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Posts published in April 2014

“Boyhood”: A Literal Coming-of-Age

By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Richard Linklater’s “Boyhood” might be the most literal coming-of-age tale ever brought to film. The writer/director is known for his strikingly original stories that are philosophically and dialogue heavy (“Before Midnight” was nominated at the Oscars last year for its screenplay) – but…

“A Letter to Momo”: Three Naughty Goblins

By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Hiroyuki Okiura is a veteran in the animated film community. He and his team for his latest, “A Letter to Momo,” have a combined resume of work on hi-fidelity projects, from the ultra-violent “Akira,” to quirky “Cowboy Bebop: The Movie,” to Oscar-winning “Spirited…

“A Picture of You”: An Off-Beat Family Mystery

June 16, 2014 By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Jen (Jo Mei) and Kyle (Andrew Pang) are two predictably combative siblings, forced to be together after the death of their mother (Jodi Long, seen in flashbacks). They must clean out their old childhood home in rural Pennsylvania, essentially throwing…

“A Coffee in Berlin”: An Atypical Existential Film

June 6, 2014 By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor If a hypothetical Noah Baumbach joined Woody Allen on a train to Berlin, Germany, then met up with Jim Jarmusch to form a small gang, sip espresso and smoke cigarettes at the nearest cafe, the intellectual brainchild of the gathering…

Some Words with Livia De Paolis

By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Livia De Paolis co-wrote, directed, produced and acted in her feature film debut “Emoticon,” which first premiered at the Gen Art Film Festival in 2013, and currently has a limited theatrical release at Cinema Village in New York City. The film tells the…

“Ping Pong Summer”: A Nostalgic Vacation Film

June 9, 2014 By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor We’ve seen filmmakers from Quentin Tarantino to Sergio Leone build upon ideas from others. Asia is a gold mine for stories, like the classic Ronin or samurai flick, to be reshaped and stylized into something original. Wes Anderson, for example,…

Emoticon: Digital-Age Drama

By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Livia De Paulis abides by the DIY ethic. She not only stars in her debut feature, “Emoticon,” but she directed it, co-wrote it and produced it, too. This approach can have several results — the film can feel thin, since the creative core…

“The Infinite Man”: Revitalizing a Genre

By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Let’s face it: the time travel film genre has been exhausted. From indie flicks like the super-low budget “Primer” to good ole “Back to the Future” to the neo-noir “Looper” it seems like viewers have seen every variation imaginable. What could impress them?…

“Lucky Them”: A Distracted Film About Distracted People

By Pete Barell Arts and Entertainment Editor Ellie Klug (Toni Collette) is a music critic who can’t seem to critique and correct her own life. Even though she’s in her forties, she indulges in bad-boy musicians, and seems to live off the instant gratification of her sexual encounters, all of…