Most Popular
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7-Up vs. Coke Part 2
Heir to a fortune, Andrew Gladney went from John Burroughs to Yale and came home to found the dot-com darling Savvis Inc. Then he squandered it all. The spectacular flameout of a St. Louis soft-drink scion.
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras
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Ludo is fired up and ready to play on the national stage
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Curious Gorge: Ian tests the animal magnetism of Three Monkeys
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Feel a Draught?: Tigín opens an outpost in a Hampton Inn downtown? O'Really!
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Seeing Red: Partners battle over a Wash. Ave. eatery's ownership (9)
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras (9)
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7-Up vs. Coke Part 2 (6)
Heir to a fortune, Andrew Gladney went from John Burroughs to Yale and came home to found the dot-com darling Savvis Inc. Then he squandered it all. The spectacular flameout of a St. Louis soft-drink scion.
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Will Ian flip for the Original Pancake House? (4)
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Is a Wash. U. dean destroying alumni records and making unjust department cuts? (3)
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7-Up vs. Coke Part 2
Heir to a fortune, Andrew Gladney went from John Burroughs to Yale and came home to found the dot-com darling Savvis Inc. Then he squandered it all. The spectacular flameout of a St. Louis soft-drink scion.
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras
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Ludo is fired up and ready to play on the national stage
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Seeing Red: Partners battle over a Wash. Ave. eatery's ownership
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Icing the Cupcakes: Rachel Watson rouses racial emotions with her sizzling editorial in University City High School's student newspaper
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Go! 3/7-3/9
06:00PM 03/07/08 -
R.E.M. Accelerate: An Advance Review and Song-by-Song Analysis of the Band's New Album
04:06AM 03/08/08 -
Your Weekly St. Louis Food Blog Digest
03:45PM 03/07/08 -
This Is Hawkwind -- Do Not Panic
06:08PM 11/09/07
What we are writing about
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Recent Articles By Roy Kasten
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The Campbell Brothers
8 p.m. Friday, February 15 and 11 a.m. Saturday, February 16. Edison Theatre, 6445 Forsyth Boulevard
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Nina Nastasia
8:30 p.m. Saturday, February 9. The Bluebird, 2706 Olive Street.
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Richard Thompson
8 p.m. Monday, February 11. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard
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Parachute Musical
9 p.m. Friday, February 1. The Bluebird, 2706 Olive Street.
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Giant Bear
9 p.m. Wednesday, February 6. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Avenue.
Recent Articles By Robert Wilonsky
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Chafing Dishes: No Reservations now available on DVD
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How the West was wasted: The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford now on DVD
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Donkey Punch
Week of January 31, 2008
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Super, Thanks for Asking
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Wookiee Mistake
Recent Articles By Dean C. Minderman
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B.B. King
7:30 p.m. Wednesday February 13. Family Arena, 2002 Arena Parkway, St. Charles.
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Chris Botti
8 p.m. Friday January 18 and Saturday January 19. Touhill Performing Arts Center at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, One University Boulevard.
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Smooth Operators
Schoolhouse Rock's songwriter celebrates a few special birthdays in St. Louis while we pit Kenny G vs. Trans-Siberian Orchestra in a fight to the holiday death.
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Preservation Blues
Local niche labels keep the music coming.
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Backstoppers Benefit
7 p.m. Sunday November 4. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
Recent Articles By Dan Leroy
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Ohmega Watts
7 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 17. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
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Chris Brown
7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 31. Scottrade Center, 1401 Clark Avenue.
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Alicia Keys
As I Am
(J) -
Duran Duran
Red Carpet Massacre
(Epic) -
Frankie Beverly and Maze
7:30 p.m. Thursday, November 1. Family Arena, 2002 Arena Parkway, St. Charles.
Recent Articles By Brooke Foster
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Go Pug Yourself
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Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin
9 p.m. Saturday, January 26. The Bluebird, 2706 Olive Street.
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Mardi Hearty
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State of Bean
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Boyz n the Theater
Recent Articles By J. Hoberman
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Harlem Knight
Ridley Scott's portrait of a 70s dope CEO may not be epic, but it's still super-fly.
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Dr. Feelgood
Michael Moore’s pill goes down easy, but his diagnosis of U.S. health care still devastates.
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L.A. Story
Charles Burnett's revered, rarely seen South Central-set film finally gets its theatrical due
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The Mystery of the Tween Demo
:Bringing smarty back, Nancy Drew returns for another generation of young consumers.
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The House Always Wins
Ocean's Thirteen is a washed-up threequel. How much you wanna bet Hollywood makes a bundle?
Recent Articles By Jim Ridley
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Chafing Dishes: No Reservations now available on DVD
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Donkey Punch
Week of January 31, 2008
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Lock up the Kids
It's a hard-knock (and creepy) life in The Orphanage.
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No Future? Not Exactly
Joe Strummer transcends punk, and the music lives on.
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Once Upon a Time
Recent Articles By Ella Taylor
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In Bruges, Martin McDonagh's sightseeing hit-men flick, isn't much of a trip
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Legend Has It
That old "last man on earth" setup? It really works.
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Small Wonder
Mr. Magorium is far less fantastical than its title.
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Help!
Run for your life if you can, little girl: Julie Taymor’s ’60s-set musical is a bust.
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Make Love, Not War
Twentysomething Tel Aviv hipsters live life, have sex, befriend the enemy in The Bubble.
Recent Articles By Scott Foundas
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No treasure at the end of Fool's Gold, a terrible Matthew McConaughey-Kate Hudson mash-up.
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Sundance 2008's buzz is barely audible.
But Sugar is sweet and Traces of the Trade leaves its mark.
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Buyers Beware
Will desperate times call for desperate measures at Sundance '08?
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Eye of the Beholder
Julian Schnabel sees only treacle in the story that inspired his Diving Bell.
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Legend Has It
That old "last man on earth" setup? It really works.
Recent Articles By Jaime Lees
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Bret Michaels (sort of) talks dirty to RFT
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AA Bondy reinvents himself as an indie-folk artist
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Vince Neil
7:30 p.m. Thursday, January 17. Bottleneck Blues Bar at the Ameristar Casino, 1260 South Main Street, St. Charles.
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Bare Is My Mind?
Bobby Bare Jr. covers up with his ace Pixies and Breeders tribute act.
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The Shondes/The Helium Tapes/That's My Daughter
9 p.m. Wednesday, December 19. The Bluebird, 2706 Olive Street.
Recent Articles By Nathan Lee
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You Kill Me
Following Untraceable's lame-brained argument, we're all to blame for this massively dumb movie.
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Strangers on a Train
Wes Anderson’s road trip tale of brotherly love stings with the depth (yes, depth) of his whimsy.
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Test My Balls of Fury
Lazy review or lazy movie?
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A Star is Bourne (Again)
Amnesiac-spy trilogy culminates in a thrilling Ultimatum.
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Charge of the Light Brigade
Racing to reignite the sun -- and our souls -- in Danny Boyle's sci-fi collage
Recent Articles By Keegan Hamilton
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Air guns legalized this deer season
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Libertarians shun Chief Wana Dubie.
Critics say he's just blowing smoke.
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Sacred Garbage?
Native Americans trash plans to expand a sprawling Illinois landfill.
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Lock 'Em Down, Lock 'Em Up
Did Lock 'Em Down Records exec Dewanzel Singleton lead a well-choreographed double life, or did the DEA finger an innocent man?
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More Than Meets the Eye
Rapper/producer Vandalyzm makes a major splash with his debut album.
Recent Articles By Shae Moseley
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The Whigs
7 p.m. Thursday, February 14. Creepy Crawl, 3524 Washington Boulevard
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Leo Kottke
8 p.m. Friday, February 15. Sheldon Concert Hall, 3648 Washington Boulevard
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Pétur Ben
9 p.m. Friday, February 8 and Saturday, February 9. Schlafly Tap Room, 2100 Locust Street.
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Larry Dersch returns to St. Louis as part of A.K.A.C.O.D.
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Band of Horses finds its rhythm from evolution.
Ben Bridwell points out there's no "me" in "band."
Recent Articles By Judith Lewis
Recent Articles By Ryan Wasoba
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HEALTH
9 p.m. Monday, February 18. The Billiken Club, 20 North Grand Boulevard
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Early Day Miners
9 p.m. Friday, February 8. The Bluebird, 2706 Olive Street.
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Cobra Starship
7 p.m. Friday, February 1. Creepy Crawl, 3524 Washington Boulevard.
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Sound Tribe Sector 9
7:30 p.m. Saturday, February 2. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
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The Dillinger Escape Plan
7:30 p.m. Saturday, January 26. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
National Features
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Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
For days after Hurricane Rita, a Texas prison was hell on earth.
By Chris Vogel -
SF Weekly
The Candidate
Our columnist knows Ralph Nader's running mate all too well.
By Matt Smith -
The Pitch
How Not To Be a Rap Star
First of all, lay off the Ecstasy.
By Nadia Pflaum -
Village Voice
Project Runaway
What becomes a gossip columnist most?
By Michael Musto
2007: The Year in Movies and Music
A year-end wrap-up of what we adored, what was ignored and what the new year will bring.
By Roy Kasten , Robert Wilonsky , Dean C. Minderman , Dan Leroy , Brooke Foster , J. Hoberman , Jim Ridley , Ella Taylor , Scott Foundas , Jaime Lees , Nathan Lee , Keegan Hamilton , Shae Moseley , Judith Lewis , and Ryan Wasoba
Published: December 19, 2007Revenge of the Nerds
Absolutely, unequivocally, this has been The Year of The Apatow: Judd got Knocked Up to the tune of $150 million (at the box office alone); the super-OK Superbad, which Apatow produced, grossed another $120 million, "gross" being the operative word; and at year's end, he walks hard to the finish line as writer and producer of a faux-biopic about a pennies-on-the-dollar Johnny Cash named Dewey Cox. This doesn't take into account the slate of films Apatow has on tap for 2008 and '09, among them the stoners-on-the-run comedy Pineapple Express (directed, no shit, by indie darling David Gordon Green); Drillbit Taylor, a seemingly skeezy take on My Bodyguard starring Owen Wilson; and Step Brothers, which will reunite Will Farrell, John C. Reilly and Talladega Nights director Adam McKay. Hence Apatow's recent crowning by Entertainment Weekly as the "smartest person in Hollywood" — that week, anyway.
Though he's made his name as a hero to the schlubs, Apatow is anything but: A powerful player, he's his own franchise now, setting up kiosks all over Showbizland. It wasn't so long ago, though, that Apatow lorded over a kingdom defined by failure and ruin. The now-familiar narrative arc of his career having been established in profile after profile this year, he has to his credit countless failed pilots, including one starring Judge Reinhold as a more washed-up version of himself; he couldn't convince NBC to save the critically adored high school-set Freaks and Geeks or keep FOX from flunking the graduated-to-college Undeclared. He used to send TV critics handwritten pleas affixed to videos of unaired pilots and shit-canned series.
Now, Apatow's the King of Comedy, for better or worse — for better, because you can laugh at the big-screen comedies without feeling cheap and desperate; for worse, because with franchising comes dilution of product. Apatow's already behind the wheel of the Yuk Machine, spitting out cheap giggles to audiences eager to gobble up anything with his name attached. Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, which Apatow co-wrote with director Jake Kasdan, has its moments — 3.9 minutes' worth, by my stopwatch — but it's little more than a sketch extended way past its breaking point. Superbad, which he only produced but was co-written by his muse Seth Rogen, also could have lost a good 45 minutes. The trailer for Drillbit Taylor's good for a worried shrug, while the four minutes of Pineapple Express posted to the Web in December promise more of the same ol', same ol': new and exciting ways to smoke weed, this time with a joint shaped like a cross.
Apatow and his boys (among them Paul Rudd, Jonah Hill and Rogen) need to stop referring to themselves (or thinking of themselves) as the modern-day Marx Brothers. If there's one thing Groucho didn't do, it was show his ass (or somebody else's balls) for a cheap, dumb laugh. Those boys worked hard for the funny.
One gets the sense that Apatow actually runs a little deeper than the shallow numskulls he throws onscreen to see if they'll stick. It's the great secret of Knocked Up that somewhere on the margins of a movie about a pretty career woman inexplicably sticking it out with a doper dude, Apatow actually tells a thoughtful, honest story about modern marriage — the one about how marriages taken for granted will slowly, almost unnoticeably, overdose on a lethal cocktail of boredom, jealousy and selfish desire.
Apatow has it in him to move this money-minting shtick forward; you can't stay nineteen forever, dude (the point of his body of work, as a matter of fact). But for now, 2007's big winner still prefers the quick and dirty giggle to the trenchant observation; he's all about the gag, like the dick drawings in Superbad or the severed bodies in Walk Hard or the pregnant-sex scene in Knocked Up. It's the stupid shit that made him the smartest man in Hollywood. Hope he's smart enough to see past it.
>—Robert Wilonsky
Missed Opportunities
How tough is it for a movie to find its audience, above the din of blockbuster marketing and beyond the clogged distribution pipeline? Tsai Ming-liang, the Taiwanese/Malaysian director regarded as one of the world's greats, had two films in U.S. theaters this year, The Wayward Cloud and I Don't Want to Sleep Alone. Neither made it far outside the nation's major cities. They weren't alone. From minor hits to complete obscurities, these ten films from 2007 — and others — deserved more attention than they got, from audiences, distributors or critics.
End of the Line Good unreleased horror movies are not exactly in overstock, so why has Maurice Devereaux's hair-raising subterranean shocker taken so long to surface from the festival circuit? Maybe it's because this sick satiric tale — in which religious zealots conduct their own Rapture with cross-shaped daggers on a stalled subway — pushes sensitive buttons about fundamentalist hysteria. Then again, maybe it's because the movie raises the even more subversive possibility that the zealots are right. Either way, this is scary as hell and impressively unrelenting — starting with a strong candidate for the best jump-fright since Michael Myers bolted upright.
The Hills Have Eyes 2 It starts in a mock-up Kandahar with a war room staffed by stuffed dummies; it ends with a besieged peacenik wisely chucking his pacifist ideals in the face of Pure Fucking Evil. In between, outmanned U.S. troops reap the fruit of decades-old government policy — here, desert nuclear testing — in the form of implacable fanatics with the home-field advantage of tunnels and caves. In a year when Hollywood turned Iraq War hand-wringing into a virtual subgenre, no reputable movie caught the country's ideological confusion so fully; its booby-trapped shallow focus seemed shorthand for the perils of a blinkered worldview. This should be playing somewhere near Los Alamos, at a drive-in with No End in Sight.
I Know Who Killed Me Not even Lindsay Lohan's sojourn in the tabloids stirred up much interest in this marvel of trashy delirium. A pity, too: Chris Sivertson's mystifying mood piece about a demure honor student who morphs into a mutilated stripper was sold as torture porn, but it's closer in spirit to a glue-huffing remake of Kieslowski's The Double Life of Veronique. As psychodrama, it was even more potent. Try finding a more eerie metaphor for a child star's uneasy transition to adulthood than pole-dancer Lohan facing her Disney-princess self packed away in a casket.
Joshua You can't blame new parents who didn't want to waste their one date night a year on a movie that acutely captures the sleep-deprived panic of the other 364 days. For the stouthearted, though, George Ratliff's masterfully unnerving thriller about a blank-faced tyke (Jacob Kogan) whose mom and dad suspect him of psychological warfare against their new baby creates a mood of imminent doom that anyone with suspiciously quiet tots will recognize. The leads enact the pressures of child-rearing so empathetically — mom Vera Farmiga in exhausted near-madness, dad Sam Rockwell in sex-starved, stuck-in-the-middle befuddlement — that the cumulative chills leave your teeth chattering. It's perhaps better watched at home, with your kids locked safely in their rooms.
Lake of Fire The year's most criminally underseen movie, Tony Kaye's landmark abortion documentary made a crucial commercial miscalculation: Because it presented both pro-choice and pro-life positions fairly, neither side wanted to see it. A documentary is supposed to reinforce your prejudices, stupid, not challenge them. For anyone brave enough to consider the issue beyond sloganeering and name-calling, though, this staggering doc has the power to tip the undecided either way. And kudos to Kaye for shooting on celluloid — his graphic film may be hell to watch, but never to look at.
Manufactured Landscapes Despite the endorsement of Al Gore, Jennifer Baichwal's visually stunning documentary was snubbed by the same environmental groups who rallied around An Inconvenient Truth — in part because the inconvenient truth of Baichwal's film is that the industrial ravaging of the planet, as shown in Edward Burtynsky's macroscopic photographs, has an undeniable (if horrifying) grandeur. Can the environment's loss be cinema's gain? Following Burtynsky through China, from one hypnotic science-fiction rubblescape to another, Baichwal challenges us to say no — or at least not to succumb to our sense of awe.
Music and Lyrics Maybe the year's most pleasant surprise: an intelligent, genuinely amusing romantic comedy, scaled to match the modest ambitions of its hero, "happy has-been" Hugh Grant. Paired with Drew Barrymore, whose tremulous vulnerability has never been more appealing, Grant gave his least shticky and most winning performance in years as a Reagan-era pop idol who gets a shot at a mild artistic triumph after years on the berry-farm circuit. But he has no shame about his limited success, and the same can be said for writer-director Marc Lawrence, who kids '80s nostalgia without meanness or condescension. The cherry on the sundae: delicious pop-novelty pastiches by Andrew Blakemore, Adam Schlesinger, and others, including the deathless "Pop! Goes My Heart."
Paprika Director Satoshi Kon's anime fantasy — a mind-blower on a Videodrome/2001 scale of sensory and intellectual bombardment — exemplifies more than any digital-animation feature this year the freedom of working in a medium with no physical restraints. With his sleep-troubled film-noir cop prowling the subconscious of a near-future Tokyo, Kon explores the relationship between dream logic and the visual grammar of movies and plays eye-boggling tricks with perspective, distending bodies and boundaries and looping his nightmare scenarios. And yet at the movie's heart is a wistful, romantic affirmation of the need for inviolate space where our inner selves can soar.











You actually list Jimmy Eat World in your Best of 2007 Music list, but make no mention of Burial's "Untrue"? Stupud fucks.
Comment by steve robinson — December 25, 2007 @ 02:31PM
You actually list Jimmy Eat World in your Best of 2007 Music list, but make no mention of Burial's "Untrue"? Stupud fucks.
Comment by steve robinson — December 25, 2007 @ 02:32PM