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Interview: Jodie Foster
Film
The voice is cool, confident—how could it not be? It’s Agent Starling, calling Time Out from Los Angeles
Review: Thor
Film
Stan Lee and Jack Kirby’s ’60s comic book about the God of Thunder schooled a generation in the intricacies of Norse mythology, and if nothing else, Kenneth Branagh’s take on the hammer-swinging superhero will ensure today’s fidgety teens know what the Bifröst is (a rainbow bridge that connects
Review: The Beaver
Film
Viewers will have to check cartloads of baggage upon entering Jodie Foster’s courageous, crazy-as-a-loon character study about a man having a major midlife meltdown
Review: Water for Elephants
Film
“Any living creature needs to know who’s in charge!” the boss (Waltz) declares, demonstrating how to train an elephant—but it’s the lumbering adaptation of Sara Gruen’s 2006 best-seller that he’s inadvertently trying to whip into shape
Boston LGBT Film Fest guide
Film
If you are someone who identifies with any of the terms lesbian, gay, bisexual or transsexual, then it’s pretty much a given that you will find something of interest in the Boston LGBT Film Festival. The fare features protagonists in all those categories of sexual persuasion
Independent Film Festival of Boston 2011 guide
Film
The Independent Film Festival of Boston has long held a reputation for picking winners. It began with the fest’s humble debut in 2003 with only 24 films, straight on through to its current mother lode of roughly 60 (not including shorts)
Review: Prom
Film
Spring is in the air—time for high-schoolers to prep their tuxedoes and dresses, get their dates lined up and ready their buckets of pigs’ blood for the social function to end them all. Prom!
Interview: David Gordon Green
Film
We’d like to ask director David Gordon Green a certain question after watching his smoke-swaddled medieval comedy Your Highness, but finding the right words is hard
Review: Your Highness
Film
Lazybones medieval knight Thadeous (McBride) would rather be getting high on primo herb than going out on Cyclops-killing quests like his bodacious brother, Fabious (Franco)
Review: Meek's Cutoff
Film
Give Meek’s Cutoff, a languorous neo-Western by indie darling Kelly Reichardt, this much: It definitely makes you feel lost in the wilderness
