Tag: Woody Allen

  • The Time Has Come to Act: Stanley Tucci’s The Impostors

    The Time Has Come to Act: Stanley Tucci’s The Impostors

    I’m not blind to its shortcomings, but The Impostors is one of my most favorite movie comfort foods. That I find it so funny and purely enjoyable is really saying something, considering its milieu is the joblessness, desperation, and looming international conflict of The Great Depression. The pitch: a loving homage to old-school Hollywood screwball…

  • Woody Allen’s Match Point plays with your sympathies

    Woody Allen’s Match Point plays with your sympathies

    Woody Allen’s Match Point is fantastic. Brilliant. Morally complex. Almost unbearably intense. It plays with your sympathies in way I haven’t seen since Hitchcock’s Frenzy (which I personally found cruel and sadistic, unlike Match Point). Up there with Crimes & Misdemeanors among Allen’s best.

  • Manhattan

    Manhattan

    Amazingly, upon a second viewing I didn’t care for Woody Allen’s Manhattan nearly as much as I remembered. Perhaps its status in the canon has retroactively enhanced my opinion. But it still inspires as a big, fat, sloppy kiss to my city, and a poster of Woody & Diane beneath the Brooklyn Bridge hangs on…