NYT > Movies
NYT > Movies

  • Stopping at 10 Just Seems Wrong
    I know it’s hard to believe, but during the past 12 months I sometimes went two or three weeks in a row without finding anything to mock, deflate or be disappointed by.
  • A List, to Start the Conversation
    Mostly, these lists give me an excuse to remind readers of good and great films that they may have missed. But in some respects, the actual list is the least of it.
  • Films That Look Death in the Eye
    The betrayal of the body, decrepitude and death: in 2007 an unprecedented number of serious films, along with the usual slasher movies, contemplated the end of life.
  • One for the Money, One for the Art
    In a year of surprises, some unknowns soared, and some big names plummeted.
  • Murder Most Musical
    “Sweeney Todd” is as much a horror film as a musical. It is also something close to a masterpiece.
  • Behind the Music, This Time for Laughs
    “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” has a good beat and you can dance to it, though mostly you’ll probably just tap your foot.
  • Good-Time Charlie’s Foreign Affairs
    “Charlie Wilson’s War” may be more of a hoot than any picture dealing with the bloody, protracted fight between the Soviet Army and the Afghan mujahedeen has any right to be.
  • P.P.S. Take Tissues to This Weepy About a Romance Tested by Death
    “P.S. I Love You” looks squeaky clean and utterly straight. Yet as directed by Richard LaGravenese, it has a curious morbid quality.
  • Talk About Slippery Slopes
    “Steep” is an undeniably impressive visual spectacle that follows the sport of extreme skiing.
  • Racing Around the Globe, Solving a History Mystery
    The hyperactive sequel “National Treasure: Book of Secrets” sends its archaeologist hero on a globetrotting quest that might have been devised after a long night of Wikipedia surfing.
  • Movie Guide and Film Series
    MOVIES.
  • Time on Your Hands? Curl Up With a Series
    It is not merely the season for giving but also of distraction and avoidance. It is, in other words, the time to hide out with the best of long-form narrative television.
  • A Goofy Scheme to Get the Girl
    The Hungarian cartoon feature “The District!” is a last-minute shoo-in for the title of 2007’s most original animated film.
  • Cereal as a Metaphor for Capitalism
    A business course on cutthroat capitalism disguised as a slacker comedy: That’s the kindest way to describe Michael Lehmann’s “Flakes.”
  • From Memories, There’s No Escape
    In both novel and film form, “The Kite Runner” recounts a simple yet shrewd story about that favorite American pastime: self-improvement.
  • Man About Town, and Very Alone
    In spite of its third-act collapse into obviousness and sentimentality, “I Am Legend” is among Will Smith’s better movies.
  • The Folks You Meet on the Border Between Consciousness and Dreams
    “Youth Without Youth” is a narratively ambitious, visually sumptuous surrealist enterprise that tries to bend time and space together as neatly as the folds in an origami swan.
  • Out of Warhol’s Inner Circle Into the Void
    “A Walk Into the Sea” is Esther B. Robinson’s documentary about Danny Williams, a former Harvard student who was a part of Andy Warhol’s Factory scene.
  • Familiar Faces With a Digital Makeover
    Hollywood continues its tired milking of old television properties with “Alvin and the Chipmunks,” a slick updating of the musical-cartoon franchise.
  • Harsh Realities and Mystical Power
    For his poetic fourth feature, “Half Moon,” Bahman Ghobadi returns to the desolation of the Kurdish borderlands and the enduring optimism of his people.
  • Holiday on Thin Ice
    The director Judd Apatow and the actress Leslie Mann have been married for more than 10 years, and they have the same argument two or three times a year.
  • Once More Diving Into the Vaults, and Surfacing With Cinematic Pearls
    It’s been a good DVD year for old-movie buffs with ambitious and interesting projects from a wide range of distributors.
  • Artists Only
    Young arty types congregate, create and watch a show about young arty types — all online.
  • Frank Capra Jr., Movie and TV Producer, Dies at 73
    Mr. Capra Jr., the son of the noted Hollywood director Frank Capra, never wanted to go into his father’s business but found in the end he could not resist its pull.
  • Golden Globes and Oscars Are Drawn Into Strike
    The guild will not allow the Golden Globe show to use its writers, and is denying historical film clips to the Oscars.
  • Master of ‘Rings’ to Tackle ‘Hobbit’
    A settlement announced on Tuesday between Peter Jackson and New Line Cinema could bring “The Hobbit” to movie theaters by December 2010.
  • Disney Wonders if a Mermaid Can Follow a Trail Blazed by a Lion
    While “The Lion King” on Broadway took everyone by surprise, “The Little Mermaid” comes with one question: Can Disney ever do that again?
  • Cinephiles, Pack Your Bags. An Uncut Version Awaits.
    The phenomenon of so many people visiting Hong Kong to see uncensored films has highlighted changing attitudes toward government censorship of the arts in China.
  • New DVDs
    New this week is a Criterion version of “Two-Lane Blacktop,” the rarely seen “Chamele