Bohemian Cinema By Jonathan Pacheco

Archive

Essay

Open Roads 2010: “Kiss Me Again”

The same characters may be around from the Italian film The Last Kiss, but they’re highly unbearable in its sequel, Kiss Me Again:

Admittedly, I quite enjoyed Gabriele Muccino’s 2002 effort, The Last Kiss, finding it entertaining despite its pretentiousness and derivative style.

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Essay

Open Roads 2010: “One Life, Maybe Two”

As part of the Open Roads: New Italian Cinema program by the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York, I take a look at the tangent universes of One Life, Maybe Two:

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Essay

“Seinfeld”: It’s Real and It’s Spectacular

“The greatest show ever” or “overrated”? “Cynical” or “postmodern”?

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Review

“The Shining” (1980)

It’s well known that Stephen King was, shall we say, less than pleased with Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 adaptation of his novel The Shining.

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Essay

SXSW 2010 Postscript: On “Cold Weather” and Original Live Scoring

I bid adieu to SXSW 2010 with three—count ‘em!—reviews of films with live performances of originals scores, but not before I take a look at the latest from Aaron Katz, Cold Weather:

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Essay

SXSW 2010: “11/4/08,” “Elektra Luxx”

The less-than-stellar Elektra Luxx fails to eliminate the bad taste left from the Election Day documentary 11/4/08:

The director of 11/4/08 states that he enlisted the help of friends around the world to film their experiences on Election Day in order to “see what history looks like,” but you know how the saying goes: History is written by the winners.

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Essay

SXSW 2010: “Marwencol,” “Brotherhood”

Along with a review of the surprisingly good indie frat thriller Brotherhood, I take a closer look at the documentary Marwencol:

I’m a bit wary of a documentary that feels the need to split itself up into chapters. To me, it’s typically a sign of a director that doesn’t quite know how to unify his material—one of the basic challenges of this genre.

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Essay

SXSW 2010: “Crying with Laughter,” “The Thorn in the Heart,” “Cannibal Girls”

In my first report from this year’s SXSW, I look at Michel Gondry’s family documentary The Thorn in the Heart, Ivan Reitman’s early and terrible Cannibal Girls, and Crying with Laughter:

Joey Frisk (a very capable Stephen McCole) is a fireball on the verge of flaming out.

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Review

The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985)

It’s no tall order to write a tragedy set during the Great Depression, but I imagine it takes some restraint to write one where the era’s circumstances aren’t the immediate sources of distress.

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Essay

Bohemian Cinema at SXSW 2010

Things are going to be a little different this time around.

Last year I wrote down a goal (though where I wrote it is anyone’s guess): next time I attend SXSW, I’d attend with press credentials. Well, let’s hear it for the power of the subconscious, because come this weekend, I’ll be down in Austin with a Press Badge on behalf of The Official Blog of Slant Magazine:

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