TRAFFIC Criterion Collection, $39.95 IF THE FIRST feature you access on this second DVD of 2000’s acclaimed drug war drama…
Real life and movie fantasies blur together in 1969 Paris.
Pee-Wee seeks bike, Mary Pickford versus alligators, and a Sideways-themed wine tasting at the Grand Illusion.
Like the current French shocker Irr鶥rsible, Sam Peckinpah’s 1971 shocker turns on an ugly rape that leads to even uglier…
Robin Williams goes to heaven, while the movie goes straight to hell.
Opens at Crest, Fri., April 14. Not rated. 140 minutes.
Guy Ritchie’s newest romps gaily through the ’90s.
Hoops star is turned against his one true love.
Send listings two weeks in advance to film@seattleweekly.com Abbott & Costello Double Feature The 1941 war comedy Buck Privates represents…
Wonk saves the world via PalmPilot and e-mail.
Gay cowboys, a giant monkey, killer bears, abandoned Japanese kids, and a 40-year-old who can’t get laid. So much for politics at the movies this year.
Watching this movie is something like staring at a stuffed ashtray the morning after a bad party.
ONE QUESTION LOOMS. What will she wear? Adorable Alicia Silverstone, on hand to attend the American premiere of Kenneth Branagh’s…
How a controversial filmmaker achieved a state of grace.
Opens at Metro and others, Fri., April 7. Rated PG-13. 108 minutes.
USUALLY THE PATTERN with an only moderately successful animated film sub-Shrek, sayis for the studio to wait a year, then…
Determined not to cause any historical offense, Ridley Scott creates bland bloodshed in the Holy Land—and a hero to suit.
Opens Fri., Feb. 17, at Guild 45
Transcendence remains one big score away.
Lots of local, low-tech movies.