Skip to Navigation Skip to Content

Examiner Connect

Movies

Max Thieriot in a once in a lifetime role as a teen sex purveyor in 'Disconnect'

Max Thieriot
Max Thieriot is slightly concerned that people may take “Disconnect” the wrong way. “I don’t want people to think that it’s a movie that says the Internet is bad,” the actor says. “It’s a wake-up call, showing how disconnected we are from each other in general, how we’ve lost touch.” In the intriguing indie film directed by Henry Alex Rubin, Thieriot plays a charismatic teen who sells sex on an adults-only website. He comes to the attention of a news reporter looking for a juicy story. Read More

‘Trance’ too muddled to cast spell

trance, James McEvoy
Three morally slippery protagonists form a shaky alliance in an effort to get their hands on a valuable painting in director Danny Boyle’s “Trance,” a sensorially dazzling but dramatically disappointing brio-noir thriller from the usually efficient British director. Too many twists obscure the human element in this movie in which Boyle — who made the 1990s decorum-busting black comedies “Shallow Grave” and “Trainspotting” and 2008’s crowd-pleasing “Slumdog Millionaire” — explores heist-drama and “Inception”-style brain-twister terrain. Read More

'To the Wonder' is another wonderful Terrence Malick film

To the Wonder
“To the Wonder,” Terrence Malick’s sixth film in 40 years, has much in common with his last film, 2011’s “The Tree of Life.” Dealing with some of the same themes, including a father who can’t open his heart, it also is more intimate and more immediate, without the dinosaurs or outer-space scenes of “Tree of Life.” Read More

24-hour art film ‘The Clock’ takes its time

Christopher Marclay: The Clock
The proverb “Time waits for no man” has never seemed more poignant than in the face of “Christian Marclay: The Clock” — an unnervingly spellbinding, 24-hour cinematic opus. Marclay’s video montage, on view at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art through June 2, uses thousands of film clips to show all 1,440 minutes in the day, each minute visually represented by a timepiece in the film: a clock, watch, sundial, etc. Despite the dizzying number of clips, it becomes one singular, very shrewd film. Read More

Adam Leon makes ‘Gimme the Loot’ into low-budget fun

Gimme the Loot
A wonder of an independent film, Adam Leon’s “Gimme the Loot” — opening today — is quick, lean and economical. It gets great performances out of newcomers and uses natural locations to brilliant effect. It’s not precious or gimmicky. Above all, it’s highly entertaining. The determined Leon, who wanted to be a filmmaker since he was 4, didn’t go to film school: “At my college, there was this great DVD library, so I’d watch a movie every night and did my own cinema studies,” he says. Read More

Matteo Garrone's ‘Reality’ doesn’t bite

Aniello Arena, reality
As its fishmonger protagonist slides down toward madness while pursuing a shot at TV stardom, the Italian fable “Reality” contains nothing unique or revelatory. But between the plot dots, this fantastical journey and neorealist comedy (yes, there is such a thing) is a skillfully spun, entertaining tale about how people equate fame and flash with human worth. Read More

Derek Cianfrance focuses on cycles, evolution in ‘The Place Beyond the Pines’

Derek Cianfrance’s new film, “The Place Beyond the Pines,” is going to mess with people’s expectations. In his followup to the powerful “Blue Valentine,” which went back and forth between two timelines, Cianfrance again plays with structure. “I was conscious not to repeat the same structure, but I’m still a structuralist,” says Cianfrance, recently in The City to promote the movie. “I’m fascinated by the shape of things. Whereas ‘Blue’ was a duet, this is a triptych. It’s also a film about lineage, so I felt it needed to be linear,” he says. Read More

Ray Liotta, Mary Louise Parker and Demián Birchir light up Sonoma International Film Festival

mary louise parker
Ray Liotta, Mary Louise Parker and Demián Bichir are the stars gracing the 16th annual Sonoma International Film Festival, opening Wednesday and running through April 14. More than 100 films, including seven premieres, will screen at various locations in and near Sonoma’s center plaza, where local merchants are offering wine and gourmet fare. Read More

Local flavor mixes with world cinema at S.F. International Film Festival

what Maisie Knew
Under the guidance of its new executive director Ted Hope, the 56th annual San Francisco International Film Festival promises to be an exciting affair. Opening April 25, the 15-day event hosts 95 feature films and full-length documentaries and 63 shorts. The 2013 lineup, announced Tuesday, is dedicated to the memory of George Gund III, longtime board chairman of the San Francisco Film Society, the festival’s parent organization, who died in January. Read More

'G.I. Joe' commands No. 1 at box office with $41M

After a nine-month delay, "G.I. Joe: Retaliation" deployed to the top spot at the box office. The action film starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Bruce Willis and Channing Tatum marched into the No. 1 position at the weekend box office, earning $41.2 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. The sequel to 2009's "G.I. Joe: Rise of Cobra" was postponed last year to convert the film to 3-D. "Retaliation" opened Wednesday, which helped to bring its domestic total to $51.7 million. Read More
URL: http://www.sfexaminer.com/archive/73/73?page=1&quicktabs_6=1