Geraldine Chaplin, Star of Nashville, Remembers Robert Altman

This weekend at the Coral Gables Art Cinema, there was a double feature of films starring silver screen legend, Geraldine Chaplin. On Saturday, David Lean’s Doctor Zhivago screened for its 50th anniversary, and on Sunday, it was Robert Altman’s turn. His beloved Nashville played to a nearly-full house, 40 years…

The Five Most Dramatic Telenovelas Filmed in Miami

Miami has been the fictional home of some of television’s most iconic television shows: The Golden Girls, Crockett and Tubbs, and Dexter all lived in the Magic City. But if those are the only shows you can think of, then you’re missing an entire genre of amazing television filmed in…

Miami Filmmaker Kenny Riches on His Selection to Sundance

When Miami-based filmmaker Kenny Riches got the call from the Sundance Film Festival, he could barely hide his excitement from close friend Robert “Meatball” Lorie. Riches’ film, The Strongest Man, had been accepted and Lorie was the film’s lead. They were both working on building the VIP section at Design…

If Mortdecai Had a Time Machine, It Could Be 1965’s Top Comedy

Mortdecai is creeping into theaters with the flushed shame of a debutante who expects to be pelted with tomatoes. It’s a pity. In 1965, Mortdecai would be the hit of the year. Director David Koepp whips through this pop-colored caper about crooked art dealer Charlie Mortdecai (Johnny Depp) — one…

Films to Check Out at the Miami Jewish Film Festival 2015

We’ve already written about our excitement over the films at the Miami Jewish Film Festival and interviewed festival director Igor Shteyrenberg, but we haven’t had a chance to talk about what we’re looking forward to, as well as what we’ve checked out and loved. With MJFF already underway, it’s about…

Jennifer Lopez’s The Boy Next Door Is as Nuts as You Hope It Is

The most pleasurably ludicrous highlight of The Boy Next Door comes a half-hour in, before the sex and murders and something-is-in-the-mirror-behind-her! jolts that stud the film like Flavor Crystals. The high-school English teacher played by Jennifer Lopez is dazzled by a gift from the handsome student (Ryan Guzman) who has…

Pacino Stares Down the End in The Humbling

There’s something bracingly honest about The Humbling, Barry Levinson’s movie about a 67-year-old Shakespearean actor, played by Al Pacino, who, after being struck with crippling anxiety, gets his mojo restored — some of it, anyway — by a manipulative muse (Greta Gerwig). Based on the 2009 Philip Roth novel of…

Jennifer Aniston Grieves, but Cake‘s Script Lets Her Down

Each year, screenwriters kill off enough offscreen children to fill a Chuck E. Cheese’s. A dead son or daughter gives a movie the illusion of depth plus an easy explanation for whatever the script ladles on the surviving parents. Binge-drinking? Nymphomania? Sudden bouts of break dancing? Blame the wee coffin…

The 20 Best Television Shows Returning in 2015

Can’t keep track of when all your favorite shows return this year? You’ve come to the right place. Chances are now that the holiday season is over, and every station is done playing Home Alone 2 on a loop, your must watch show is nearing a return. Whether it be…

World 1-1 Filmmakers on Their Atari Documentary at Cosford

It’s been over a year since Jeanette Garcia and Daryl Rodriguez created the Kickstarter for their documentary, World 1-1, and recently the filmmakers presented their film to a delighted audience at the Cosford Cinema here at Miami. It’s been months since their premiere in San Francisco at the Roxie Theater,…

American Sniper Is a Rah-Rah War on Terror Fantasy

In Clint Eastwood’s American Sniper, Navy SEAL Chris Kyle (Bradley Cooper) — an astoundingly talented marksman credited with more than 160 confirmed kills in Iraq — runs into a fellow veteran at a mechanic’s shop between deployments. The soldier shows Kyle an artificial leg and thanks him for saving his…

Comedy Appropriate Behavior Is Dirty, Hilarious, and Moving

Forget its generic title, its breakup setup, and its indie-standard Brooklyn walk-and-talks: Writer/director Desiree Akhavan’s Appropriate Behavior is the freshest comedy of life and love in the city since Obvious Child. Hilarious and heartbroken, Akhavan stars as Shirin, a bisexual Iranian-American video artist just bounced from her lover’s Gowanus apartment…