Repertory Cinema Wishlist: My Favorite Year

The influence of Sid Caesar’s early television variety series Your Show of Shows runs deep, and the 1982 comedy My Favorite Year, inspired by an actual appearance on the show by the charming but washed-up actor Errol Flynn, plays like an inside joke. As with TV’s The Dick Van Dyke…

Shaun of the Dead: Your gateway drug to zombie fandom

“You’ve got red on you.” Don’t like that one? How about “We’re coming to get you, Barbara!” — which serves as a clever callback to the movie that birthed the modern zombie. Maybe you prefer something like the creatively cursed “Fuck-a-doodle-doo!” There’s no question that the abundance of quotable lines…

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Catalyst. The beautiful grounds of the Denver Botanic Gardens are the ideal place to mount an outdoor sculpture show, and over the past few years, there has been one such presentation after another. This year, the theme is contemporary sculptors in Colorado. The pieces are picturesquely sited throughout in clearings…

Blackfish takes viewers on a tense journey

Tilikum, the 12,000-pound bull orca whose big splashes still climax daily SeaWorld shows, has been implicated in three human deaths, spread over his three decades of forced performances: Two trainers, twenty years apart, and a drifter who in 1999 apparently hid in the park and dove into the wrong pool…

There’s an ugly human truth at the core of Kick-Ass 2

Despite the giddy, gory ridiculousness of Kick-Ass 2, this summer’s most violent yet least punishing comic-book movie, there’s a kernel of ugly human truth at its core. In the first issue of Mark Millar and John Romita Jr.’s Kick-Ass comic, from 2008, a lonely high-school twerp dons a wetsuit and…

Eight reasons Breaking Bad is the best show ever

The final eight episodes of Breaking Bad will begin Sunday. Over the course of five seasons, the series has established itself not just as one of the best shows now on TV, but as one of the best ever — maybe the best ever. On the eve of this final…

Tommy Wiseau on the legacy of The Room

For ten years, The Room has been confounding and entertaining audiences. The film’s strange blend of inept performance, oblique writing and haphazard direction has earned it an ever-growing cult audience that can’t get enough of the movie’s unique charms. Sure, by most standards it a “bad” film, even a terrible…

The Room: Three theories to explain this movie

Welcome to a new column called Geek Speak, in which we take on an aspect of geek culture each week. There is nothing quite like The Room. It’s one of a handful of movies considered “the worst movie ever” that has somehow managed to find an enduring audience. For those…

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Catalyst. The beautiful grounds of the Denver Botanic Gardens are the ideal place to mount an outdoor sculpture show, and over the past few years, there has been one such presentation after another. This year, the theme is contemporary sculptors in Colorado. The pieces are picturesquely sited throughout in clearings…

The warmhearted Wasteland is full of twists but few surprises

There are twists aplenty but few surprises in Wasteland, a warmhearted but routine heist drama from first-time writer-director Rowan Athale. After serving time for crimes he didn’t commit, 22-year-old Harvey (Luke Treadaway, terrific) returns to his Yorkshire, England, home town intent on revenge against Roper (Neil Maskell), the neighborhood drug…

Matt Damon seems weighed down in Elysium

Movie stars shouldn’t be subject to the rules of gravity, as we mere mortals are. One of the great pleasures of watching actors is to see them move, and when yesterday’s youngsters start creaking, we feel it in our joints. That’s not to say actors can’t age gracefully, or that…

Jason and Jennifer’s talents go unused in We’re the Millers

If there’s one nuance mainstream comedies have yet to learn, it’s that “empathetic” need not mean “likable” — audiences can feel for characters they don’t necessarily want to be. The hit black comedy Horrible Bosses, which had three angry underlings plotting murderous vengeance against their you-know-whats, should have been a…

Five fantastic horror Western films, in honor of Near Dark

The Western is dead. For years, even decades, the Western genre has been a wasteland, with few new films coming out and even fewer hits. Luckily, horror fans know what to do with dead things: make them undead, so they can stand up again and start biting faces and murdering…

Repertory Cinema Wishlist: McCabe & Mrs. Miller

In a string of films in the 1970s, Robert Altman placed his alternative spin on everything from crime movies (Thieves Like Us, 1974) to Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe (The Long Goodbye, 1973). But Altman’s self-proclaimed anti-Western, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, which followed popular comedy M*A*S*H in 1971, might just be…

Now Showing

Catalyst. The beautiful grounds of the Denver Botanic Gardens are the ideal place to mount an outdoor sculpture show, and over the past few years, there has been one such presentation after another. This year, the theme is contemporary sculptors in Colorado. The pieces are picturesquely sited throughout in clearings…

In the pitch-perfect Still Mine, love trumps the law

All that Canadian farmer Craig Morrison (James Cromwell), age 87, wants to do is build a little house, on his own land, without having to ask anyone’s permission. In the pitch-perfect, deeply affecting Still Mine, writer-director Michael McGowan tells the true story of what happened when Craig’s determination to build…