Opening Today: Duplicity

March 20, 2009
Andrew Schwartz/Universal Pictures

Photo: Andrew Schwartz/Universal Pictures

The Times’s A.O. Scott has given it a glowing review:

However you describe it, “Duplicity” is superior entertainment, the most elegantly pleasurable movie of its kind to come around in a very long time. […]

[Writer/director Tony] Gilroy’s most ingenious structural gamble — the duplicity of “Duplicity” — is to make foreground and background almost perfectly reversible. It’s a sharp, sexy comedy masquerading as a twisty tale of intrigue, and vice versa. And as soon as you grow impatient with the pre- or postcoital repartee of Ms. Roberts and Mr. Owen, a nimble army of supporting players comes forward to deliver Mr. Gilroy’s mordantly funny dialogue with perfectly straight faces.

The song featured in the trailer is “The Bomb” by Bitter:Sweet.

Download: Bitter:Sweet – The Bomb

More: “Duplicity” at Rotten Tomatoes; Movie Review: Duplicity (NYT)

Also opening this week is “I Love You, Man” which although starring the adorable Paul Rudd, I have a total aversion to because it reeks of Judd Apatow-style garbage (even though it’s not connected to Apatow). Frankly, I’m really only mentioning it here so I can include Manohla Dargis’s description of Jason Segel: “a gentle belly swell, the suggestion of an A-cup.” Ouch.


Opening Today: Coraline

February 6, 2009

Focus Features

Focus Features

“Coraline” follows the title character as she seeks out an alternate world to soothe the loneliness she experiences in the real world, with strong parallels to “Alice In Wonderland” and “The Wizard Of Oz.”  The movie, which is based on an award-winning novel of the same name, is directed by Henry Selick, who also directed the “Nightmare Before Christmas” and apparently has a similar aesthetic.  I read a very flattering review from a less-trusted source yesterday and now A.O. Scott at the Times has posted a very positive review, ultimately marking it a Critics Pick:

“Mr. Selick, for his part, is so wantonly inventive and so psychologically astute that even Coraline’s dull domestic reality is tinted with enchantment”

And it’s in 3-D!

“Mr. Selick uses the [3-D] technology to make his world deeper and more intriguing.  […]  And what is there, on the screen, is almost too much to absorb in one sitting: costumed mice and Scottish terriers; glowing blossoms and giant insects.”

I’ve never seen a movie in 3-D and I think this may be the one to pop my cherry.  In an article published earlier this week, Selick spoke with the Times about working with the 3-D technology and his desire to not make it gimmicky; he ultimately describes it as “window-dressing.”

Here’s the trailer:

Related: New York Times Review; Rotten Tomatoes Meta-Reviews; Google Showtimes (Um, how do I find the 3-D theaters?!)