Brian De Palma on Passion‘s Battles — and Avoiding Sequels

Brian De Palma had a good reason for remaking the erotic French thriller Love Crime: He could do it better. “I think it’s very dangerous to remake a classic,” says De Palma. “Leave it alone.” But the 2010 corporate catfight flick about two female frenemies had a framework he loved…

Five Great Summer Movies You Might Have Missed (And Can Still Catch!)

As another summer movie season characterized by cynicism and excess draws to a close, there are few activities less valuable or interesting than complaining about it. The blockbusters arrived, flattened cities, vomited effects, deafened with explosions, made money, didn’t make enough money, pleased populist critics, displeased elitist critics, and finally…

ASU to Host Walking Dead Discussion of Zombies and Taxes

If you’re sick of the typical political debate about sequester this and debt ceiling that, join ASU’s Center for Science and the Imagination, along with the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, for a showing of AMC’s hit zombie series The Walking Dead on Thursday, August 29, in Tempe. Part…

Austenland Smartly Satirizes Romances — Until It Swoons

Since it’s called Austenland, and since it’s a romantic comedy, you probably expect it to open with “It’s a truth universally acknowledged” and to wrap with one lovesick sap madly dashing after another, right up to an airport’s departure gates, even though both presumably have cell phones and could just…

Ain’t Them Bodies Saints Pines Gorgeously

In David Lowery’s sublime new film, Ain’t Them Bodies Saints, Bob Muldoon (Casey Affleck), who’s serving 25 to life for armed robbery and wounding a cop during a shootout, frequently puts pencil to parchment and writes love letters to his girlfriend, Ruth (Rooney Mara). Bob’s aching, lovelorn voice can be…

The World’s End Is a Likable Brew, But Not For the Ages

The laddish pleasures of The World’s End, Edgar Wright’s comedy about a group of middle-aged guys drinking beer and facing mortality, come with a bittersweet edge. In the old days, the lead character, Gary King, used to be the coolest kid in school, at least in the outlaw sense: He’d…

Europa Report Only Looks Realistic

No human has left near-Earth orbit since 1972, we’re reminded in Europa Report, a smartly marketed space-horror quickie that purports to be the one-giant-leap for found-footage scares — and also maybe Serious Space-Travel Movies themselves, which have failed to soar past our atmosphere almost as long as NASA has. To…

You’re Next: Slasher Flick Puts the Well-to-Do in the Red

On September 17, 2011, 1,000 protesters set up tents in Manhattan’s financial district and dubbed themselves Occupy Wall Street. Four days later, Lionsgate purchased You’re Next — a home-invasion slasher that slices up a family of useless 1 percenters — and should have released it immediately. Instead, the studio sat…

A Hong Kong Auteur Makes Crime Cut Again

Hong Kong genre film volcano Johnnie To rocks crime thrillers like it was still 1999, and in so many ways that’s a blessing — the pulpy textures of the HK gangster-policier are evergreen, and To always focuses his down-to-earth Sino-neo-noirs more on classical story beats rather than outrageous sensation. (In…

Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie: What Happened?

An average episode of the 1989-1999 cable show Mystery Science Theater 3000, in which a man and his robot buddies heckle bad movies, runs about 90 minutes. The 1955 film This Island Earth is 87 minutes. The 1996 feature Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie, in which the man and…

Hyperloops and Sassy Robots: The Technology of Futurama

Good news, everybody! Elon Musk, the philanthropist/buisnessman/mad scientist who founded PayPal, SpaceX, and Tesla Motors has announced plans for a new form of transportation: the Hyperloop. The proposed Hyperloop would be a huge tube that magnetically transports capsules within it at speeds approaching 700 miles per hour. Musk claims that…

The Coming-of-Age Movie Flow Chart

Whether your teen years shaped you, scarred you, or left you more or less unscathed, there’s no denying that Hollywood harbors a special love for high school movies. While they each have their own set of one-liners, dated fashion trends, and even more dated soundtracks, there’s a certain formula that…

Lee Daniels’ The Butler Finds Urgency in the Conventional

At the movies, straightforward storytelling, the kind in which a director and his cast push a story forward in waves of action and feeling, has become so out of fashion it’s almost avant-garde. Moviegoers, it seems, need to be cool: not too moved, not too surprised, not too impressed. We…

Ashton Kutcher Almost Reveals the Man Beyond the Devices

Geniuses, unfortunately, tend to be impossible people. Consumed by their own dazzling brilliance, they treat those closest to them cruelly and thoughtlessly, causing much undue suffering — only to turn around and invent a device that can put 1,000 songs in your pocket. Damn them. If what we see in…

3 Must-See Movies in Phoenix This August

Equip yourself with snacks and a cardi, because it’s time to cool down at the movies. Here are three films you need to see this August. In A World . . . @ Harkins Camelview In A World… finds vocal coach Carol (Lake Bell) struggling to make her mark on…