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  1. May 10, 2024 · Advertisement. “Nothing Can’t Be Undone By a Hotpot” constantly threatens to become a darker story but pointedly never goes there. It’s more frothy and playful than not, which might make it a hard sell for genre aficionados who prefer their mysteries to be grim and/or dark. You still shouldn’t expect prefab cynicism from a movie where ...

  2. 5 days ago · As the film reveals the enigmatic connection between Atlas and Harlan later on, “Atlas” goes further off the rails amid visual designs and thematic ideas that feel borrowed from other (and better) films that came before it. And for a “our future depends on this”-type tale, the stakes never quite coalesce. But “Atlas” does have ...

  3. 6 days ago · Brian Tallerico | 2024-05-23. Getting fired from SNL was the best thing that ever happened to Shane Gillis. Andrew Schulz movie reviews & film summaries | Roger Ebert.

  4. 5 days ago · Cannes 2024: My Sunshine, Rumours, The Balconettes. Robert Daniels | 2024-05-24. Our latest dispatch concerns a trio of films with wildly disparate tones, from coming-of-age queer drama to feminist ghost picture. Lucas Bravo movie reviews & film summaries | Roger Ebert.

  5. May 10, 2024 · It is “more than a place, an idea, a world within a world.”. It is their only world. We hear Lee tell Maeve and Imogen about the time before they lived in Lazareth, when “people lived in cities and towns and people filled their time with mindless distractions.”. But then came a global virus, and all systems collapsed.

  6. May 6, 2024 · 30 Minutes on "Not Fade Away". The first theatrical feature film written and directed by David Chase, the creator of “The Sopranos,” is an autobiographical tale about the formation of an artistic sensibility. John Magaro plays Doug Damiano, a northern New Jersey teenager whose father Pat (James Gandolfini) is a hot-tempered, Archie Bunker ...

  7. May 15, 2024 · Roger Ebert | 1968-01-29. With the lithe grace of a seasoned athlete, Peter Finch lifted the tea bag from the teapot and, holding it by the trademark at the end of its string, dropped it into an ashtray. His aim was accurate, and he permitted himself a dour smile. Oscar Wilde movie reviews & film summaries | Roger Ebert.

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