Monthly Archives: January, 2012

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Review: Man on a Mission: Richard Garriott’s Road to the Stars

"We behold all of the unpleasant physical trainings and the grand achievement of a successful space voyage, and subliminally we are told that if you dream big, anything can happen. Unfortunately, most of us will never be millionaires with the privilege to spend without repercussions, and watching Garriot do so with such egregious waste is often downright annoying."

Man on a Mission: Richard Garriott’s Road to the Stars | Review

Mission Accomplished Thanks To Large Bank Account

And the Most Anticipated Film of 2012 is… Carlos Reygadas’ Post Tenebras Lux

Incrementally perfecting his stylistic and narrative approach, in Japon and Battle in Heaven, Carlos Reygadas examined our will to live, defined how compassion and sympathy can sustain itself in dire trying moments, and he painfully, unflinchingly reminded us that there is nothing romantic about cruelty found in nature (violence brought about by humans). In his third feature, he examined such themes under the weight of the world or the gods above -- in my books the cinematic miracle known as Silent Light defies classification as it reaches far beyond the film patronage experience. Working with DP Alexis Zabé, with Post Tenebras Lux (literal translation, Light After Darkness), we should expect strong imagery, a deeply personal journey and a composition that the filmmaker described as “an expressionist painting where you try to express what you're feeling through the painting rather than depict what something looks like."

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Top 100 Most Anticipated Films of 2013: # XX Insert title Director: INSERT Writer(s): INSERT Producer(s): INSERT U.S. Distributor: Rights Available Cast: INSERT () Intro: List Worthy Reasons times...

Review: The Divide

"With 2012 already upon us, the Mayan prophecy of world’s end is destined to become more pervasive in the future cinematic offerings. But it’s the tagline for The Divide that reinforces the film’s glum outlook and proves the least hackneyed element about it, proclaiming that “the lucky ones died in the blast.” His film makes a strong case for that. Or maybe you’d rather be caged with strangers losing their minds while eating kidney beans and getting raped for an inordinate amount of time. Which side of the divide are you on?"

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