Biography

The Fire Inside

The Fire Inside

“What you think about girls’ boxing?” The man asking that is Jason Crutchfield (Brian Tyree Henry), the coach of a boys’ boxing club located in Flint, Michigan. It’s 2012, and five years before he’d allowed one girl to join his club (even though it was against protocol): a coiled 11-year-old scowler named Claressa Shields, played […]

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Unfrosted

Unfrosted

Not much more than yet another assembly line typeproduced, Unfrosted: The Pop-Tarts Story appears to be a bit hollow. Most of the time, the most difficult task is determining exactly what the filmmakers meant to achieve, let alone whether it was possible to do so at all. Typically, the last term in quotation marks is

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Cabrini

Cabrini

There is a particularly good moment towards the end of the sturdy, almost retro epic ‘Cabrini,’ by Brenda Longo and Kathleen Murphy, about an Italian Catholic missionary nun who set up the only orphanage in New York at the dawn of the twentieth century, which coordinated the building of homes and charities century later. In

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White Bird

White Bird

“White Bird” directed by Marc Forster, deals with the Holocaust and comes out as a thoughtful but more or less didactic movie which tries to depict so much tragedy mostly as a classroom interaction for today’s children. It is an extended digression of a French granny narrating to the grandson about tolerance and its meant

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Dance First

Dance First

The 1953 novel ‘The Unnamable’ commences with these words – ‘I can’t go on. I’ll go on’ that most people including his critics would easily attribute to the Irish born poet, playwright, essayist and novelist, Samuel Beckett. dance First is simple and to the point and that is where they are most in terror of

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Queer

Queer

Queer: The jazzy experimentalism of the Beat Generation writers has proven to be a complicated task in converting their works to the screen. Walter Salles’ adaptation of On the Road, Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman’s Howl and David Bronenberg’s Naked Lunch attempted the same with varying degrees of success. One of the better films about

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Reagan

Reagan

First of all, I should answer the most difficult question which everyone asks in the final review: I hate Ronald Reagan presidency. It’s a bias I must admit to. That said, I do not see the need to understand why people appreciate the film, given that the plot is interesting, the screen version has no

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