FX’s Hillbilly Noir Justified Was the Forgotten Prestige TV Show

No show wears its love for language and land more proudly than FX’s Justified, which ended its six-year run this week. Based on a novella by Elmore Leonard and starring squinty-eyed sex symbol Timothy Olyphant, the hillbilly noir never received the critical adulation or the audience one might expect for…

The Best Classic Movies Showing in Miami in April

Miami is flourishing with theaters that showcase classic cinema on a regular basis. It’s gotten to the point where it’s practically impossible to keep track of how many there really are, to the point where March’s list became incomplete due to new additions throughout. As such, for April, we’re taking…

Disney’s Monkey Kingdom Is Wonderful and Full of Lies

Truth in film takes another jolly beating in Disneynature’s Monkey Kingdom, a documentary-like nature flick with the last-century chutzpah to pass off its marvelous footage of some months in the life of a single-mom macaque as a full-fledged princess story, with three acts, a tearful exile, and her ascent, in the final reels, to the throne. (Oops, spoiler for the anthropomorphized-monkey movie.)

Smuggler Thriller Manos Sucias Hurts Because It’s Honest

For any thinking person, little in Josef Kubota Wladyka’s fleet and sweaty Colombian-smuggler thriller Manos Sucias will surprise. Drug-running is work for the broke and desperate; the runners might be less broke after a delivery, but that desperation only grows worse; killing is grim and painful and utterly unlike the…

In The Salt of the Earth, Sebastiao Salgado’s Devastating Photographs Are Too Beautiful to Turn Away From

Even if you think you don’t know the photographs of Sebastião Salgado, you’ve probably seen them. In one of his most famous pictures, taken in the mid-1980s in Mali, a woman whose face is half-hidden by a dark, rough-textured cotton veil, her bearing as elegant as anything you’d see in fashion photography, appears to gaze off into the middle distance.

Effie Gray Vaguely Damns Ruskin as a Prude

In 1848, Euphemia Gray, a bright and pretty young girl from a family of modest means, left her home in Scotland to marry her era’s equivalent of an art-world rock star, the imposingly erudite critic John Ruskin. Perhaps as early as her wedding night, Effie knew she had made a…

Miami & the Beaches Environmental Film Festival Kicks Off April 15

Miami, even more so than many other global locales, is about to feel the effects of environmental negligence. With climate change and sea level rise, the Magic City will be lucky to stick it out ’til 2020—especially given the mind-boggling denial of our state’s leadership.  Thankfully, the Miami and the…

Game of Thrones Season 5 Preview: Women Warriors Take Over Westeros

It may be hard to remember now, but there once was a time when Daenerys was the most exciting character on Game of Thrones. Played by Emilia Clarke, the exiled royal best embodied the HBO drama’s paradoxical appeal: its mix of historical authenticity and rousing fantasy. Reduced to currency by…

Noah Baumbach Ages Up to 40-Something Angst in While We’re Young

Noah Baumbach has always had a dash of hypochondria, but in the past few years, his doctor’s visits have changed. “If you’re a worrier like I am, or Ben,” he says, referring to Ben Stiller, the star of his 2010 movie Greenberg, “you’re used to going, ‘Is this something that should be cause for worry?'”

Hulu’s Musical Drama South Beach Features Local Talent, Local Spots

Country fans have Nashville. Hip-hop fans have Empire. And now, Latin American music fans have South Beach. Produced by Miami-based Dolphin Entertainment, Hulu’s upcoming musical soap opera, though fictional, is rooted in South Florida. Born from the desire to film a show in his hometown, Dolphin President and South Beach…

In Defense of Furious 7

Furious 7 and While We’re Young are two very different movies — one’s all synchronized driving and explosions, the other’s all sorta-depressed New Yorkers who don’t drive — but both receive generally positive reviews from Alan Scherstuhl and Stephanie Zacharek of the Village Voice, and Amy Nicholson of LA Weekly,…

Mad Men: What’s Left After Achieving Everything?

Mad Men has always been, among many other things, about the exit of the old guard and the entrance of the new — and the acceleration of that transition by the mood and the movements of the Sixties. The pilot, set in 1960, finds the Sterling Cooper higher-ups scrambling to…

Miami Filmmaker’s Short on Mariel Boatlift To Screen at Cannes

From Cane to Cannes: One letter makes all the difference, especially for University of Miami graduate and first-time director Tony Mendez. At the end of each academic year, UM’s film program hosts a film festival for all the student films (this year’s runs May 1-3 at the Bill Cosford Cinema),…

The Ten Worst Reality Television Shows Filmed In Miami

Love it or hate it, reality television is here to stay; and unfortunately, over the years Miami has been one of the genre’s favorite towns. Yeah, sorry about that, America. MTV gave us the greatness that was the Real World Miami in 1996, but it seems since then anyone and everyone…