When the sun is in Sagittarius, expect to feel a need to honestly express yourself, to travel, and to learn. Depending on where Sagittarius is in your chart, you may either feel inspired intellectually and spiritually or become impatient with others and find yourself paying the price for a blunt “foot-in-mouth” comment.
Don't miss the national broadcast premiere of Sisters in Law, a captivating and often humorous documentary film about two brave women dispensing justice in Cameroon. Sisters in Law will air on the Emmy-Award winning PBS series, Independent Lens, November 27 at 10 pm on most PBS stations.
This book rests in your hand with a comfort and ease that makes it one that cannot be put down until finished. Though it is literally small in shape, McEwan’s literary talent is large in capacity. His plot is tight, and his technique is so riveting that it is difficult to review this title without giving away the juicy parts. Really, you will read the book faster than I can write this review.
Joel and Ethan Coen’s "No Country for Old Men" will be the centerpiece of this year's festival. Based on the novel by Pulitzer Prize-winner Cormac McCarthy and adapted by the Coens, the film is a thriller starring Tommy Lee Jones, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Woody Harrelson, and Kelly MacDonald.
Director Matthew Vaughn brings off color humor and originality to the fairy tale/love story “Stardust.” Having worked on the English gangster movies “Layer Cake,” “Snatch,” and one of my personal favorites, “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,” Vaughn is able to mix a sinister brew with some peppery English wit to make this a very entertaining film.
Even if you don’t have kids, go see “Ratatouille,” the latest animated film from Pixar. Totally entertaining and visually transporting, this movie is a winning combination of fantastic writing and flawless animation. If you do have kids, take them, and all of you will be transfixed.
Malalai Joya is the 29-year-old subject of the Women Make Movies new release, ENEMIES OF HAPPINESS, by Eva Mulvad and Anja Al-Erhayem. Winner of the Sundance World Cinema Documentary Jury Prize, the film follows this outspoken women's rights activist during the final weeks of her campaign for a seat in the newly-formed parliament in Afghanistan.
In it's attempt to create a version of Alfred Hitchcock's brilliant film, "Rear Window," for adolescents, "Disturbia" loses it's momentum by not building suspense the way that a well-crafted movie of this genre should.
Produced in 1990 with assistance from George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, Akira Kurasawa’s eight sequences in "Dreams" are a landmark film achievement. One of my all time favorite film moments, the “Crows” segment, indulges an art enthusiast’s fantasy of stepping inside a Vincent Van Gogh painting and experiencing Van Gogh’s spiritual vision of nature, first hand.
The 14th New York African Film Festival is being held at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City April 4 - 12. This year the festival celebrates the 50th anniversary of the independence of Ghana. Located in sub-Saharan West Africa, Ghana was the first country in that region to gain independence from colonial rule.
In this phenomenal Spanish film, the bookish young stepdaughter of a sadistic army general escapes into an eerie but captivating fantasy world. Beautiful in its imagery and horrifying in its brutality, Oscar nominated “Pan’s Labyrinth” merges the mythic underworld of fairy tales with the reality of Spain’s descent into fascism after the Spanish Civil War.