In the latest installment of Filminism, Kelly Stitzel discusses female characters from the films of one of her favorite filmmakers, David Lynch..
Film
As Outland turns 30, Jeff Johnson reflects on seeing the film opening day with his dad.
Rob Smith Can’t Say No to the surreal pop brilliance of a little yellow alien named Gustafer Yellowgold.
A new documentary chronicles the career of the legendary 80s punk-pop band, The Replacements.
Sara reveals how she’s managed to kill multiple celebrities and shows Walter the alternate version of Look of the Week she’s been ordered to make for her employers (is this…
Tron and
It takes a real man to transform from a pop star into an action hero, but Luke Goss has done it. Good for him! (We still asked him about being in Bros, though.)
Robin Wright may be The Conspirator in Robert Redford’s Lincoln assassination film, as Michelle Williams goes west in Meek’s Cutoff.
“The Virginity Hit” is a sleeper waiting to be discovered by more people than the “Superbad” audience to whom the film is being marketed.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 1 (Warner Bros., 2010) After six films and billions of dollars in box office grosses, this is the end — or the…
As John Boorman’s Excalibur turns 30 this week, Jeff Johnson reflects on the definitive version of the King Arthur legend.
Bob Cashill takes a look at some of the less familiar chapters from a storied career.
The patented naturalism and awkwardness of Look of the Week extend to Sara’s uncut junket visit with with Joe Wright and Saoirse Ronan (HANNA). Meanwhile, back in the studio, our…
Join Kelly Stitzel as she explores the many facets of women in film in her new monthly column. This month, inspired by the HBO mini-series Mildred Pierce, she discusses some of her favorite daughters in film.
No fooling — Insidious, from the makers of Saw, gets things bumping in the night. Plus, Hilary Swank is The Resident, and the phantasmagorical Santa Sangre, both on DVD.
A mystery landed on the Popdose doorstep: the treatment for Jennifer Aniston’s upcoming “Fooling April” — The horror, the horror.
The powerhouse combination of Naomi Watts, Sean Penn and director Doug Liman make “Fair Game”one of the best films of last year, and also one of the most overlooked.
Is Disney’s take on Rapunzel a bad hair day for the studio? Bob Cashill takes his scissors to it.
Even the best film composers have had their share of rejected scores. This week’s Revival House examines seven great ones.
Sara describes the pragmatic overtones of this episode as “more denim than taffeta,” which is only natural as the Letter to an Unknown Director recipient is tough guy Nicholas Ray.
Even in a year in which unemployment in America hovered above nine percent, Americans pulled it together enough to bring the top ten films at the box office to a…
Prostitutes! Excessive partying! Jessica Tandy! These are a few of Charlie Sheen’s favorite things, and they all make cameos in this week’s Box Office Flashback to March 28, 1990.
London’s hottest show is now playing at a movie theater near you. And a former bride of Frankenstein stars in The Tourist, now on Blu-ray.
Join Kelly Stitzel as she dips her Converse-clad toes into the rad waters of ’80s skateboarding movies with Thrashin’.
One year after his death, a group of George Harrison’s friends got together to pay tribute to him. The stunning film of that event is now available on Blu-ray.
Stanford University’s David Giovacchini and Veronika Ferdman of Slant Magazine join host Sara Vizcarrondo in the studio for a highly informed, personal, self-swallowing discussion of CERTIFIED COPY, while Walter von…
Yippie-ki-yay! Scott Malchus looks back at “Die Hard” in this week’s Basement Songs.
In anticipation of the release of Paul, Popdose looks at the work of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost.
