SIFF 2012 Full Lineup Announced, Tickets On Sale NOW

SIFF 2012 Full Lineup Announced, Tickets On Sale NOW

Let’s get ready to festival! Like some rough beast, its hour come round at last, the 2012 Seattle International Film Festival is snuffling at our door. Are you ready for 460 films from 75 countries (273 features, 64 documentaries, 187 short films)? Are you prepared to take in 61 world premieres, 36 North American premieres, and 24 U.S. premieres? Of course not! Don’t be ridiculous. That’s why we’re here. Continue reading SIFF 2012 Full Lineup Announced, Tickets On Sale NOW

This Week’s DVD Releases

This Week’s DVD Releases

This week brings yet another terrible car-based action film with Nicolas Cage, Drive Angry, and Javier Bardem’s second Oscar-nominated performance in Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s Biutiful. Meanwhile, Kaboom is a perfectly serviceable sex and drug-fueled midnight film from Gregg Araki. But probably the most anticipated release this week is the third season of True Blood, even though Alan Ball’s HBO vampire series long ago jumped the shark to so trashy bad it’s good. Continue reading This Week’s DVD Releases

Renoir and Errol Flynn: Cinema Essentials at the Grand Illusion and Central Cinema

Renoir and Errol Flynn: Cinema Essentials at the Grand Illusion and Central Cinema

The Rules of the Game is one of those rare vaunted Greatest Films in Cinema History that deserves its rep, richly. During its original release, it roused the undisguised contempt of the French upper class for its scalpel-sharp dissection of that strata’s lack of conscience. Critics at the time panned it, and the movie’s original negative was destroyed entirely during a World War II Allied bombing run (thankfully the movie received a painstaking restoration from surviving prints, to its full length with Renoir’s blessing in the late 1950s). But like a lot of misunderstood-at-the-time films, The Rules of the Game plays more resonantly now than ever.
Continue reading Renoir and Errol Flynn: Cinema Essentials at the Grand Illusion and Central Cinema