Robert Klein Still Can’t Stop His Leg Movie Review: He’s Got His Mojo Working
By Adam Blair |
The comedians’ favorite comedian gets an affectionate if overlong portrait that is loaded with laughs.
Rules Don’t Apply DVD Review: Warren Beatty’s Overlong Ego Trip
By Adam Blair |
Dull movie about that fascinating monster Howard Hughes; a charming performance by Alden Ehrenreich is wasted.
Joy Movie Review: When Real Life is Like a Fairy Tale
By Adam Blair |
Enjoyable if somewhat slow-moving comedy-drama makes selling mops fun and sexy.
Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words Movie Review: Here’s Looking at You, Kid
By Adam Blair |
Sharp insights and touching reminiscence about a Hollywood icon struggle to shine through a mountain of repetitive filler.
The Intern Movie Review: Candy-Coated Faux Feminism at Its Worst
By Adam Blair |
It seems to be a harmless, charming little trifle, but this Nancy Meyers movie’s antiquated attitudes got my blood boiling.
Experimenter Movie Review: We’re All Just Lab Rats in This Maze
By Adam Blair |
The Milgram obedience experiments haunt this strange movie, overstuffed with interesting ideas and a compelling but cold performance by Peter Sarsgaard.
Book Review: The Shining: Studies in the Horror Film, Edited by Danel Olson
By Adam Blair |
A deep dive into every aspect of The Shining combines academic analysis, technical explanations and fun facts for fanboys.
Every Secret Thing DVD Review: Chilling Crimes and Very Bad Parenting
By Adam Blair |
Twisty tale of monstrous mother love wastes talents of Diane Lane, Elizabeth Banks, and Dakota Fanning in downbeat police procedural.
Magic Mike XXL Movie Review: Flesh and Fantasy
By Adam Blair |
The relaxed, sexy vibe of this ode to the male body beautiful almost makes up for its lack of narrative momentum.
Book Review: Madeline Kahn: Being the Music, A Life by William V. Madison
By Adam Blair |
The unique comedic chameleon gets a bio that contextualizes her career but comes up short on the person behind the performer.
The D Train Movie Review: Star-Struck Straight Guy Goes Off the Rails
By Adam Blair |
Confusing, cringe-inducing Jack Black comedy offers moments of poignance and insight along with a few laughs.
Tribeca 2015 Review: Dirty Weekend: What Happens in Albuquerque Stays in Albuquerque
By Adam Blair |
Matthew Broderick timidly takes a walk on the wild side in Neil LaBute’s funny but ultimately flaccid satirical fable.
Tribeca 2015 Review: Grandma: Lily Tomlin’s Tour de Force
By Adam Blair |
Tomlin inhabits a tailor-made role in this funny, touching gem; strong cast saves the film from sentimentality and plot’s too-convenient construction.
Tribeca Film Festival 2015 Review: The Overnight Is Quasi-Porn Without the Money Shot
By Adam Blair |
Innocents Taylor Schilling and Adam Scott are seduced, sort of, in this weird, funny but ultimately skin-deep comedy/drama.
Tribeca 2015 Review: A Courtship: Christian Mingle to the Max
By Adam Blair |
Disappointed by dating? Documentary shows what happens when a young woman decides to let God play matchmaker.
Tribeca 2015 Review: Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Story of the National Lampoon
By Adam Blair |
1970s comedy nexus National Lampoon fondly remembered in a documentary with humor and humanity.
Maps to the Stars Movie Review: Monsters Incorporated
By Adam Blair |
Julianne Moore, John Cusack, and Mia Wasikowska in David Cronenberg’s dark Hollywood satire/ghost story that’s both unsettling and compelling.
Still Alice Movie Review: Going, Going, Gone, Girl
By Adam Blair |
A luminous Julianne Moore takes us inside the horror of Alzheimer’s by disappearing while in plain sight.
Top Five Movie Review: Genuine Laughs with the Sting of Truth
By Adam Blair |
Need a break from oh-so-serious Oscar bait? Chris Rock’s raucous, original comedy is funny, touching, and unexpectedly relevant.
Life Itself (2014) Movie Review: A Fascinating Person Attached to That Thumb
By Adam Blair |
Film critic extraordinaire Roger Ebert gets the compelling documentary he deserves, celebratory but unafraid to show his flaws and weaknesses.
Horns Movie Review: Daniel Radcliffe Can’t Handle the Truth
By Adam Blair |
Harry Potter trades his magic wand for a devil’s pitchfork in a horror movie providing scares and chuckles before turning loony-cartoony
Begin Again DVD Review: Sorry, Once Was Enough
By Adam Blair |
Mark Ruffalo and Keira Knightley trapped in a sappy, predictable music industry backstager from the maker of Once.
The Two Faces of January Movie Review: Sex and Suspense from Three Strong Actors
By Adam Blair |
Viggo Mortensen, Kirsten Dunst, and Oscar Isaac in an entertaining tangle of greed, lust, and guilt from Patricia Highsmith.
My Old Lady Movie Review: Paris When it Fizzles
By Adam Blair |
Maggie Smith and Kevin Kline fans beware: this self-indulgent, manipulative movie is a cold, soggy French fry.
The One I Love Movie Review: Do I Know You?
By Adam Blair |
Sharp, perceptive, subtly mind-blowing movie that explores reality and relationships with a light touch, helped by stars Mark Duplass and Elisabeth Moss.
To Be Takei Movie Review: To Somewhat Boldly Go
By Adam Blair |
Charming portrait of courageous, good-humored George Takei that nevertheless lacks the urgency and conflict that the best documentaries can provide.
To Be Takei Director Jennifer Kroot: The Past and Present of a Cheerful Bulldozer
By Adam Blair |
“I just couldn’t figure out how the U. S. Government could have imprisoned Mr. Sulu as a five year old.”
Chad Hanna DVD Review: Henry Fonda Joins the Circus
By Adam Blair |
Harmless, mildly enjoyable corn featuring strong performances by Fonda, Dorothy Lamour, Linda Darnell, a lion, a horse, and an elephant.
Book Review: Five Came Back: A Story of Hollywood and the Second World War by Mark Harris
By Adam Blair |
Fascinating, lively group bio chronicling the WWII service of Hollywood legends Frank Capra, George Stevens, John Ford, William Wyler, and John Huston.
Boyhood’s 12 Years in the Making: Jumping into the Void
By Adam Blair |
Director Richard Linklater and stars Ethan Hawke, Patricia Arquette, and Ellar Coltrane on creating an “epic of minutia.”
Boyhood Movie Review: As Time Goes By
By Adam Blair |
Literally 12 years in the making, Richard Linklater creates a naturalistic slice of life that’s equal parts interesting and maddeningly anti-dramatic.
Chef Movie Review: A Truly Touching Father-Son Love Story
By Adam Blair |
Slight satirical comedy becomes something better as it goes along.
Cold in July Movie Review: Suspense Thriller Degenerates into Gratuitous Violence
By Adam Blair |
Michael C. Hall and other good actors wasted in a pseudo-profound drama culminating in a pointless blood bath.
Bullets Over Broadway Panel Discussion: How Woody Allen Burst into Song
By Adam Blair |
Director/choreographer Susan Stroman reveals the trajectory from 1994 film comedy to hit Broadway musical
Tribeca 2014 Review: Black Coal, Thin Ice: Uneven Film Noir Spiced with Humor and Horror
By Adam Blair |
Stylish noir thriller with touches of humor gives a glimpse into the run-down, everyday China most Westerners don’t see.
Tribeca 2014 Review: 5 to 7 Is a Witty Comedy That Wilts into a Soggy Love Story
By Adam Blair |
A graceful, witty culture-clash comedy that overcooks into a ridiculously sappy doomed romance.
Tribeca 2014 Panel: Stories by Numbers Review: Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Data?
By Adam Blair |
High-powered panel discusses whether data can contribute to creative storytelling and why binge-watching is really nothing new.
Tribeca Film Festival 2014: Thelma Schoonmaker Reveals the Secrets Behind Raging Bull
By Adam Blair |
Scorsese collaborator Thelma Schoonmaker reveals the influences, artistry and happy accidents that go into a great film.
God’s Pocket Movie Review: One Last Chance to See Philip Seymour Hoffman
By Adam Blair |
Downbeat drama with too few flashes of crazy black humor, but strong performances from Hoffman, John Turturro and Christina Hendricks
Joan Crawford Stars in Montana Moon, I Live My Life, and The Bride Wore Red from Warner Archive Collection
By Adam Blair |
Three little-known films from Joan’s MGM years show how the studio placed, and kept, this star in the spotlight for over a decade.
Boardwalk DVD Review: Death Vish
By Adam Blair |
A time capsule from the bad old days of crime-ridden 1970s New York, almost saved by a touching love story enacted by octogenarian pros Lee Strasberg and Ruth Gordon.
Legit: The Complete First Season DVD Review: Tasteless, Rude, Offensive, and Very Funny
By Adam Blair |
If you think the first season of Legit is funny, you should feel ashamed of yourself. I know I do.
Charlie Countryman DVD Review: Confused Romance / Neo-Noir Mashup
By Adam Blair |
Shia LaBeouf hurtles through a few days of danger, drugs, and debauchery; his almost-believable romance with Evan Rachel Wood doesn’t redeem this mess of a movie.
TV Review: The Good Wife: ‘The Decision Tree’ & ‘Goliath and David’
By Adam Blair |
Still one of TV’s best shows, but midway through season five there are ominous signs of future shark-jumping.
Tim’s Vermeer Movie Review: Art Isn’t Easy
By Adam Blair |
Documentary about the quest to re-create a Vermeer masterpiece is alternately fascinating and like watching paint dry.