The Film Talk Movie Review Podcast
The Award Winning Show of Cinema Reviews and Interviews with Jett Loe and Gareth Higgins

Posts Tagged ‘movie review’

Survival of the Shiftiest: Richard Stanley and the Deep Magic of DUST DEVIL

Survival of the Shiftiest: Richard Stanley and the Deep Magic of DUST DEVIL

Jett here:  I’m excited to introduce a new contributor to the site – Tim Hayes.  Tim’s a freelance writer based in the UK, who earns his living writing about business, science, art, and other topics in a land where, according to legend, the work of the journalist is respected and rewarded.


Episode 165 – SOURCE CODE / Death of the Film Critic

Episode 165 – SOURCE CODE / Death of the Film Critic

In this week’s show Gareth and I discuss in some great detail the new Duncan Jones Sci-Fi Romance Actioner SOURCE CODE as well as mull over the possible Death of the Film Critic.


Episode 164 – SUCKER PUNCH / Elizabeth Taylor / TOPSY-TURVY

Episode  164 - SUCKER PUNCH / Elizabeth Taylor / TOPSY-TURVY

In this week’s show Gareth and I discuss in some detail the new ‘video games as movie’ SUCKER PUNCH, the work of Elizabeth Taylor and one of Mike Leigh’s few period pieces TOPSY-TURVY.


THE ADJUSTMENT BUREAU: Patriarchy Rules

THE ADJUSTMENT BUREAU: Patriarchy Rules

When will people learn? Mystery is greater than resolution. Curiosity lured us from hulking mouth-breathers into torture rationalizers—but torture-rationalizers who went to the Moon! Answers just remind us that George Nolfi’s THE ADJUSTMENT BUREAU is a work of poorly planned screenwriting about half-forgotten ideas


JUSTIN BIEBER: NEVER SAY NEVER: Pinocchio

JUSTIN BIEBER: NEVER SAY NEVER: Pinocchio

After a good three minutes of pulling my hair out trying not to have to write about UNKNOWN (about which Jett and Gareth have already covered the full spectrum of my faintly entertained response), THE MECHANIC (aka The Boor and the Bore), or—Gwyneth-willing—COUNTRY STRONG, I realized that the best reviewed 2011 wide release is a [...]


This Week in TFT: UNKNOWN, KABOOM and an Oscar Podcast

A brand new week here at The Film Talk folks – here’s what we’ve got coming up:  Tony Youngblood on KABOOM, Brandon Nowalk on NEVER SAY NEVER and, though it pains me to even mention it, Gareth and I will be discussing this past Sunday’s Oscars.


THE EAGLE: Love, Honor, and Obey

THE EAGLE: Love, Honor, and Obey

You could blame the monumental waste of Kevin Macdonald’s THE EAGLE on CENTURION‘s release last year, which preemptively renders its successor both outclassed and unnecessary, if the bulk of its ineptitude didn’t reside in the script. Yes, Jamie Bell heroically tries to balance an ensemble led by a statue and filled out with Donald Sutherland’s paycheck [...]


COLD WEATHER: The Big Wake-Up

COLD WEATHER: The Big Wake-Up

Ironically, and here I’m talking about the artistic technique and not a pretend embrace of, say, Chuck Norris, Aaron Katz’s COLD WEATHER validates mumblecore by rejecting it. The first act is your standard mumblecore setup: a low-ambition young white male moves in with his sister, gets a routine job, meets an ex, all while making [...]


INTOLERABLE CRUELTY & THE LADYKILLERS: Bush League Coens

INTOLERABLE CRUELTY & THE LADYKILLERS: Bush League Coens

Seven or eight years ago, about the time of our conflict with Saddam and the Iraqis, the Coen brothers made two films so bad they closed up shop to recharge. At least, that’s the story ‘round these parts.


ANOTHER YEAR: Seasonal Affective Disorder

ANOTHER YEAR: Seasonal Affective Disorder

While THE KING’S SPEECH loudly, laughably declared it has a voice this weekend, sweeping the guild awards and hoodwinking a lot of people who should know better into thinking it’s more than a shallow, concave, lumpy golddigger, ANOTHER YEAR quietly expanded, a genuinely humanist portrait of middle-aged British people discovering the therapeutic power of friendship, [...]


Human nature: SWEETGRASS and ALAMAR

Human nature: SWEETGRASS and ALAMAR

Through the vast winter wasteland, two films arrived to make me grateful for this period of weirdly timed horror and forgettable “rom”-“coms.”  (Three, actually, as I caught CERTIFIED COPY on British DVD and have a new best film of 2010, but enough about that until it opens in the US.)  Thanks to Netflix Watch Instantly, [...]


BLUE VALENTINE: Things Fall Apart

BLUE VALENTINE: Things Fall Apart

Aiming for Cassavetes gets you Cassavetes, which would be outstanding if we didn’t already have Cassavetes. Which isn’t to say that Derek Cianfrance’s BLUE VALENTINE is wholly derivative, but insofar as it’s an exploration of a crumbling relationship, it breaks no new ground and comes to no conclusions. This, thanks to its opening at a [...]


Episode 157 – NIGHT OF THE HUNTER / THIS WAY OF LIFE / Tom Burstyn Interviewed

Episode 157 - NIGHT OF THE HUNTER / THIS WAY OF LIFE / Tom Burstyn Interviewed

A Tarkovsky Level Member request is our command as we review the over-rated yet beautiful THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER and speak with THIS WAY OF LIFE director Tom Burstyn.


ECCENTRICITIES OF A BLONDE-HAIRED GIRL

ECCENTRICITIES OF A BLONDE-HAIRED GIRL

It’s right there in the title. No, not the “BLONDE-HAIRED GIRL” part, that object of beauty framed in her window like an untouchable museum piece. The detractors don’t seem to notice anything beyond this crumbling skeleton of a Victorian romance, inspired as it is by realist writer Eca de Queiroz, but Manoel de Oliveira’s 2009 film [...]


SOMEWHERE: Lifestyles of the rich and famous

SOMEWHERE: Lifestyles of the rich and famous

Still sucking up to the Italians, Sofia Coppola continues to explore the old bourgeois ennui picture—an increasingly pessimistic cycle from EUROPA ’51 to LA DOLCE VITA to LA NOTTE and beyond—in SOMEWHERE, another film about existential angst where the cause, contra the Italians, is not the soul-crushing effects of modernism but celebrity itself. The bourgeoisie [...]


TRUE GRIT: City of Mann

TRUE GRIT:  City of Mann

Comparing the Coen Brothers’ latest western, the chase film TRUE GRIT, to its predecessor, the camp classic (double entendre!) that finally won John Wayne his Oscar, is a triflin’ quarrel. Never mind that the original TRUE GRIT is dated by its tomboys with Mia Farrow voice, comic mugging accompanied by jaunty woodwinds, and an overall [...]


DOGTOOTH: Adventures in home-schooling

DOGTOOTH:  Adventures in home-schooling

The night after I got to see Yorgos Lanthimos’ bone-dry Greek family comedy DOGTOOTH at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, that same room saw the Houston Film Critics Society name THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO the best foreign language film of the year. In the year Houston hosted CARLOS, WHITE MATERIAL, MOTHER, A [...]


Episode 155 – BLACK SWAN / MONSTERS

Episode 155 - BLACK SWAN / MONSTERS

A slightly heated conversation or perhaps you might even call it a podcast review of Darren Aronofsky’s BLACK SWAN and the beautiful new film MONSTERS.


BLACK SWAN: Hall of mirrors

BLACK SWAN: Hall of mirrors

Just once I’d like to see a film about an artist who achieves his masterpiece by seeking greater control. The popular fantasy is that artists are sensitive feelers who must completely lose themselves and let the spirit of Obi-Wan or whatever guide them to glory, not practicing communicators who ought to pinpoint precisely what they’re [...]


WAKING SLEEPING BEAUTY: A Walt Disney Studios picture

WAKING SLEEPING BEAUTY: A Walt Disney Studios picture

Don Hahn’s WAKING SLEEPING BEAUTY is almost as exciting as Al Gore’s AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH. Wake me when Guy Maddin gets here. Hahn’s documentary on the second golden age of Disney—a climb from the nadir of THE BLACK CAULDRON all the way up to Pride Rock, with a glance at infinity and beyond—is more insidery [...]


WHITE MATERIAL: Stay the course

WHITE MATERIAL: Stay the course

Boy, there’s nothing like watching a Claire Denis film to make a guy feel thankful. Especially if that guy happens to (perhaps secretly) love COLD MOUNTAIN, as WHITE MATERIAL has at least as much in common with Denis’ cinematic cousin Olivier Assayas and regional relatives like HOTEL RWANDA as it does with the Minghella story [...]


HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN

HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN

I’m not going to inspire any fainting spells by saying HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN is the best film in the franchise. I might when I say that the other six are barely watchable. Why is the Alfonso Cuarón entry so much better? Glad you asked.


FOUR LIONS: Boom Goes the Dynamite

FOUR LIONS:  Boom Goes the Dynamite

I admit I was a mite concerned by the concept of FOUR LIONS—a self-proclaimed “jihad comedy” about bumbling terrorists—though less for any faintworthy controversy than for the unshakable image of a Benny Hill type running around London trying and failing to blow things up, Wile E. Coyote-style. I should have known better. Chris Morris (aka [...]


CARLOS: Almost Legal

CARLOS:  Almost Legal

Is there a better symbol for our historical moment than a tabloid terrorist? I don’t mean trash-mag doodler Perez Hilton; I mean a bona fide violent terrorist whose persona is more celebrity than revolutionary, whose exploits and impact are approached with bemused spectatorship in place of active engagement. Pop history has had years to streamline [...]