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NEW THIS WEEK
Secret of Kells, The 4
Brooklyn's Finest 2.9
Alice in Wonderland (2010) 1.62
Stolen (2010) rate me!
ALSO IN THEATERS

COMING NEXT WEEK
12-Mar Children of Invention
12-Mar Delta
12-Mar Exploding Girl, The
12-Mar Green Zone
12-Mar Mother (2010)
12-Mar Our Family Wedding
12-Mar Remember Me (2010)
12-Mar Severe Clear
12-Mar She's Out of My League
12-Mar Suicide Girls Must Die
12-Mar Tales From The Script
17-Mar Mid-August Lunch

DVD RELEASES
9-Mar Break-Up Date buy
9-Mar MINE: Taken By Katrina buy
9-Mar Old Dogs buy
9-Mar Planet 51 buy
9-Mar Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire buy
9-Mar Stoning of Soraya M., The buy
9-Mar Up in the Air buy
16-Mar Armored buy
16-Mar Astro Boy buy
16-Mar Bandslam buy
16-Mar Boondock Saints II, The: All Saints Day buy
16-Mar Brief Interviews with Hideous Men buy
16-Mar Broken Embraces buy
16-Mar Did You Hear About the Morgans? buy
16-Mar Fourth Kind, The buy
16-Mar I Sell The Dead buy
16-Mar Ninja Assassin buy
16-Mar Paris (2009) buy
16-Mar Princess and the Frog, The buy
16-Mar Wonderful World buy

TOP 5
MOVIES IN RELEASE
TITLE RATING
North Face 5
Red Riding: 1974 4.46
Ghost Writer, The 4.38
Shutter Island 4.17
Ajami 4.14

BOTTOM 5
MOVIES IN RELEASE
TITLE RATING
Toe to Toe 1
When in Rome (2010) 1
Spy Next Door, The 1.15
Tooth Fairy 1.37
Alice in Wonderland (2010) 1.62

2009 CineVegas Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
World's Greatest Dad 4.35
Taking Chances (aka Patriotville) 4
Redland 5
(500) Days of Summer 4.18
Youth Knows No Pain 5
MORE MOVIES

2009 Sundance Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Amreeka 4.14
Pomegranates and Myrrh 4
Grace 4
Adam (2009) 2.95
La Mission 4.8
MORE MOVIES

2009 South By Southwest Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Artois the Goat 5
Zift 3.56
Slammin’ Salmon, The 4
Black (2009) 4
Moon 4.46
MORE MOVIES

2009 Tribeca Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Outrage (2009) 4
Still Walking 4
Good Guy, The 4
Serious Moonlight 1.5
Kobe Doin' Work 2.33
MORE MOVIES

2009 Festival de Cannes MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Up 4.67
Inglourious Basterds 4.11
Fish Tank 4
Prophet, A 4
My Neighbor, My Killer 5
MORE MOVIES

2009 Philadelphia Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Old Partner 5
Lymelife 2.67
Children of Invention 4
Tyson 4.35
Song of Sparrows, The 4
MORE MOVIES

2009 Florida Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Deadgirl 4.42
Treeless Mountain 5
Anvil!: The True Story of Anvil 5
Management 2
Alien Trespass 2.68
MORE MOVIES

2009 Santa Cruz Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Saint Misbehavin: The Life and Time of Wavy Gravy 3.22
Quiet Little Marriage, A 5
Pig Hunt 3.7
Youssou Ndour: I Bring What I Love 4
Salute 5
MORE MOVIES

2009 Seattle International Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
I Sell The Dead 4
Moon 4.46
Divo, Il 4
Kanchivaram 4.67
Woman in Berlin, A 5
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2009 Los Angeles Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
In the Loop 4.68
What They Do 5
Paper Heart 3.86
High-Rise 4.67
Cold Souls 2
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2009 Toronto International Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Creation 3.53
Soul Kitchen 4
Single Man, A 4.22
Heiran 3
Life According to Agfa 4
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2009 New York Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire 3.39
Police, Adjective 4
Mother (2010) 5
Hadewijch 4
Independencia 2
MORE MOVIES

2009 Chicago International Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Cropsey 3
About Elly 5
Cedar Boys 5
Looking for Eric 3
Paranormal Activity 3.36
MORE MOVIES

2010 Sundance Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Waiting For Superman 5
Animal Kingdom 2.67
Peepli Live 5
Homewrecker 5
Bran Nue Dae 2
MORE MOVIES

2010 Slamdance Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Cummings Farm 5
Drones 5
URFrenz 5
YellowBrickRoad 5
General Orders No. 9 4
MORE MOVIES

2010 South By Southwest Film Festival MOVIES
TITLE RATING
Crying With Laughter 4.5
Harry Brown 4
Greenlit 5
War Don Don 5
Suck 4.67
MORE MOVIES

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EFC STATS
Movies Listed: 20070
Total Ratings: 227837
Total Reviews: 23228
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SPOTLIGHTED FEATURES REGULAR COLUMNS
DVD Reviews For 3/5: “I Didn’t Want To Wake You Up, But I Really Wanted To Show You Something.”
SXSW 2010 Interview: “Erasing David” Director David Bond
SXSW 2010 Interview: “Helena from the Wedding” Director Joseph Infantolino
SXSW 2010 Interview: “Passenger Pigeons” Director Martha Stephens
SXSW 2010 Interview: “Jimmy Tupper VS. the Goatman of Bowie” Director Andrew Bowser
SXSW 2010 Interview: “Earthling” Director Clay Liford
Festival Interview: "The Retelling" director Emily Hagins
Interview: Richard Schickel on Clint Eastwood
The 10th Annual eFilmCritic Oscar Pick 'Em (WIN 50 DVDS!)
The Oscar Eye (Awards Tally 2009-10) (UPDATED 3/8/10 - FINAL TALLY)
Celebrity Exclusive Interviews
Film Festivals of the World
Sunday News Recap
Sonic Death Monkey - Soundtrack Reviews
Criticwatch
Rants and Raves
Court of Public Opinion
Multiplex Shmultiplex
Forgotten Video
Great Moments in Junketeering
The HBS/EFC Hall of Fame
The Oscar Eye
Films I Neglected To Review with Peter Sobczynski
MORE FEATURES
LATEST REVIEWS
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (2010)
"Tim Burton, 3-D, Johnny Depp, and a bottle of Jergens"
2 stars
brianorndorf says... "As witnessed throughout much of his filmography, Tim Burton has the uncanny ability to reach astonishingly dark moods while still maintaining a jovial atmosphere worthy of his riotous imagination. Occasionally, the shadows get the best of him. Much like “Batman Returns” and “Mars Attacks,” “Alice in Wonderland” is a Burton vehicle with four flat tires, attempting to pull off a tricky juggling act of whimsy and violence, using author Lewis Carroll’s legendary novel as a playground for the blandest of fantasy visions. It’s a drab feature film molded with garish CGI and acted as if there wasn’t a director on set at all. It’s far from deplorable, but it does represent the filmmaker at his most persistently ineffective." (more)
GHOST WRITER, THE
"The type of movie that sneaks up on you from behind"
4 stars
brianorndorf says... "It’s been some time since Roman Polanski made something as cagey and good-naturedly twisted as “The Ghost Writer.” He’s been off vacationing inside of his youthful trauma during the last decade (“The Pianist,” “Oliver Twist”), which makes his new film a cunning achievement, steered by one of the filmdom’s sharpest minds. Verbose but lovingly toxic, “The Ghost Writer” nails a perfect pitch of paranoia with a distinctly retro flair, restoring some needed maturity to the bustling business of thriller cinema." (more)
BROOKLYN'S FINEST
"Same shield, different day"
4 stars
brianorndorf says... "Director Antoine Fuqua has built a career on mediocrity, hitting a few cinematic highlights (“Training Day”), but mostly sticking to the comfort of generic thrillers devoid of sensational feats of filmmaking. As imperfect as it is, “Brooklyn’s Finest” is perhaps the closest Fuqua will ever come to true greatness, revealing a deft command of nerve-racking criminal moods and multi-character tragedy, showing something approaching range while working out a screenplay soaked in oily despair. Missteps abound, but “Brooklyn’s Finest,” when firing on all brooding cityscape cylinders, is a convincing, commanding motion picture." (more)
AJAMI
"A place of war, time for families"
4 stars
brianorndorf says... "“Ajami” is an Israeli picture that closely mirrors the work of Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu during his emotionally turbulent years with “Amores Perros,” “21 Grams,” and “Babel.” Observing the ominous nature of violence and its crushing aftermath, “Ajami” is a striking raw nerve of a feature film, holding to a steady path of dread, but keeping the story on its toes by jolting back and forth through locations and time. It builds patiently, but fascinatingly, providing a portrait of humanity struggling in one of the more volatile areas of the Middle East." (more)
MINISTERS, THE
"Boondock taints"
1 stars
brianorndorf says... "Here we have a picture concerning a pair of bible-quoting brothers who justly kill in the name of God. Sound a little familiar? Well, much of “The Ministers” is poorly reheated leftovers from superior criminal adventures. That’s not to suggest “The Boondock Saints” is of any hearty cinematic value whatsoever, but I’ll take Troy Duffy’s Bushmills bravado over the chronic clumsiness of writer/director Franc Reyes any day of the week." (more)
GOOD GUY, THE
"Good and Gooder"
4 stars
Jay Seaver says... "Tommy Fielding (Scott Porter) is a pretty good guy, especially considering he's a Wall Street trader. He doesn't overindulge; he isn't pressuring his girlfriend Beth (Alexis Bledel) to have sex even though it's been a couple months and his ex Christie (Jeane Fournier) is obviously still available. When one of his traders gets a better offer, he wishes him well and tells his boss Cash (Andrew McCarthy) that he'd like to promote tech whiz Daniel Seaver (Bryan Greenberg), because he's honest." (more)
BROOKLYN'S FINEST
"A collection of genre clichés and missed opportunities."
3 stars
Mel Valentin says... ""Brooklyn’s Finest," Antoine Fuqua’s ("Tears of the Sun," "King Arthur," "Training Day," "The Replacements") latest film, premiered last January at the Sundance Film Festival. The original distributor, Senator Distribution, went bankrupt, leaving Fuqua and his film in limbo. Overture Films picked "Brooklyn’s Finest" at the Venice Film Festival last September and set distribution for the first week in March (and here we are). The version we’re seeing, however, is 20 minutes shorter than the version that premiered last January at Park City, Utah. It also includes a slightly different ending (for one character at least). Despite the changes Fuqua made in the interim, "Brooklyn’s Finest" remains a collection of genre clichés and missed opportunities, ultimately relegating it to the misfire category." (more)
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (2010)
"Whatever you do, don't go into that rabbit-hole."
2 stars
Mel Valentin says... "Lewis Carroll’s 1865 children’s/fantasy novella, "Alice in Wonderland" has been adapted and re-adapted (and re-re-adapted) for stage, screen, and television more than twenty times (the earliest adaptation dates to 1951). Walt Disney adapted "Alice in Wonderland" as feature-length animated film in 1951. Now, more than a half a century later, a live-action/computer animated iteration arrives on 3D and IMAX screens thanks or, to be more accurate, no thanks to filmmaker Tim Burton ("Sweeney Todd," "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," "Big Fish," "Planet of the Apes," "Sleepy Hollow," "Mars Attacks!," "Ed Wood," "Batman Returns," "Edward Scissorhands," "Batman"), a hefty production budget, and a team of computer animators. Despite the best visual effects that money can buy, "Alice in Wonderland" isn't visually impressive (far from it, actually). It's also, unsurprisingly, narratively clichéd." (more)
MORE REVIEWS

LATEST FEATURES
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – “MARWENCOL” DIRECTOR JEFF MALMBERG
by Jason Whyte
"“Marwencol is a documentary about an artist named Mark Hogancamp who created a 1/6th-scale WWII-era town in his backyard as a means of recovering from a brutal attack. A few years into his homemade therapy, his photographs of his town are discovered by the “art world.” The question is, will he take a chance and re-enter society as an artist, or will he stay in the safety of his own world?” Director Jeff Malmberg on the film “Marwencol” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – “LIKE A PASCHA” DIRECTOR SVANTE TIDHOLM
by Jason Whyte
"“Welcome to the biggest brothel in Europe, a clear blue eleven story high house in the middle of Cologne, Germany. More than 200 women from all over the world work here. If you ask them why, they will tell you it’s the way it’s always been. More than 700 men come here every day. Inside these walls, no daylight ever reach in. “Orgasm guaranteed”, a sign says, ”Only 30 EURO”. But what is it that is for sale here, really? Is it an orgasm or something else? According to Sonia, prostitute since ten years, a lot of her customers cry with her. Is true satisfaction and closeness really for sale? Three years in the making, the film centres around the stories of some of the brothel’s residents and visitors to discover what it is it that men ultimately need. The result is surprising.” Director Svante Tidholm on the film “Like a Pascha” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – “ON THE OTHER SIDE OF LIFE” DIRECTOR STEFANIE BROCKHAUS
by Jason Whyte
"“Two township kids involved in crime, hung up on drugs and with no job in sight go to the bush to undertake an African Initiation ritual to become men.” Director Stefanie Brockhaus on the film “On The Other Side of Life” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – “DANCE WITH THE ONE” DIRECTOR MIKE DOLAN
by Jason Whyte
"“Dance with the One is an emotionally explosive drama about two brothers, Nate and Sitter Hitchens, and their hippie outlaw father, Owen, who have never gotten over the tragic death of the boys’ mother and Owen’s wife. The family’s frayed attempts to survive emotionally become physical when Nate makes his family the target of a lethal drug runner.” Director Mike Dolan on the film “Dance With The One” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – “THE RIDE” DIRECTOR MEREDITH DANLUCK
by Jason Whyte
"“The Ride is about Cowboys, bull riding, rock and roll, wild west punk cowboys. Feeling more like narrative fiction than a straight up doc, the film floats through this rough and tumble world, seamlessly connecting people and places together. It’s a portrait of America told by these mythical archetypes.” Director Meredith Danluck on the film “The Ride” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – "CRYING WITH LAUGHTER" DIRECTOR JUSTIN MOLOTNIKOV
by Jason Whyte
"“Crying with Laughter is a darkly comedic revenge thriller exploring the theme of memory. The story of two men who haven’t seen each other for 25 years, and who, on meeting up again, go and deal with an incident from their past that one cannot remember but that the other cannot forget.” Director Justin Molotnikov on the film “Crying With Laughter” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – " WAR DON DON" DIRECTOR REBECCA RICHMAN COHEN
by Jason Whyte
"“In the heart of Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, United Nations soldiers guard a heavily fortified building known as the “special court.” Inside, Issa Sesay awaits his trial. Prosecutors argue that Sesay is a war criminal, guilty of crimes against humanity. His defenders insist that he is a reluctant fighter who protected civilians and played a crucial role in bringing forging the peace. “War Don Don” tells the story of a sensational trial with unprecedented access to prosecutors, defense attorneys, victims and, from behind bars, Sesay himself. In Krio, war don don means “the war is over,” and although today Sierra Leone is at peace, the specter of war remains ever-present. Can the trial of one man uncover the truth of a traumatic past? International justice is on trial for the world to see.” Director Rebecca Richman Cohen on the film “War Don Don” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – "CITIZEN ARCHITECT" DIRECTOR SAM WAINWRIGHT DOUGLAS
by Jason Whyte
"“In 1993 the late architect Samuel Mockbee started the Rural Studio, a design/build education program, in which students create striking architecture for impoverished communities in rural Alabama. Guided by frank, passionate interviews with Mockbee, Citizen Architect: Samuel Mockbee and the Spirit of the Rural Studio shows how a group of students use their creativity, ingenuity and compassion to craft a home for their charismatic, destitute client, Jimmie Lee Matthews, known to locals as Music Man because of his zeal for R&B and Soul records. The film reveals that the Rural Studio is about more than architecture and building. Mockbee's program provides students with an experience that forever inspires them to consider how they can use their skills to better their communities. Interviews with Mockbee’s peers and scenes with those he’s influenced infuse the film with a larger discussion of architecture’s role in issues of poverty, class, race, education, citizenship and social change.” Director Sam Wainwright Douglas on the film “Citizen Architect: Samuel Mockbee and the Spirit of the Rural Studio” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – A NY THING DIRECTOR OLIVER LECOT
by Jason Whyte
"“The guy loves the girl so much that he flies after her, from Paris, all the way to New York… to end up staring at her kissing her official boyfriend… And then starts the chase to gain her heart back, with many encounters on the way, including drugs, violence, poetry, nonsense humor, tenderness, some funny sex and a bunch of gorgeous songs, before everything comes back to normal… or not...” Director Oliver Lecot on the film “A NY Thing” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
SXSW ’10 INTERVIEW – “THE PARKING LOT MOVIE” DIRECTOR MEGHAN ECKMAN
by Jason Whyte
"“The Parking Lot Movie is about a very special Parking Lot in Virginia and the select group of Parking Lot Attendants that have worked there over the years. Using both interviews as well as day-to-day footage of the Parking Lot, the documentary details the Parking Lot Attendant’s peculiar sense of Parking Lot justice. Additionally, this documentary explores themes relating to the American Psyche and the American Lifestyle. It is also a celebration of a highly successful and incredibly innovative business model.” Director Meghan Eckman on the film “The Parking Lot Movie” which screens at this year’s South By Southwest Film." (more)
2010 OSCAR PREDICTIONS: NO SURPRISES HERE
by Peter Sobczynski
"Fearless Oscar predictions from your fearless Oscar predictor." (more)
A GUIDE TO THE 13TH ANNUAL EUROPEAN UNION FILM FESTIVAL: WEEK ONE
by Peter Sobczynski
"In 1998, Chicago’s Gene Siskel Film Center first presented the European Union Film Festival, a month-long program designed to highlight the newest films emerging from the EU member nations. Over the years, it has grown into an annual event that is one of the largest such showcases and has offered viewers a canny mix of previews of highly anticipated films as well as smaller titles that might otherwise never be seen in these parts. This year, the 13th Annual European Union Film Festival kicked off on March 5th with Fernando Treuba’s “The Dancer and the Thief” and will be screening 59 films from all 27 EU nations, including new works from such noted filmmakers as Neil Jordan, Catherine Breillat, Jacques Rivette and Peter Greenaway, not to mention the local premiere of the Academy Award-nominated animated film “The Secret of Kells.”" (more)
MORE FEATURES

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