EIFF Review: Breakfast on Pluto

Posted by: Scott Hayes  •  October 4, 2005 @ 11:59am

Some of Ireland's greatest actors and its greatest living director teams up again with writer Patrick McCabe for this alternately fun and serious view of a transvestite's travels and travails as he/she seeks out his mother who abandoned him.

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VIFF Review: This Divided State

Posted by: Mark McLeod  •  October 4, 2005 @ 11:59am

In the political world in the United States of America, no one figure is more controversial to both political parties than documentarian Michael Moore, whose 2004 feature Fahrenheit 9/11 has become one of the most widely seen documentaries in history.

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VIFF Review: The Waldo Cumberbund Story

Posted by: Showbiz Monkeys  •  October 3, 2005 @ 11:59am

The Waldo Cumberbund Story is a unique and off-beat tale of childhood dreams about a young boy's desire to play the ukelele in a Hawaiian band.

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EIFF Review: Plagues and Pleasures on the Salton Sea

Posted by: Scott Hayes  •  October 2, 2005 @ 11:59am

"Enjoy climate, comfort, and stench!!!" That's the tag line from the poster for this, another fine doc at EIFF05, followed by "featuring Hungarian revolutionaries, Christian nudists, pop stars, land sharks, hard drinkers, empty cities, failed resort towns, tons of dead fish, a dying café and a man who built a mountain."

Ah the tangled webs we weave when first we practice to irrigate a de

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EIFF Review: 39 Pounds of Love

Posted by: Scott Hayes  •  October 1, 2005 @ 11:59am

Some documentaries may have interesting subjects but are real yawners. I remember struggling through Grey Gardens by the Maysles brothers.

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EIFF Review: Waking Up Walter: The Walter Gretzky Story

Posted by: Scott Hayes  •  October 1, 2005 @ 11:59am

Based on Gretzky's book "On Family, Hockey and Healing", this telefilm is a look at one man's recovery from a stroke. Okay, the man just happens to be the father of the greatest hockey player who ever lived, Wayne Gretzky.

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Review: Capote

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  September 30, 2005 @ 11:59am

Who was Truman Capote? What drove this man to write the legendary true-crime novel, "In Cold Blood"?

In the new film Capote, you can't really classify the film as a bio-pic, but a sliver of one man's very dynamic life. The film explores what happened to Truman Capote (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) when he ventured deep into Kansas in the winter of 1959.

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Review: Serenity

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  September 30, 2005 @ 11:59am

When Fox Television cancelled the short-lived TV series, Firefly, many of us mourned. But it was probably more the network's fault than it was the ratings for the cancellation of the show.

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Review: History of Violence, A

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  September 30, 2005 @ 11:59am

There has been a lot of talk and commentary about A History of Violence from director David Cronenberg. The remarks focus primarily on how powerful and thrilling the film is on the angle it takes on an all-too-familiar story.

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Review: History of Violence, A

Posted by: Tom Milroy  •  September 30, 2005 @ 11:59am

When it comes to David Cronenberg movies, reactions are rarely unified. His work always seems to be "out there". If you've seen Crash or Naked Lunch, you know what I mean. His latest movie A History of Violence is sure to provide another polarized audience.

Going on what I'd read about this movie, it was a huge surprise.

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