Review: Walking Tall

Posted by: Mark McLeod  •  April 2, 2004 @ 11:59am

They say you can't go home again, but that's just what Chris Vaughn (The Rock) wants to do. After an 8-year stint in the army, Chris has decided to head home to the small mountain town he grew up in and start work at the local mill. Upon his return, he finds that the mill has been shut down by his old friend who took over ownership when his parents passed away.

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Review: Walking Tall

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  April 2, 2004 @ 11:59am

Back in 1973, the true story of a Southern sheriff named Buford Pusser â€" played by Joe Don Baker â€" who battled the odds with his pickup truck and a hunk of wood made audiences stand up and cheer.

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Review: Hellboy

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  April 2, 2004 @ 11:59am

Comic writer and creator Mike Mignola has always had a flair for the dark, mysterious, and heavily moody. His artistic style renders his creations and drawings often in heavy black backgrounds where only portions of their faces are seen. Mignola's art style was always more about the words than the pictures when creating a comic.

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Review: Dogville

Posted by: Jeremy Maron  •  March 26, 2004 @ 11:59am

Lars Von Trier's last film, Dancer in the Dark, starring Bjork and Catherine Deneuve was THE film studies movie of the year. I'll bet there wasn't a film program in the world that didn't show this film in at least one class. Will Dogville live up to this? Well, in my first class EVER at Carleton University, I was talking about it with a fellow classmate.

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Review: The Ladykillers

Posted by: Mark McLeod  •  March 26, 2004 @ 11:59am

Marva Munson (Irma P.Hall) is a simple woman living in the deep South somewhere along the Bible belt. A widow, she lives at home with her cat Pickles and regularly attends church services on Sunday with a group of her friends. Being a widow and living in a rather large house, she rents a room out to supplement her income and for some human companionship.

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Review: Seven Times Lucky

Posted by: Scott Hayes  •  March 25, 2004 @ 11:59am

The subgenre that is grifter noir features unsavoury characters like kingpins, loan sharks, petty thieves, cops on the take, and others. They are absolutely delightful to watch, especially when the story is done right: full of twists and turns.

Gary Yates should be a proud man. He did it spot-on right. Kevin Pollak is Harlen, an older con man who is losing his touch.

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Review: Dawn of the Dead

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  March 19, 2004 @ 11:59am

There are staples of a genre and then there are the immortals. George A. Romero's 1968 classic Night of the Living Dead is still one of the greatest horror films of all time. It still holds its own and scares the pants off you with each viewing. It is eternal.

Ten years after that classic, Romero awakened our fears once more with Dawn of the Dead.

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Review: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Posted by: Mark McLeod  •  March 19, 2004 @ 11:59am

Focus Features is a relatively young distributor and is the art-house division of Universal Pictures. In their short existence, they have distributed an amazingly high number of excellent motion pictures. In the last year alone they were the studio behind multiple Oscar nominee Lost in Translation and the film that ended up as my favorite of 2003, 21 Grams.

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Review: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  March 19, 2004 @ 11:59am

It's been almost 2 years since we have had a glimpse at the upside-down world of script-crafter Charlie Kaufman. The Oscar-nominated screenwriter has delivered such head scratching films as Human Nature, Being John Malkovich, and Adaptation.

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Review: Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London

Posted by: Mark McLeod  •  March 12, 2004 @ 11:59am

Cody Banks (Frankie Muniz) is not your ordinary teenager. In fact he's a secret agent for the CIA recruited after requesting a spy kit by mail. Now a couple of years older, Cody and the rest of the junior agents are spending the summer at Camp Woody, a super secret training facility masquerading to their parents as a summer camp.

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