Right, the Austin Powers song. Sorry, I'm gonna stick to thinking of it as the Quincy Jones song.
Friday, February 28, 2025
Thursday, February 27, 2025
'Press Play With Madeleine Brand': 'Last Breath,' 'My Dead Friend Zoe' and 'The Accidental Getaway Driver'
Katie Walsh and I were on KCRW today to discuss this weekend's new movies with guest host Brian Hardzinski. We tacked the deep-sea diving drama Last Breath, the melancholy comedy My Dead Friend Zoe, the woeful thriller Cold Wallet and the atmospheric true-life tale The Accidental Getaway Driver. Check it all out down below.
Gene Hackman's Finest Films
I was flattered to be asked to help contribute to this Rolling Stone piece that provides a primer on Gene Hackman's best performances. These 20 films constitute a hall-of-fame career.
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
'Last Breath' Review
Oscar weekend tends to be a pretty slow one in terms of new releases. But I can recommend Last Breath, a true-life survival thriller about three deep-sea divers in the North Sea who face a life-or-death crisis. Read all about it over at Screen International.
The Films That Got Overlooked This Oscar Season
This year's Oscar nominees are fairly decent, but I'd like to take a moment to recognize 10 superb films we won't hear mentioned at all during Sunday's telecast. The voters forgot about these movies, but I have not.
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
The Grierson & Leitch Podcast: 'The Monkey,' Sly Stone and Our Oscar Predictions
On this week's episode, we shake our heads at The Monkey and groove to Sly Lives! But then, we take our time offering our predictions in the eight major Oscar categories. Worth noting: We recorded just as the SAG Awards were getting underway Sunday night, so a few of the surprise winners hadn't happened yet. Still, I think I was fairly hesitant in my picks, knowing that several of the categories remain fairly wide open. Check out our conversation down below.
Labels:
documentaries,
movie reviews,
music,
oscars,
osgood perkins,
podcast,
questlove,
stephen king
Friday, February 21, 2025
Lauryn Hill - "Lost Ones"
I'll always prefer The Score to The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. But this track slays.
Thursday, February 20, 2025
'The Annihilation of Fish' Review
In 1999, Charles Burnett's film The Annihilation of Fish premiered in Toronto. A very mixed reaction from critics doomed the movie. Now, at long last, the film is finally coming out into the world. For the Los Angeles Times, I reviewed this delicate, long-lost love story.
The Grierson & Leitch Podcast: Captain America, Paddington and Bridget Jones Return
On this week's episode, we review new movies from franchises trying to sustain their cultural cachet: Captain America: Brave New World, Paddington in Peru and Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy. I only liked one of the three. You can hear our discussion down below.
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
My LAFCA Awards Presentation for Jomo Fray, Cinematographer of 'Nickel Boys'
The devastating Los Angeles fires in January forced the postponement of this year's Los Angeles Film Critics Association awards dinner. But on February 6th, the show went on, resulting in an evening that was a little more subdued but, nonetheless, still rather joyous. It was my honor to present our award for Best Cinematography, which deservedly went to the year's best film. Here were my remarks from the stage:
Few cinematographers today are more exciting than Jomo Fray. He has shot some of the most distinctive feature debuts in recent memory, including Selah and the Spades and All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt. His images are tactile, lived-in — they stun without feeling showy. His camerawork, which is often centered on Black narratives, has the grace of a poem.I was so glad to have Jomo Fray there. I hadn't met him, and he was, unsurprisingly, terrific. (Also, everybody loved his outfit.) All of our winners can be found here. This photo was taken by Shiloh Strong.
Tonight, we celebrate his crucial contribution to Nickel Boys, deservedly praised for its audacious use of first-person POV. Working alongside first-time feature director RaMell Ross, Fray had to determine precisely how the film’s teenage characters would take in their world, shooting on locations that often had to be 360-degree environments, with a nimble camera meant to replicate Elwood and Turner’s sentient perspective. From a craft standpoint, Nickel Boys was an enormous undertaking.
But anyone moved beyond words by this film doesn’t talk about aspect ratios or SnorriCam rigs. Instead, we marvel at myriad indelible shots that feel like childhood memories. Nickel Boys is full of pain and sorrow, but there’s also an incredible innocence to it — we don’t just see the film from Elwood and Turner’s perspective, we reconnect with the spirit of being young, back when our impressionable eyes were hungrily absorbing everything around us. Fray’s camera is attuned to these terrors and joys. We practically smell the stench of the so-called White House, where the Black students of Nickel are beaten. But we also delight at the sight of an adorable girl smiling under our seat on a bus.
The film invites us to experience it all in this most extraordinary of coming-of-age dramas, to bear witness to a country’s history of racism and cruelty — a history that remains so very present. Nickel Boys is an act of love and an act of defiance. And Jomo Fray makes sure we never look away.
Please join me in congratulating our winner for Best Cinematography, Jomo Fray.
Labels:
best of 2024,
cinematographers,
essays,
lafca,
nickel boys
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
Screen International: My Screen Life
Screen International runs a regular feature in its print edition called "My Screen Life," in which the publication's editors, critics and reporters discuss the films and moments that shaped them. My turn was up recently, so I talked about 2001, George Clooney and Cannes. Check it out here.
My Interview With George Wallace
He's been doing stand-up for nearly 50 years. His best friend is Jerry Seinfeld. (Back in the day, they used to be roommates.) And now he has a Prime Video show with Laverne Cox called Clean Slate. For Cracked, I had a long conversation with the legend about everything: comedy, Donald Trump, Johnny Carson, Twitter, Sanford and Son, growing up in the church, my bookcases, you name it. Hope you enjoy.
Labels:
comedians,
cracked,
interviews,
jerry seinfeld,
stand-up,
tv
Monday, February 17, 2025
Berlin 2025: 'Magic Farm' Review
I quite liked Amalia Ulman's first film, El Planeta. Her new movie, Magic Farm, got a chilly reception at Sundance, but I think it works. For Screen International, I made the case for this rambunctious, politically pointed comedy, which is now playing Berlin.
Labels:
berlin,
film festivals,
movie reviews,
screen international,
sundance
'Cleaner' Review
Eventually, every movie star gets his or her Die Hard. For Daisy Ridley, that movie is Cleaner, which I reviewed for Screen International.
Labels:
clive owen,
daisy ridley,
movie reviews,
screen international
Saturday, February 15, 2025
Berlin 2025: 'Mickey 17' Review
I'm not in Berlin, but for Screen International I reviewed one of the festival's high-profile premieres. Here are my thoughts on Bong Joon Ho's latest.
Friday, February 14, 2025
P.M. Dawn - "I'll Be Waiting for You"
Gone but not forgotten, P.M. Dawn was one of the 1990s' best hip-hop groups. My favorite album of theirs was their 1995 record, Jesus Wept, which wasn't as big as their first two discs. No matter: All these years later, I still find its mixture of the spiritual and the romantic to be fairly overwhelming.
Thursday, February 13, 2025
How Does Neon Put Together Its Cool DVD Box Set Every Year?
This was a treat. For the Los Angeles Times, I talked to the people at Neon who design the company's annual for-your-consideration DVD box set of its films. This collection has quickly become the one item each year critics love to brag about receiving. You can read what I learned here.
'The Monkey' Review
I really liked Longlegs. But Osgood Perkins' follow-up left me cold, in large part because it's more of a dark comedy. I explain my reservations with The Monkey here.
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
RaMell Ross Breaks Down the Secrets of the 'Nickel Boys' Screenplay
I feel very fortunate this awards season to have gotten to spend some time with RaMell Ross. I've already profiled him for the Los Angeles Times, and I've also moderated a few Q&As with him. Today, I'm happy to unveil this new L.A. Times piece, in which he and I focus on Nickel Boys' screenplay, breaking down three crucial scenes and discussing how they evolved from the script to the screen. I was especially pleased that Ross shared a few secrets about these scenes which, I don't think, have been talked about anywhere else. Check out the piece here.
Labels:
directors,
interviews,
los angeles times,
nickel boys,
oscars,
ramell ross,
writers
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)