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Latest Articles
Errol Morris's magnificent obsessions
Mr. Natural
The tops of the side tables in Errol Morris's office are entirely obscured by books, among them Remembering Satan: A Tragic Case of Recovered Memory ; The Education of T.C. Mits: What Modern Mathematics Means to You ; French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan's Écrits , and an anthology of Weekly World News stories.
By
EUGENIA WILLIAMSON
| July 13, 2011
Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Morgan Spurlock's new "docbuster"
Morgan Spurlock ( Super Size Me ) is at it again.
By
BRETT MICHEL
| April 19, 2011
Odd meter
Practical Advice for Political Nutjobs
It's time for that popular feature, Practical Advice for Political Nutjobs, the column that's been proven by complicated scientific-type testing to help weirdos avoid public humiliation. It also saves them money because they never again need to line their hats with pricey aluminum foil.
By
AL DIAMON
| March 16, 2011
War on the average Joe
Press releases
Right now, Maine can afford to pay its state employees' pensions for the next 10 years with no additional investment — without any sort of supplement, not even workers' biweekly paycheck deductions.
By
JEFF INGLIS
| March 09, 2011
Review: Casino Jack and the United States of Money (2010)
The globe-trotting misdeeds of Jack Abramoff
Alex Gibney has a gift for turning stories of corruption so thick they're nearly impenetrable into simple tales of unfettered greed and malfeasance.
By
CHRISTOPHER GRAY
| June 24, 2010
Documentary Man
An interview with Frederick Wiseman
If you think the polemic salvos Michael Moore churns out define the modern documentary, you've either succumbed to Moore's manipulative shenanigans or are unfamiliar with the works of Frederick Wiseman. No disrespect to the Roger & Me director, he is what he is — a man with a camera and a handful of pixie dust.
By
TOM MEEK
| December 09, 2009
Review: Oh My God
Ringo Starr, authority on religion
If Michael Moore can bring in Wallace Shawn as an economics expert, I guess director Peter Rodger can enlist Ringo Starr as an authority on religion in his worldwide search for an answer to the question “Who is God?”
By
PETER KEOUGH
| November 25, 2009
Review: American Casino
Putting a face on figures
If you’re still curious about what derivatives are after seeing Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story , Andrew and Leslie Cockburn’s drier, more in-depth examination of the meltdown and bailout might help.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| October 30, 2009
Review: The Yes Men Fix The World
Anti-capitalism hoaxes occasionally misfire
Is capitalism on the ropes, or what ?
By
LANCE GOULD
| October 21, 2009
Review: Capitalism: A Love Story
Moore of the same: Capitalism fails to make a prophet
In his new film about the Wall Street meltdown, Michael Moore — surprise! — denounces capitalism and its exploitation of the working class. Not that he's above doing a little exploiting himself.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| September 29, 2009
By
| January 01, 0001
Freedom isn’t free
Press Releases
Campaign-finance reformers often object to the idea that money equals speech. But even for progressives, it does indeed.
By
JEFF INGLIS
| September 23, 2009
October lite
The outlook is still gloomy, but film finds time for childish things
We expected the vampires, the werewolves, the zombies, and the homicidal maniacs. Same thing with the android doubles, the alien abductors, the sexually abused pregnant teenager, the Apocalypse, and the post-Apocalypse. But kids' movies?
By
PETER KEOUGH
| September 17, 2009
Factory food
Why the cheap, mass-produced food we eat is killing our environment, our economy — and us
Since Squanto taught the Pilgrims to plant maize, no food has been more emblematic of the evolution of American eating habits than corn. That's been true from the sepia-tinged golden age of the Midwestern breadbasket to the present day, where those yellow kernels are lab-engineered and recombinated into a dizzying array of futuristic foodstuffs.
By
MIKE MILIARD
| June 25, 2009
By
| January 01, 0001
An American Carol
A dissent-bashing tale
A Michael Moore–esque documentarian changes his stars and stripes after trying to abolish the Fourth of July.
By
BETSY SHERMAN
| October 09, 2008
Religulous
Unabashedly agnostic and skeptical
He’s as cocky and smarmy as Michael Moore, but somehow Bill Maher is also more endearing and credible, as he prances about the globe making jest of sanctimonious true believers.
By
GERALD PEARY
| October 02, 2008
Troop surge
Mercenaries 2 does it the old-fashioned way
It’s tempting to write off Mercenaries 2: World in Flames , if only because of the noisy ads — they’re scored by an annoying white-boy rap song.
By
AARON SOLOMON
| September 16, 2008
Trouble the Water
A raw and emotional look at Hurricane Katrina
The direct, artless footage conjures a real-world Cloverfield , except with people who are resourceful and worth caring about.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| September 11, 2008
Believe it or not
Interview: Guy Maddin tells the truth
Even the titles of his films are a little weird.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| July 08, 2008
Springtime for Darwin
The wars of evolution are louder than ever. What Ben Stein, Bad Religion, and a physics professor from Quincy can tell you about where you came from.
There are two stories, and two stories only.
By
JAMES PARKER
| May 07, 2008
Kernel-industrial complex
Examining a landscape where crops only feed food
Aaron Woolf’s documentary King Corn, which opens the weekend of conversations about local farming and sustainable consumption, is a sound prototype for the new wave of populist eco-docs.
By
CHRISTOPHER GRAY
| April 23, 2008
Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?
Nobody knows
Last time we saw documentarian Morgan Spurlock, he was downing McDonald’s fries in Supersize Me.
By
TOM MEEK
| April 16, 2008
The medium is the movie
In new films, truth is fluid — and controlled by the click of a button
In almost every movie you go to these days you’ll see another screen — a television, a computer, even another movie screen — within the screen you’re watching.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| March 05, 2008
Courting dissent
Interview: Brett Morgen defends his Chicago 10
One of the great principles of American jurisprudence, though not necessarily of film criticism, is a defendant’s right to confront his accuser in a court of law.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| February 27, 2008
Casting ballots
The Human Rights Watch Film Festival on the campaign trail
Some believe democracy can save the world. Others wonder whether it can even work in America.
By
PETER KEOUGH
| January 08, 2008
The amazing race
We break down the Presidential campaign to its six essential parts, and predict your next Commander-in-Chief.
For the past year, presidential politics has been building to the crescendo that is the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary.
By
DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
| December 26, 2007
On the national affront
An inescapable year reaches its inevitable conclusion
Where does one begin to recap 12 months of such willful self-parody?
By
BARRY CRIMMINS
| December 19, 2007
Listen up
Providence national pop + jazz picks: 2007 in review
It’s the first year a long time where I truly felt like I didn’t listen to enough music.
By
JIM MACNIE
| December 18, 2007
Open city
The 2007 Toronto Film Festival
In the pioneering early-’80s days of the Toronto Film Festival, the audience actually rose before movie showings for a canned recording of “God Save the Queen.”
By
GERALD PEARY
| September 18, 2007
view all
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02/16
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Chamberlin + Tan Vampires + Worried Well
@ Empire Dine And Dance
[
02/16
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"Guyland: the Perilous World Where Boys Become Men"
@ Bowdoin College
[
02/16
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Mary Halvorson + Chris Weisman
@ Buoy Gallery
BLOGS
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About Town
| February 16, 2012 at 9:48 AM
Romney-Paul caucus brouhaha continues
February 14, 2012 at 10:14 AM
Chris Brown reactions: NOT OKAY!
February 13, 2012 at 10:28 AM
Here's my question:
February 06, 2012 at 11:39 AM
On the burning of an American flag at #OccupyMaine this morning
February 06, 2012 at 9:05 AM
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