Comedy Series Hialeah Debuts at Milander Center Next Week

As anyone who’s shared a Shit Miami Girls Say meme can attest, there’s plenty of humor to be found in the city of Hialeah. But the upcoming six-episode Hialeah comedy series doesn’t laugh at its namesake. It laughs with it, according to star and executive producer Melissa Carcache. The former Hialeah and…

Film Director Brett Ratner Accused in Weinstein-esque Sexual Harassment Scandal

Could Miami have its own Harvey Weinstein? Just kidding — of course it does. Like every other place on Earth where men hold nearly all of the power and money, Miami is surely housing enough sexual harassers to book the world’s one-week outpatient treatment centers into the next century. And according to six women, film director Brett Ratner is one of them.

Tom of Finland Gives a Boldly Gay Artist the Too-Polite Movie Treatment

When same-sex marriage became legal in Finland this past March, the government celebrated by releasing an official emjoi — a leather-clad man with a drooping mustache and a police-style cap emblazoned with the word “Tom.” No explanation was necessary, for “Tom” was clearly a nod to Tom of Finland —…

Thor: Ragnarok Shows That Marvel Movies Can Still Hit Where It Counts

Like most of the better Marvel efforts, Thor: Ragnarok feels like the work of a unique sensibility instead of a huddle of brand managers. While the studio’s films demonstrated plenty of comic flair right from the start of its shared-universe experiment, with 2008’s Iron Man, recent efforts have veered too…

A Jane Goodall Documentary Proves Entirely Worthy of Its Subject

When I first saw Brett Morgen’s 2002 documentary The Kid Stays in the Picture, I was shocked that the film somehow matched the rollicking, mercurial energy of its subject, producer Robert Evans. Morgen reimagined the use of archival footage and voiceover, and the style he pioneered has now been mimicked…

Netflix’s Joan Didion Doc Does Justice to Its Epochal Subject

Joan Didion has set an impossible standard for any documentarian who would want to cover her life. She’s essentially already done it herself, brilliantly, in her essays, novels and films. Still, Didion’s nephew, actor/director Griffin Dunne, takes a shot with his new Netflix film Joan Didion: The Center Will Not…

In All I See Is You, a Blind Woman Gets Her Sight — and Looks Disappointed

This fall, mainstream films are subverting expectations all over the place. Darren Aronofsky’s Mother! proved too much for some audiences looking for a moody drama who were then shocked by gory, allegorical narrative. Blade Runner 2049 sloughed off most of its predecessor’s lower-brow populist action for a somber tone and…

With Breathe, Andy Serkis Asks How Much Fun a Polio Movie Can Be

The last few months have seen some welcome innovation in the cry-along subgenre of dramas about finding the will to keep living after bodily catastrophe. First, in the notably sincere and unsensational Stronger, director David Gordon Green and his crew strove to strip away as much of such films’ usual…