Guy Pearce
New Zealand
county Lee
TIFF 2023
epic
Guy Pearce
New Zealand
county Lee
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‘Melissa Etheridge: My Window’ Review: A Broadway Memoir, Confession and Concert That’s Worthy of Applause - variety.com - Oklahoma
variety.com
29.09.2023 / 02:05

‘Melissa Etheridge: My Window’ Review: A Broadway Memoir, Confession and Concert That’s Worthy of Applause

Trish Deitch Before Melissa Etheridge became a stadium rock star, she spent four years playing lesbian bars in and around LA. That atmosphere—a small, rowdy roomful of happy drunken ladies—changed the way she wrote music and performed.

‘PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie’ Review: The Plucky Pups Get a Super-Powered Sequel - variety.com
variety.com
18.09.2023 / 15:43

‘PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie’ Review: The Plucky Pups Get a Super-Powered Sequel

Courtney Howard The “PAW Patrol” franchise is now 10 years old — 70 in dog years — and with each installment, children and their parents have been treated to exciting adventures, wholesome characters and cool new merchandise. What began as a preschool TV series in 2013 got the silver-screen treatment in 2021 with the inventively named “PAW Patrol: The Movie,” broadening its scale and reach but sacrificing none of its lesson-learning or toy-slinging.

‘The Royal Hotel’ Review: Bad Times With the Barflies in Kitty Green’s Genre Take on Toxic Male Behavior - variety.com - Australia - Finland
variety.com
16.09.2023 / 15:09

‘The Royal Hotel’ Review: Bad Times With the Barflies in Kitty Green’s Genre Take on Toxic Male Behavior

Amy Nicholson “The Royal Hotel,” the setting of Kitty Green’s ulcer-inducing thriller, is a sun-baked bar in a rural Australian mining town surrounded by terrain so monotone that Canadian backpackers Hanna (Julia Garner) and Liv (Jessica Henwick) can’t keep their eyes open on the way in. The two young women arrive at their barmaid jobs with a sense palpable disorientation. They’ve quite literally woken up in Oz, and they don’t know the people, the customs, the nicknames for the local ales, or the way out.

‘The Movie Teller’ Review: Berenice Bejo, Daniel Bruhl In An Enchanting Chilean Cross Between ‘The Last Picture Show’ And ‘Cinema Paradiso’ – Toronto Film Festival - deadline.com - city Belfast - Chile
deadline.com
16.09.2023 / 03:25

‘The Movie Teller’ Review: Berenice Bejo, Daniel Bruhl In An Enchanting Chilean Cross Between ‘The Last Picture Show’ And ‘Cinema Paradiso’ – Toronto Film Festival

When I was in college cinema courses I made a Super 8 film called Movie Girl. It was a Hollywood-set love letter to movies centered on a Musso & Franks waitress who put herself dreamily into the plots of classic films. It won an award there but was the highlight of the directing career I never had. However I have always been partial to filmmakers who put their own early film going experience and passion into their careers now. You may have heard of them. Kenneth Branagh won an Oscar for doing just that in Belfast. Steven Spielberg got several nominations last year for his very personal The Fabelmans . Woody Allen had his own charming take in The Purple Rose Of Cairo. Peter Bogdanovich made a lasting impression with 1971’s The Last Picture Show, as did Giuseppe Tornatore with his Oscar winner, Cinema Paradiso. It is a combination of the latter two especially that might describe the feel of the latest movie about the love of movies, The Movie Teller (La Contadora de Peliculas) which had its World Premiere tonight at the Toronto Film Festival. And just in sheer numbers of classic film clips incorporated into its near two hour running time, this one sets a record in the little sub-genre. For movie lovers everywhere The Movie Teller is a must see.

‘The Royal Hotel’ review: Welcome to the scariest bar on earth - nypost.com - Australia - USA
nypost.com
15.09.2023 / 16:31

‘The Royal Hotel’ review: Welcome to the scariest bar on earth

Hollywood, by and large, portrays bars as the most fun and chummy places on earth. At “Cheers” and “Coyote Ugly,” everybody knows your name and you can grow into a better person by sexy dancing.Even Moe’s Tavern from “The Simpsons,” with all its seasoned boozehounds, has a base level of respectability and camaraderie.

‘The Morning Show’ Review: Hit Apple TV+ Show Leans Into Soap Opera Melodrama in Entertaining Third Season - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
13.09.2023 / 13:03

‘The Morning Show’ Review: Hit Apple TV+ Show Leans Into Soap Opera Melodrama in Entertaining Third Season

Numerous clips have been shared online regarding how self-importantly Aaron Sorkin and company took themselves while they were making “The Newsroom,” a show that practically announced itself as the last stand for human rights and journalistic decency in the world. Holding that impossible standard high in its third season is Apple TV+’s expensive hit “The Morning Show,” a program that makes it feel like if morning news in America falls, then the apocalypse is just around the corner.

With Jon Hamm, ‘The Morning Show’ Season 3 Adds a New Face but Keeps Up the Chaos: TV Review - variety.com - Italy
variety.com
13.09.2023 / 07:15

With Jon Hamm, ‘The Morning Show’ Season 3 Adds a New Face but Keeps Up the Chaos: TV Review

Alison Herman TV Critic It’s difficult to top the heights and/or depths of “The Morning Show” Season 2, a borderline camp masterpiece in which Elle Woods sucked face with Alicia Florrick and a disgraced Matt Lauer type drove his car off an Italian bluff. But the Apple TV+ drama is obligated to try, so for its latest premiere, it goes where no fictional daytime infotainment digest has gone before: to outer space.

‘The Burial’ Review: Jamie Foxx And Tommy Lee Jones Lead Rousing David Vs. Goliath Deep South Legal Story – Toronto Film Festival - deadline.com - New York
deadline.com
12.09.2023 / 02:59

‘The Burial’ Review: Jamie Foxx And Tommy Lee Jones Lead Rousing David Vs. Goliath Deep South Legal Story – Toronto Film Festival

The Burial is a not-so-great title; it sounds like a horror film. I hope it doesn’t keep people away from this highly entertaining, crowd-pleasing movie that otherwise is an example of what good old fashioned Hollywood filmmaking can still be all about in the right hands. It feels bigger than life, but it is based on some pretty big lives indeed.

‘Lee’ Review: Kate Winslet Gets Her Oscar Clips In Ellen Kuras’ Visually Immaculate, But Standard-Issue Biopic [TIFF] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
10.09.2023 / 02:37

‘Lee’ Review: Kate Winslet Gets Her Oscar Clips In Ellen Kuras’ Visually Immaculate, But Standard-Issue Biopic [TIFF]

Time and again, we’ve seen that trying to smash the entirety of a life—especially that of a notable person—into the running time of a feature film is a fool’s errand, resulting in puddle-deep characterization, painfully expositional dialogue and narratives that offer little more than bullet points. But these movies win Oscars, so financiers see them as something resembling a low risk, and here we are.

DP Ellen Kuras steps Into the Director’s Chair With Kate Winslet-Starrer ’Lee’ - variety.com
variety.com
09.09.2023 / 13:31

DP Ellen Kuras steps Into the Director’s Chair With Kate Winslet-Starrer ’Lee’

Diane Garrett Ellen Kuras is having a full-circle moment. The celebrated cinematographer, who has worked for directors including Martin Scorsese, Spike Lee and Michel Gondry, wanted to be a politically minded filmmaker like Costa-Gavras when she was starting out, but found herself primarily working behind the camera for many years. With “Lee,” a Toronto premiere starring Kate Winslet as famed World War II photographer Lee Miller, she is finally making her debut as a feature film director.

‘The Convert’ Review: Guy Pearce Is a Remorseful Warrior in Blood-Soaked New Zealand Period Piece - variety.com - Britain - New Zealand - Beyond
variety.com
09.09.2023 / 03:37

‘The Convert’ Review: Guy Pearce Is a Remorseful Warrior in Blood-Soaked New Zealand Period Piece

Carlos Aguilar When lay minister Thomas Munro (Guy Pearce) first reaches the shores of New Zealand in 1830, he does so on a white horse. A religious British man riding into a far-off land on his milky stallion is the picture of a white savior if there ever was one.

‘The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’ With Norman Reedus Is a Welcome, if Mostly Carol-Less, Addition to the Franchise: TV Review - variety.com - France - New York - city Dead
variety.com
08.09.2023 / 17:45

‘The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’ With Norman Reedus Is a Welcome, if Mostly Carol-Less, Addition to the Franchise: TV Review

Jessica Liese If the first “Walking Dead” spinoff following the finale of the flagship series, “The Walking Dead: Dead City,” seemed to mark the beginning of a new era for the franchise, the second certainly feels like a continuation — tonally, if not chronologically. “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon,” which premieres on AMC on Sept. 10, builds on the tentative good will established by “Dead City,” even arguably improving on some of its strengths.

‘A Murder At The End Of The World’ Trailer: Emma Corrin & Clive Owen Star In FX Limited Series On November 14 - theplaylist.net - USA - county Harris - county Story - city Fargo - city Dickinson, county Harris
theplaylist.net
07.09.2023 / 19:05

‘A Murder At The End Of The World’ Trailer: Emma Corrin & Clive Owen Star In FX Limited Series On November 14

FX has quite the slate of new releases on its Fall TV calendar, with “American Horror Story: Delicate” and the latest season of “Fargo” among then. But don’t sleep on “A Murder At The End Of The World,” a seven-episode limited series starring Emma Corrin and Clive Owen.

‘The Royal Hotel’ Review: Julia Garner Impresses In Aussie Outback Thriller [Telluride] - theplaylist.net - Australia - USA
theplaylist.net
07.09.2023 / 16:59

‘The Royal Hotel’ Review: Julia Garner Impresses In Aussie Outback Thriller [Telluride]

TELLURIDE – The most intriguing aspect of Kitty Green’s new thriller “The Royal Hotel” is what she doesn’t tell you. Set in a town in the middle of the Australian outback, this is a movie that simmers in culture clashes, dangerous misogyny, and sexual tension.

‘The Burial’ Trailer: Oscar Winners Jamie Foxx & Tommy Lee Jones Lead A Legal Drama Debuting At TIFF - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
07.09.2023 / 15:03

‘The Burial’ Trailer: Oscar Winners Jamie Foxx & Tommy Lee Jones Lead A Legal Drama Debuting At TIFF

How can one small business stand up to corporations? It might seem an unlikely question for a funeral home, but even that industry faces these issues. Maggie Betts’ “The Burial” looks at what happens when a small funeral home encounters corporate entities determined to corner the market on death care. The film, premiering at the 2023 Toronto Film Festival, finds a skilled acting duo in leads, Tommy Lee Jones and Jamie Foxx.

‘The Morning Show’ Review: Hit Apple TV+ Show Leans Into Soap Opera Melodrama in Entertaining Third Season - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
06.09.2023 / 13:35

‘The Morning Show’ Review: Hit Apple TV+ Show Leans Into Soap Opera Melodrama in Entertaining Third Season

Numerous clips have been shared online regarding how self-importantly Aaron Sorkin and company took themselves while they were making “The Newsroom,” a show that practically announced itself as the last stand for human rights and journalistic decency in the world. Holding that impossible standard high in its third season is Apple TV+’s expensive hit “The Morning Show,” a program that makes it feel like if morning news in America falls, then the apocalypse is just around the corner.

‘The Theory Of Everything’ Review: A Weirdly Elusive Dive Into The Multiverse – Venice Film Festival - deadline.com - Germany - Switzerland
deadline.com
03.09.2023 / 15:33

‘The Theory Of Everything’ Review: A Weirdly Elusive Dive Into The Multiverse – Venice Film Festival

Thanks to science fiction, we all have a basic grip on the theory of the multiverse: the idea that there are innumerable parallel worlds in which the chances and choices of the past – the roads not taken, whether by ourselves or the dinosaurs – have split off into alternative stories, endlessly bifurcating into other pasts, other futures that must be peopled, most provocatively, with other versions of ourselves. It is an idea that has proved rich pickings for comic-book adventures, where peril can come from any available universe and there is always a chance of confronting a doppelganger, but German director Timm Kröger has returned to the theory – which dates back to the 1950s – to explore how mysterious, sinister and terrifyingly vast a proposal it really is. This is a theory of everything where everything – that familiar word – is infinite. Where nothing, in fact, is ever going to be “everything.”

‘The Holdovers’ Telluride Review: Alexander Payne & Paul Giamatti Reunite For a ’70s Nostalgia Dramedy - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
02.09.2023 / 22:15

‘The Holdovers’ Telluride Review: Alexander Payne & Paul Giamatti Reunite For a ’70s Nostalgia Dramedy

TELLURIDE – Considering the success and adoration of the “Sideways,” it’s sort of surprising it took Alexander Payne and Paul Giamatti this long to find another film to make together. Almost 20 years later, the director and actor have reteamed for “The Holdovers,” which debuted at this year’s Telluride Film Festival.

‘The Pigeon Tunnel’ Review: Errol Morris’s Latest Works In A Familiar Style, But With New Thematic Concerns [Telluride] - theplaylist.net - county Early
theplaylist.net
02.09.2023 / 13:29

‘The Pigeon Tunnel’ Review: Errol Morris’s Latest Works In A Familiar Style, But With New Thematic Concerns [Telluride]

Early in his new film “The Pigeon Tunnel,” Errol Morris creates one of the most vivid images of a career packed with them: a man in a suit walking through a meadow filled with mirrors. He’s always had a gift for finding specific and memorable visual metaphors for the stories he tells and the themes he’s drawn to; here, what’s noteworthy isn’t just the mirrors but the way the man keeps moving away from them.

Revisiting the 1980 SAG-AFTRA Strike with ‘MASH’ Stars, an Emmy Boycott and All-Night Negotiating Sessions: ‘We’re Going to Strike Like Hell’ - variety.com - Beverly Hills
variety.com
01.09.2023 / 23:17

Revisiting the 1980 SAG-AFTRA Strike with ‘MASH’ Stars, an Emmy Boycott and All-Night Negotiating Sessions: ‘We’re Going to Strike Like Hell’

Cynthia Littleton Business Editor Loretta Swit remembers well the night she won her first Emmy Award. On Sept. 7, 1980, the “MASH” star sat in her agent’s living room in Beverly Hills, watching the ceremony on TV when she heard her name called out and saw her picture flash on the screen.

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