I will watch this just to hear this sound:
In the seventeenth chapter of “The Voyage of the Beagle,” Charles Darwin turned to the mating habits of the giant Galápagos tortoise. “When the male and female are together, the male utters a hoarse roar or bellowing, which, it is said, can be heard at the distance [...]
Entries Tagged as 'review'
Darwinian Tortoises
April 18th, 2008 · No Comments
Tags: film
Bardem Hair Day
October 11th, 2007 · No Comments
Picture Source: IMdB
In an interview with the cast and filmmakers of the upcoming Coen Brothers’ film, No Country For Old Men, Javier Bardem (and the Coens) talk about how his hair came to look the way it was in the movie.
Lisa Schwarzbaum (Moderator): I think there are two things that dominate this film - [...]
Opus Prodigiosus
September 3rd, 2007 · 1 Comment
[Originally on Desicritics]
Was in New York recently, and whenever I’m there I try to catch an off-Broadway play, or a decent Broadway one, if that’s possible. Well, this time I was way off Broadway - on 59th between Park and Madison, in fact - at the 59E59 theaters. The play was Michael Hollinger’s Opus [...]
Goya’s Ghosts (2006)
August 15th, 2007 · No Comments
[Originally on Blogcritics]
Milos Forman’s (One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, Amadeus) latest movie can be divided into two halves: The first half being intellectual masturbation for the anti-war groups; and the second half, a historical melodrama. Putting the two together results in a political soap opera which is as intellectually compelling (and just as easy [...]
Hoo-ah! How Pacino Got Bigger Than Himself
August 9th, 2007 · 2 Comments
Slate.com’s Jessica Winter dissects how Pacino, unlike his peers (Robert De Niro and Jack Nicholson), became better at playing the role of the “Famous Person” than what he did to become famous.
Pacino increasingly sought out big, shouty parts and then inflated them past their already outsized proportions: He out-Sataned Satan in The Devil’s Advocate (1997), [...]
The Coens Are Back
July 27th, 2007 · No Comments
The trailer for the Coen Brothers’ new film No Country for Old Men is out. And, to put it mildly, it does not disappoint.
From the trailer, it looks like they are back with a bang and are bringing on all the blood, noir, edginess, and “edge-of-the-seat”-iness from their Blood Simple days. After Ladykillers, I think [...]
A Terrible Longing
July 23rd, 2007 · No Comments
“I am walking in my city. The island sleeps, and I can feel the jostling of its dreams. I know they are out there, Mahalaxmi, Mazagaon, Umerkhadi, Pydhuni and the grand melodrama of Marine Drive. I have music in my head, the jingle of those old names, Wadala, Matunga, Koliwada, Sakinaka, and as I cross [...]
Tags: bombay · books · diaspora · india
You Have the Right to Remain Silent: The Police Concert Review
July 3rd, 2007 · 2 Comments
[Originally on Blogcritics]
Sometime in the 1980s (or thereabouts), I heard ‘De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da’ for the first time. It was on my father’s Sony stereo system, which was covered with a custom-made plastic case and occupied an exalted position on his bedroom shelf. I had just been given “stereo privileges” which [...]
Tags: concert · music · review
Angelina Jolie
June 27th, 2007 · No Comments
A certain A. Lane from the New Yorker has brutally and frankly broken it down for all of us and showed us the six functions of Jolie, Inc.
Ms. Jolie is now more of a brand than a person, and she comes in six flavors:
1. The celebrity.
2. The sexpot.
3. The Brad handler.
4. The mother.
5. The world [...]
13 (Tzameti) Redux a.k.a. Beer Hunter
March 13th, 2007 · No Comments
After reading my review of 13 (Tzameti) (originally written for Thirsty magazine), a reader sent me an email to let me know about a MySpace blog dedicated to the movie. On that blog was this YouTube video that parodied the movie. It’s called Beer Hunter. Interesting…
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