
NYT > Movies
- 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.” - SAGS Rock This Way
The Screen Actors Guild nominations are out and there are some surprises to be found. - 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? - 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. - 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. - 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 “Chameleon Street” and a 90th Anniversary United Artists boxed set. - Met Has New Rival in Operas at Movies
The San Francisco Opera on Tuesday announced its own plan to transmit operas to movie theaters using a system it says is superior to that of the Metropolitan Opera. - Evidence in Hollywood Wiretapping Case Is Questioned
Lawyers for defendants in the Anthony Pellicano wiretapping case argued that evidence seized from the Hollywood private detective’s offices had been improperly obtained. - A Warning From Behind the Curtain
Media consumers have been watching the writers’ strike from the sidelines, but they might take notice if the awards season is replaced by marches and pickets. - Sex! Drugs! (And Maybe a Little War)
Mike Nichols, Aaron Sorkin and Tom Hanks find dark humor in a congressman’s foreign adventure. - Vexing Questions of Jewish Identity
Jamie Kastner calls his documentary “Kike Like Me” a “black comic road movie about identity.” - ‘I Am Legend’ Has a Healthy Start
“I Am Legend” hauled in an estimated $76.5 million in its debut to capture first place in the weekend box-office rankings compiled by the tracking company Media by Numbers. - Sondheim Dismembers ‘Sweeney’
Theater buffs have been worried sick about what would happen to “Sweeney Todd” when it was remade as a film. Stephen Sondheim, who wrote the score, eagerly wielded the razor. - Kurdish Director, Stuck Between Iraq and Iran
Bahman Ghobadi, the international face of Kurdish cinema, works in countries that are less than accommodating. - Extreme Sports Vault Onto the Big Screen
Thousands of low-budget films of skating, skiing and surfing have become a world unto themselves. - The Clothes That Make the Man, and the Movie
In “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story,” fashion is the clock that helps the audience mark the time. - Independent Streak
The director talks about why his new movie is not for everyone, why making money no longer matters and what he’d like to be remembered for besides ‘‘The Godfather.’’ - The Epic in a Demitasse Cup
Why can't movies or wines be as easy to make as a good shot of espresso? - ‘Atonement’ Leads Field of Golden Globe Nominees
The love-and-war drama “Atonement” got seven nominations, and Denzel Washington also had a big day. - 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. - Movie Guide and Film Series
MOVIES. - 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. - Songs for a Brighter Tomorrow
Can singing change history? “The Singing Revolution,” a documentary by James Tusty and Maureen Castle Tusty about Estonia’s struggle to end Soviet occupation, shows that it already has. -