Nicholas Jasenovec’s quasi-doc “Paper Heart” is hands-down the most audaciously inventive movie I’ve seen so far this year. The ever-cute Charlyne Yi claims she doesn’t believe in love, so she and a camera crew tour America interviewing regular folks about real romance, with paper puppet sequences adding surrealistic fun. PG-13 (language). 89 minutes. (Read more…) […]
Author Archives: Dann Gire
‘Revanche’ (Revenge)
Goetz Spielmann’s bold fifth feature is an exquisitely wrought, unpredictable tale of fate, lust, love, and bad aim. When a Vienna cop (Andreas Lust) accidentally kills a woman fleeing from a robbery, her ex-con lover (Johannes Krisch) contemplates revenge while cutting up a zillion cords of firewood at his grandfather’s farm. In German and Ukrainian […]
Apatow’s latest a slower, more mature comic tale of second chances
Comedian George Simmons (Adam Sandler), left, and comic Ira Wright (Seth Rogen) watch Clarke (Eric Bana) go sports nutty in Judd Apatow’s third comedy feature “Funny People.” “Funny People” is a frequently hilarious and more frequently poignant story of three people foolish enough to need a second chance in life, and smart enough to seize […]
A book-reporty look at the inventor of the sitcom
Aviva Kempner’s documentary “Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg” is a journalistically sound, but conventional, book-reporty look at the amazing accomplishments of Gertrude Berg, whose long-running radio and TV show “The Goldbergs” invented the modern-day sitcom and gave Berg (writer, producer and star) the very first Emmy for best actress. Not rated. 92 minutes. (Read more…) Now playing […]
‘Shrink’
Dramas about psychiatrists tend to bore and annoy me, and Jonas Pate’s “Shrink” reminds me why. Kevin Spacey expends a lot of charisma as Dr. Carter, a burnout shrink who chain-smokes weed and drinks his way through a parade of Hollywood types (Robin Williams, Robert Loggia, Saffron Burrows and others), unsympathetic characters. Rated R for […]
Film Noir Festival includes special guest Harry Belafonte
The Music Box Theater and the Film Noir Foundation proudly present a week-long festival of film noirs. Musician and actor Harry Belafonte comes to Chicago for a Q & A after the screening of his 1959 film noir classic “Odds Against Tomorrow” on Saturday (August 1, 2009). It’s part of a weeklong festival of the […]
Guinea pig action flick ‘G-force’ deserves an F
Hurley (voiced by Jon Favreau) is the guinea pig who takes the cake in the animated adventure “G-force.” The hits just keep getting dumber. Walt Disney’s partially computer-animated “G-Force,” created by action-film mogul Jerry Bruckheimer’s production company, barely qualifies as a dumbed-down Saturday morning cartoon show on cinematic, 3-D steroids. No thought of any character […]
‘Soul Power’ goes behind scenes of Foreman, Ali fight
Director-editor-producer Jeffrey Levy-Hinte took 30-year-old rolls of 16 mm film out of mothballs and created a toe-tapping piece of music history in this revealing documentary about the three-day concert preceding the 1974 fight between George Foreman and Muhammed Ali. (PG-13) 93 minutes. (Read more…) Now playing at Pipers Alley in Chicago and Renaissance Place in […]
‘Humpday’
It’s “Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice,” without Carol & Alice. Two college buddies (Mark Duplass and Joshua Leonard) get together and decide to have sex with each other in a homemade porn film. How can one break this to his wife (Alycia Delmore)? (Read more…) Now playing at the Century Centre in Chicago.
‘In the Loop’
Armed with clever, snappy lines and at least two Harry Potter references, “In the Loop” is a droll and dry political satire directed by Armando Iannucci with pseudo-documentary devices. (Think “Wag the Dog,” only not as crisp and quick.) (Read more…) Now playing at the Century Centre in Chicago.