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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Fracture
Inspired, even if preposterous
By
TOM MEEK
|
April 25, 2007
FRACTURE
2.5
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Fracture
.
Gregory Hoblit delivered some hair-raising twists in
Primal Fear
— the gotchas in that deadly game of legal one-upsmanship maintained the tension right up to the final frame. Here he takes that template and tosses in two A-List actors, and the result is inspired, if preposterous. The intrigue begins when billionaire Ted Crawford (Anthony Hopkins) pumps a bullet into the head of his adulterous wife (Embeth Davidtz). Enter Willy Beachum (Ryan Gosling), the hot-shot deputy DA with one foot out the door after landing a gig at a big-time law house. He’s got a signed confession in hand, so the case should be a slam dunk, but Ted (à la Hannibal Lecter) proves a cagy sod with many a card up his sleeve. So does Hoblit. The two actors spar masterfully (Ted of course represents himself in court); it’s manipulative artifice for sure, but the stacked aces make it a rapt jury-rigging.
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,
Psycho Santa
,
Untraceable
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War zones
The party’s over. Time for the lessons to begin.
Psycho Santa
Ryan Landry takes a holiday hatchet to The Silence of the Lambs in his latest outing for the Gold Dust Orphans, serving up Kris Kringle with some fava beans and a nice Chianti.
Untraceable
The least-satisfying detective stories tend to be about serial killers.
Punisher: War Zone
As former commando turned Cosa Nostra terminator Frank Castle, Ray Stevenson is pretty much what you'd expect — all business.
Indie dependents
Try as they might to be independent, filmmakers are still bound by family ties, the same as everyone else.
October lite
We expected the vampires, the werewolves, the zombies, and the homicidal maniacs. Same thing with the android doubles, the alien abductors, the sexually abused pregnant teenager, the Apocalypse, and the post-Apocalypse. But kids' movies?
Review: The Wolfman
Joe Johnston sets his remake of the 1941 Lon Chaney Jr. classic The Wolf Man in Victorian England, a fitting backdrop for a Jekyll and Hyde –esque tale of men battling beasts within.
Fall back
If you cannot remember the past, so Santayana said, you’re condemned to repeat it. Watch trailers for this fall's new releases.
Worst in breed: Television
Who are the unsexiest TV men of 2007?
New to DVD on January 17, 2006
With the possible exception of the days of Soviet Social Realism, people have gone to the movies to escape the daily grind, not relive it.
Dicked over
This article originally appeared in the December 22, 1995 issue of the Boston Phoenix .
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[
05/26
]
"A Natural Order," photographs by Lucas Foglia
@ David Winton Bell Gallery
[
05/26
]
George Orwell's 1984, adapted by Nick Lane
@ Gamm Theatre
[
05/26
]
"2012 RISD Graduate Thesis Exhibition"
@ Rhode Island Convention Center
ARTICLES BY TOM MEEK
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| May 17, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture ( i.e. , Paris Hilton, the Kardashians, and American Idol ) and the indignity of being an office drone.
REVIEW: THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS
| April 24, 2012
Peter Lord, animator behind claymation staples Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run , directs this very British, very dry romp on the high seas during the time when Britannia did indeed rule the waves.
REVIEW: GOD BLESS AMERICA
| April 18, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture (i.e., Paris Hilton, the Kardashians and American Idol) and the indignity of being an office drone.
REVIEW: UNDEFEATED
| March 15, 2012
Dan Lindsay and T. J. Martin's Oscar-winning documentary about an underequipped high-school football team competing against big-time programs across Tennessee offers a potent contemplation on race and opportunity.
REVIEW: DR. SEUSS' THE LORAX
| March 01, 2012
Regrettably, this team loses a lot of Seuss's quirkiness, though not the message about corporate greed and slash-and-burn imperialism.
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TOM MEEK
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