Denver Film Festival Advance Ticket Packages Now on Sale

Discount advance ticket packages are now on sale for the 39th Denver Film Festival, offering select blocks of tickets for the festival that will run from November 2 through November 13. And the Denver Film Society, which has produced the festival since its start forty years ago, has revamped its…

Eight Movies to See in Denver Right Now

It was a wild week in film releases. We reviewed John Krasinski’s Sundance favorite (which won’t break the dysfunctional family arc), found the final installment in the Bridget Jones saga, Bridget Jones’s Baby, to be a pleasant surprise, and an got spooked with an eerie Polish possession in Demon.  Here are the eight best…

Have Superheroes Killed the Movie Star?

Looking back at this dismal summer of superhero adaptations, I am reminded of something Chris Rock said during the 77th Academy Awards: “There are only four real stars, and the rest are just popular people.” This was February 2005, mind you — a few months before Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins…

Donald Glover’s Atlanta Is a Slice-of-Life that Slices Back

To show all that he can do, to show something of what life’s actually like, Donald Glover first has to break your heart. Glover – the star, creator, and often writer of FX’s tense, downwardly mobile hangout comedy Atlanta – is best known, still, as a handsome clown on NBC’s Community, Dan…

Bridget Jones Presses on Into Adulthood – and Her Best Film Yet

Bridget Jones mines the riches of embarrassment. Her gaffes, blunders, stumbles and pratfalls provide the laughs in the atypical romcoms built around her, films that rely heavily on the comedy of idiosyncrasy. Bridget is no outsider: She’s a straight, white, middle class, university-educated woman with a London apartment, a media…

Jerry Lewis Soldiers Through the Mawkish Drama Max Rose

Still and silent, Jerry Lewis slumps there like old furniture in the lifeless house in which the first half of Daniel Noah’s coming-of-old-age drama Max Rose molders. The film is a fiction, a tidy and improbable one, but these scenes have documentary power. Lewis’ Max Rose, recently bereaved, sits and…

Demon’s Director Committed Suicide. Now a Wife/Producer Perseveres

What happens when a director takes his own life before he’s able to see his work open in theaters? In the case of Marcin Wrona and Demon, his mesmerizing Polish art-horror film, Olga Szymanska, Wrona’s producing partner and wife, has pressed on. She has traveled with the film, watching the…