Steve Weiss Named FilmBar’s Programmer

Steve Weiss, head honcho of No Festival Required, has been named film programmer of the soon-to-be-launched FilmBar. Weiss brings some pretty good microcinema experience to the indie venue that plans to screen new, classic, and international flicks when it opens in late November. In 2002, after Jeff Cochran pulled the…

Rebuilding Hope Documentary DVD Available Online

Rebuilding Hope, a documentary that follows three men who fled civil war-torn Sudan and into the United States as children, then return to their homeland as adults, is available for purchase online following a local screening in Phoenix. Gabriel Bol Deng, Koor Garang and Garang Mayuol, the subjects of the…

The Tillman Story: A Discussion with Director Amir Bar-Lev

The Tillman Story, director Amir Bar-Lev’s documentary about Pat Tillman’s family’s search for the truth about his death, opens in theaters nationwide today. We recently caught up with Bar-Lev to ask a few questions about the film. What compelled you to make The Tillman Story? [Tillman’s death] was a story…

The Room: Four Major Symbols in Tommy Wiseau’s Cult Classic Comedy

Independent filmmaker Tommy Wiseau is as enigmatic as his movies. Several times during our 20-minute phone interview, he says, “I don’t like to talk about myself.” But one thing Wiseau will discuss at length is his movie The Room, which screens at MADCAP Theaters Friday and Saturday, September 3 and…

The Tillman Story Sets the Record Straight

Pat Tillman, the Arizona Cardinals safety who enlisted in the Army Rangers eight months after September 11, read Emerson, Chomsky, and, though an atheist, the Bible. Resembling a beefier Seann William Scott, he shunned cell phones, cars, and professional-athlete megalomania. A fiercely private (and principled) person, his death in Afghanistan…

The American: Anton Corbijn Turns the Tried-and-True Thriller Inward

Sometimes you feel bad for movie marketers, tasked with connecting any given film to as large an audience as possible. Take, for example, The American. Judging by the film’s trailers and advertisements, it’s a fast-paced Euro-stylish thriller starring George Clooney as a dashing, conflicted hero. Yet it quickly becomes apparent,…

Animal Kingdom Suffers for Its Ambition

Happily sampling nasty beats and riffs from the Scorsese catalog, the new Aussie crime saga Animal Kingdom begins with a hushed but breath-holding set piece: A gawky lad watches TV on the couch next to his dozing mum . . . until the already-summoned EMTs arrive and the boy calmly…

Arizona Underground Film Festival: Tickets Now on Sale

Tickets are now on sale for the third annual Arizona Underground Film Festival, which rolls through Phoenix and Tucson September 18 to 25. Last week, the festival announced the first six films to make the cut. What to expect: A comedy about German hit men, a surreal skateboarding flick, a…

The Last Exorcism: Trembling Before God and the Handheld Camera

With a small, well-chosen cast, sly script, and slippery, ambivalent characters, The Last Exorcism gives a welcome twist to the demonic-possession movie revival. A fourth-generation minister, Cotton Marcus (Patrick Fabian) of Baton Rouge’s Church of St. Mark was groomed for the pulpit. Onetime child preacher Cotton has grown out of…

The Tillman Story Chronicles a Family’s Search for the Truth

The Tillman Story, a documentary about the death of former Arizona Cardinal and Army Ranger Pat Tillman, opens in Los Angeles and New York City today.  The film, directed by Amir Bar-Lev (My Kid Could Paint That), chronicles the Tillman family’s search for the truth about Pat’s death in the…

Lottery Ticket: Bow Wow’s Strikes It Rich

Midway through Lottery Ticket, a teen-comedy-cum-wish-fulfillment fantasy, the movie’s hero, Kevin Carson, goes on a spending spree. The holder of a $370 million lottery ticket that he can’t cash in until after the July 4 holiday, Kevin accepts a $100,000 loan from a local gangster, and proceeds to spend it…

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World: Michael Cera Shows Some Soul

Edgar Wright’s Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is every bit as faithful to its source material (Bryan Lee O’Malley’s six-volume series about a 22-year-old go-nowhere man-boy fending off his new girlfriend’s seven evil exes) as Zack Snyder’s Watchmen was to his (Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ brooding comic-hero deconstruction). Both…

Get Low: A Hermit’s Life-Affirming, Pre-Death Funeral

“No Damn Trespassing, Beware of Mule!” warns the hand-carved sign posted near the high-country cabin of Tennessee recluse Felix Bush (Robert Duvall), whose abrupt decision to re-engage with the larger world propels Get Low, an imperfect but rewarding new film. It is 1938, and Felix, who’s been in a self-imposed…

Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World Plays Like a Video Game

Besides doing fun domestic partner stuff like arguing about why dirty socks don’t go on the couch and whose last name will come first in their hyphenated union, Phoenix New Times staff writer Niki D’Andrea and her girlfriend, Esther Groves, like to occasionally get out of the house for “dates.”…

Scottsdale International Film Festival Announces 2010 Lineup

For its tenth year, the 2010 Scottsdale International Film Festival plans to roll out a collection of seriously dynamic feature films. The five-day, thirty-film festival will screen several award winners, such as Reykjavík-Rotterdam, a thriller that, to date, is one of the most expensive films in Icelandic cinema history; the…