Midnight in Paris: Investigating the Problem of Time

A nebbishy screenwriter who longs to publish a novel, Gil (Owen Wilson) is tentatively working on a book set in a nostalgia shop — much to the open frustration of Inez (Rachel McAdams), his all-too-modern, rich-girl fiancée, who has a tendency to talk about him in catty, judgey tones as…

The Hangover Part II: Didn’t We Already See This Movie?

Most sequels are born of good box office rather than good ideas — if you build it and they come, you simply must build another one — but it’s hard to imagine a more calculating, creatively bankrupt piece of real estate than The Hangover Part II. Trade out Las Vegas…

Meek’s Cutoff Displays Fractured Trust in 19th-Century Oregon

Tenacious indie Kelly Reichardt has specialized in quirky, minimalist quasi-road movies in which loners come unmoored in some great American space. Meek’s Cutoff is that and more — one great leap into the 19th-century unknown. The members of a small wagon train crossing the Oregon Trail in 1845 follow their…

Cannes Outdoes Itself: Our Picks from the Strongest Festival in Years

CANNES, FRANCE — The last-day screening of Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s ruminative, challenging Once Upon a Time in Anatolia strengthened an exceptionally ambitious and coherent competition at this year’s Cannes Film Festival — although Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life won the Palme d’Or, Ceylan’s late entry shared the second place…

13 Assassins: A Bloody Love Letter

When New Times blogger Michelle Martinez and her partner, musician E.J. Rodriguez, are not watching movies, they’re talking about them.They’ve even been known to stop a movie to discuss it. Michelle: At times, 13 Assassins was so violent, I had to close my eyes. There are just some things you…

The Upsetter: The Life and Music of Lee “Scratch” Perry

The Upsetter: The Life and Music of Lee “Scratch” Perry, which opens at Filmbar this week, is part chronicle Perry’s life, and part history of Reggae and Dub music (both pioneered by Scratch). Though Perry’s words are thickly slurred, often-subtitled, and clouded in a thick, low cloud of “smoke,” his…

Mel Gibson Goes Crazy for The Beaver

An earnest, intermittently droll dramedy about a manic-depressive toy manufacturer and his bewildered family, The Beaver is a parable that’s not easily parsed. While director Jodie Foster fails to maintain a consistent tone — could there be such a thing as inspirational satire? — the movie’s lopsided wobble is undeniably…

Cannes 2011 Has Issues

CANNES, FRANCE — Midway through the Cannes Film Festival, the competition has been all about family — more specifically all about parents (and parent surrogates) and their troubled children, many of both types pretty much from hell. Brad Pitt seems a good bet for red-carpet glory as the domineering autocrat…

Secret Museums at FilmBar

Erotic art has a history of being hushed, censored, or flat out destroyed.Secret Museums, playing at FilmBar for the rest of the week, is taking a more public approach. The subtitled documentary travels through the excavated streets of Pompeii, and the carefully guarded shelves of private collectors (and the hidden…

Napoleon Dynamite Gets Cartooned on FOX in 2012

FOX announced last night that Napoleon Dynamite will attempt a (hopefully doomed) animated comeback mid-season of next year. This just in: the nerdy, annoying, nasal-voiced cartoon character may also accelerate the apocalypse countdown. Buckle up…

Film Noir and Kettle Corn in This Week’s Dinner and a Movie

Nothing goes better with a movie than dinner (and perhaps vise versa), which Chow Bella has all figured out. Dinner and a Movie pairs all sorts of films with themed recipes each week.Today features The Third Man starring Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles, who find themselves in the middle of…

Bridesmaids: SNL Scribes Shine on the Silver Screen

Besides doing fun relationship stuff like arguing about how to discipline their dog, New Times blogger Tyler Hughes and his girlfriend, Jackie Cronin, go to the movies. Tyler: Going in to Bridesmaids, I was sure that you’d like this movie more than I would. I’m a big fan of SNL scribes…

THOR: Marvel’s God Comes Out To Play

Besides doing fun relationship stuff like arguing about how to discipline their dog, New Times blogger Tyler Hughes and his girlfriend, Jackie Cronin, go to the movies. Tyler: Seeing THOR just made me more excited to see The Avengers movie coming out next year. There were so many references to the…

Something Borrowed: The Divine Secrets of the Eskimo Sisterhood

Something Borrowed is based on a 2005 work of chick literature by Emily Giffin. It was directed with extraordinary impersonality by Luke Greenfield (Rob Schneider’s The Animal), and produced by Hilary Swank in collaboration, apparently, with the restaurant Shake Shack — one of the lifestyle brands prominently featured in this…

Happy Star Wars Day

Perhaps the only day when you can watch Star Wars Lego animations, drink a Hairy Wookiee, and quote cheesy, punned movie lines, like “May the fourth be with you.”…

Garfield Screens at the Alwun House Wednesday Night

Garfield tells the true story of one of downtown Phoenix’s first neighborhoods banding together to reclaim a historic neighborhood from crime and city abandonment. Members of the Garfield community, including Garfield Organization founder Lupe Sisneros, reached out to ASU students to make a film that would educate others about the deep-rooted…

Spanish Mothers and Red Wine in this Week’s Dinner and a Movie

Nothing goes better with a movie than dinner (and perhaps vise versa), which Chow Bella has all figured out.Dinner and a Movie pairs all sorts of films with themed recipes each week.Today features Pedro Almodovar’s Volver starring Penelope Cruz, who takes over a village restaurant and cooks for a visiting…