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Director: Agnieszka Holland , studio Sony Pictures , Release Date: 2012-02-10 Genre: Drama MPAA Rating: R Starring: Robert Wieckiewicz – Leopold Socha Benno Furmann – Mundek Margulies Agnieszka Grochowska – Klara Keller Maria Schrader – Paulina Chiger Herbert Knaup – Ignacy Chiger From acclaimed director Agnieszka Holland, In Darkness is based on a true story. Leopold Socha, a sewer worker and petty thief in Lvov, a Nazi occupied city in Poland, one day encounters a group of Jews trying to escape the liquidation of the ghetto. He hides them for money in the labyrinth of the town’s sewers beneath the bustling activity of the city above. What starts out as a straightforward and cynical business arrangement turns into something very unexpected, the unlikely alliance between Socha and the Jews as the enterprise seeps deeper into Socha’s conscience. The film is also an extraordinary story of survival as these men, women and children all try to outwit certain death during 14 months of ever increasing and intense danger. — (C) Sony Pictures Classics V.A. Musetto 2011-12-09 original_score 3/4 freshness fresh New York Post Holland has said that she wanted her harrowing and rewarding epic to run long so it would make viewers feel that they’re in the sewers as well. In this she succeeds. Stephen Whitty 2011-12-09 original_score 3/4 freshness fresh Newark Star-Ledger As many Holocaust stories as we’ve seen this one still has a fresh and important lesson about heroism – and how it has the habit of springing from some all-too-human places. A.O. Scott 2011-12-08 original_score 3/5 freshness fresh New York Times It is suspenseful horrifying and at times intensely moving. But the ease with which it elicits these responses from the audience feels more opportunistic than insightful. |
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Tag Archives: New York Times
Beauty and the Beast (In 3D)
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Director: Gary Trousdale , Kirk Wise , studio Buena Vista , Release Date: 2012-01-13 Genre: Animation MPAA Rating: G Starring: Mia Farrow – Narrator Paige O’Hara – Belle Robby Benson – Beast Jerry Orbach – Lumiere Angela Lansbury – Mrs. Potts Belle, whose father is imprisoned by the Beast, offers herself instead and discovers her captor to be an enchanted prince. Janet Maslin 2008-10-18 original_score 4.5/5 freshness fresh New York Times It is a surprise in a time of sequels and retreads that the new film is so fresh and altogether triumphant in its own right. Jonathan Rosenbaum 2008-09-10 freshness fresh Chicago Reader Despite some excessive narrative streamlining this 1991 release was the best Disney animated feature in years full of charm and humor. Richard Corliss 2008-09-01 freshness fresh TIME Magazine Its animators’ pens are wands; their movement enchants. |
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Toast
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Director: S.J. Clarkson , studio Screen Gems , Release Date: 2011-10-07 Genre: Drama MPAA Rating: Unrated Starring: Freddie Highmore – Older Nigel Slater Helena Bonham Carter – Mrs. Potter Victoria Hamilton – Mum Ken Stott – Dad Oscar Kennedy – Young Nigel Slater Nigel’s mother (Victoria Hamilton) appears to have been the world’s worst cook, boiling unopened cans of food to a soggy pulp and nervously refusing young Nigel’s (Oscar Kennedy) suggestions that she try an occasional fresh veg. After many a ruined dinner they fall back on that old reliable, toast-the one dish she has mastered. But Nigel loves her dearly, and is devastated by her early death, leaving him and his lonely dad (Ken Stott) to look after each other. When new cleaner Mrs. Potter (Helena Bonham Carter) arrives, her curves, charms and fabulous lemon meringue pies quickly bewitch Nigel’s father, and, much to his son’s horror, the three move to the country to live together. The one silver lining is Domestic Science class at Nigel’s new school, where Nigel (now played by Freddie Highmore) can finally shine. Soon he and Mrs. P. have embarked on a highly competitive cooking duel, vying for Dad’s affections. — (C) Official Site
2011-09-24 freshness none New York Times Elizabeth Weitzman 2011-09-23 original_score 3/5 freshness fresh New York Daily News All the actors do well but the film’s strongest assets are the period details–including the highs (coq au vin) and lows (gelled ham) of Sixties cuisine. Lou Lumenick 2011-09-23 original_score 2/4 freshness rotten New York Post Be warned Some of the regional British accents would benefit from subtitles. |
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Stay Cool
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Director: Ted Smith , studio Initiate Productions , Release Date: 2011-09-16 Genre: Comedy MPAA Rating: PG-13 Starring: Mark Polish – Henry McCarthy Winona Ryder – Scarlet Smith Sean Astin – Big Girl Chevy Chase – Principal Marshall Josh Holloway – Wino Henry McCarthy (Mark Polish), the 30-something author of the popular 80s-themed novel How Lionel Got Me Laid, returns to his suburban hometown of Sacramento to deliver the commencement speech at his former high school. Despite his success as an author Henry’s return home has sparked all of the youthful dreams, desires and particularly disappointments he’s never quite gotten over, specifically his unrequited affection for the girl who is now the local pharmacist: the elusive Scarlet Smith (Winona Ryder). Between run-ins with the outcast friends he left behind Big Girl (Sean Astin) and Wino (Josh Holloway), the school principal (Chevy Chase) and a seductive senior, Shasta O’Neil (Hilary Duff) who clearly has the hots for him, Henry is sent spinning through a time warp that incites all the old emotions and challenges of the world he grew up in. — (C) Initiate Productions Bill Goodykoontz 2011-08-12 original_score 3/5 freshness fresh Arizona Republic 2011-01-13 freshness none New York Times |
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The Hedgehog
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Director: Mona Achache , studio NeoClassics Films , Release Date: 2011-08-19 Genre: Drama MPAA Rating: Unrated Starring: Josiane Balasko – Renee Michel Garance LeGuillermic – Paloma Josse Togo Igawa – Kakuro Ozu Anne Brochet – Solange Josse Ariane Ascaride – Manuela Lopez Inspired by the beloved New York Times bestseller, The Elegance of the Hedgehog, by Muriel Barbery, The Hedgehog is the timely story of Paloma (Garance Le Guillermic) a young girl bent on ending it all on her upcoming twelfth birthday. Using her father’s old camcorder to chronicle the hypocrisy she sees in adults, Paloma begins to learn about life from the grumpy building concierge, Renee Michel (Josiane Balasko). When Paloma’s camera reveals the extensive secret library in Renee’s back room, and that the often gruff matron reads Tolstoy to her cat, Paloma begins to understand that there are allies to be found beneath the prickliest of exteriors. As the unlikely friendship deepens, Paloma’s own coming of age becomes a much less pessimistic prospect. — (C) NeoClassics Films |
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