-fiction novel that later proved unadaptable…

Child’s Pose, an Amazing New Romanian Classic

Ah, the Romanians — sometimes it seems like no one else is bothering to make movies for grown-ups anymore. Those of us with an abiding New Wave-y interest in human warts and tragic truth-telling have known, since 2005’s The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, to look to the Carpathians for dependable…

Who Is Dayani Cristal? Is Exquisite, Cohesive, and Poetic

The Sonora Desert in Arizona is freezing at night, brutally hot in the day. The documentary Who Is Dayani Cristal? reveals that the infrastructure dealing with illegal immigration into the United States from points south is likewise hot, cold, and unnecessarily deadly. We meet Americans dedicated to identifying, even humanizing,…

The Other Woman Doesn’t Let Its Cast Be Great

The sexual politics of Nick Cassavetes’ decidedly un-romantic comedy The Other Woman are intriguingly European and, at their core, kind of groovy. Wronged Connecticut wifey-wife Kate (Leslie Mann) seeks out her husband’s mistress, sexy city-slicker and high-powered lawyer Carly (Cameron Diaz), looking to her for answers: Why is my husband…

The End Is Awesome: Six Best Dystopian Movies

The genre of dystopian fiction and film has been around forever, and it sure isn’t stopping. Recent years have shown an abundance, and they’ve come in all kinds of forms; from adaptations of young adult literature (Hunger Games, Divergent) to visually stunning original works (Oblivion). While we can’t forget a…