‘Girls Against Boys,’ reviewed by Marshall Fine

HollywoodandFine.com I found myself strangely compelled by Austin Chick’s “Girls Against Boys,” as much for what it doesn’t say as for what it does. The film starts with a flash-forward, with a young woman named Lu (Nicole LaLiberte), sexually teasing a cop (Matthew Rauch) in a bedroom, then getting him …

What now, Arnold?

HollywoodandFine.com Now that his first comeback movie has seriously bombed, what’s next for Arnold Schwarzenegger? I’m here to suggest that, in fact, “The Last Stand,” which opened to slim box office in the U.S. a couple of weeks ago, is actually a step in the right direction for the aging …

Demand Celebrities Go Fuck Themselves and Gangster Squad reviewed by Armond White for CityArts

YouTube satire tops Gangster Squad By Armond White Gangster Squad is not the first important cinema work of 2013–that would be the YouTube clip “Demand Celebrities Go Fuck Themselves”–but the two are related. Both deal with violence, the top-ranking political issue this news cycle, as an undeniable part of our …

‘Knife Fight,’ reviewed by Marshall Fine

HollywoodandFine.com It’s the rare political satire that really works – if only because real politics are so much weirder and painfully amusing than anything a writer could concoct. Exhibit A: Mark Sanford, disgraced governor of South Carolina, announcing he will run for Congress (where he’ll fit right in). If finding …

Armond White’s Better-Than List for 2012 from CityArts

Critic Armond White assesses the past movie year By Armond White In 2012 politics became personal fantasy. Movies weren’t just entertainment but were used to justify prejudiced (even escapist) points of view. Critics misread films to suit political partisanship but they could do so only because filmmakers were similarly biased. …

‘Broken City,’ reviewed by Marshall Fine

HollywoodandFine.com Allen Hughes’ “Broken City” has the bones and perhaps even the DNA of a better, darker and more interesting film. Its tale of marital discord and political in-fighting, as well as corruption and malfeasance, could have been constructed as one of those painfully compelling tales of a good man …

‘The Last Stand,’ reviewed by Marshall Fine

HollywoodandFine.com Sometimes, all you want is a knock-down, guns-blazing approximation of an old-style western, even if it’s set in contemporary times. As a modern oater, “The Last Stand” is shamelessly entertaining. As guilty pleasures go, this one is relatively defensible. Directed by Korean émigré Kim Jee-woon, it’s a 21st-century take …

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