“The bickering, plotting, and attempted murder in which the characters engage are staples of the rom-com canon, from Shakespeare to Cary Grant. But like the best works of its genre, beneath the pulpy, vapid titillation afforded by a focus on the timeless lust for sex and money, Intolerable Cruelty has a bite to it.”
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“Chalamet is perfect for this parable, because to some extent he’s playing himself. Alongside the familiar ‘space fascist, ‘space peasant’, and ‘space emperor’ archetypes, T-Chala puts the ‘space softboi’ in the pantheon of sci-fi archetypes.”
Read More“The rich, detailed array of characters in Jerry Maguire really serves to highlight one thing, or rather one person. As the opening sequence neatly demonstrates, the utter insignificance of one man in the vast, unknowable world translates into his total significance in his own head.”
Read More“With its simple plot and ‘normal’ characters, the film is driven by its use of negative space and psychological threats, most obviously in the unrelenting, invisible, unknowable entity. The fear of the unknown, and more importantly the question of whether the threat is real at all, is driven home by plot elements which should be mundane rather than supernatural: the central element of sex, the Detroit setting, anachronistic household items.”
Read More“How does a film which opens with the protagonist putting a dog in a trash compactor and then racially harassing a neighbor turn into a romcom with an 85% on Rotten Tomatoes? Jack Nicholson. That's how.”
Read More“The inherent contradiction at the heart of the Piaf in the film- a vulnerable, charismatic, childlike mirage of personas- renders her as unknowable to herself as to her audiences.”
Read More"The third John Wick installment proved that the franchise knows its formula and knows how to develop it- expertly amping up the three key elements of violence, visuals, and, er, dogs."
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