Mia Wasikowska

An Agreeably Plain Jane Eyre

The latest movie adaptation of Jane Eyre is slowly rolling out nationally via art-house theaters, but the plot of Charlotte Brontë's three-volume novel remains wonderfully commercial. The spookily pale Mia Wasikowska (Alice in Wonderland) plays the poor but plucky governess, while Michael ...

Rango: Johnny Depp’s Peyote Western

The audience laughed hyperactively throughout the trailers for upcoming animated blockbusters. "€œDo talking-animal movies always have extra-long previews?"€ my wife asked. "€œYou can never have too many fart jokes,"€ I explained. Then Rango started, with Johnny Depp voicing an actor ...

Sir Tom Stoppard

Tom Stoppard: Baffling the Innocent Since 1966

Tom Stoppard's remarkable career stands as a puzzling rebuke to cynicism about show biz. Sure, audience-pandering, trend-surfing, and propagandizing can explain the vast majority of what the entertainment industry sets before us. Then how can we account for Stoppard's endless success? Sir Tom has ...

Unknown: Liam Neeson’s Descent From Alpha to Beta

Orson Welles once explained that he was, inevitably, what the Comédie-Française called a King Actor. "€œThey weren"€™t necessarily the best actors; they were the actors who played the king."€ Welles had to be cast as the highest authority character "€œor I discombobulate the ...

Keira Knightley

Never Let Me Go: Tea Time for Organ Harvesters

Although the movie industry is always accused of philistinism, filmmakers are often suckers for prestige novels. Richard Grenier, Commentary's renegade movie reviewer in the 1980s, pointed out a common type of bad classy movie: the credulous adaptation that inadvertently exposes a polished prose ...

Bedtime for Bonzo’s Behaviorist Bent

To celebrate Ronald Reagan's 100th birthday, I watched his most derided movie, Bedtime for Bonzo. We"€™ve been hearing wisecracks about it for generations, so it has to be an embarrassment, right? Bedtime for Bonzo turns out instead to be a small but nifty family comedy that was a deserved hit ...

Winter’s Bone: Blood in the Ozarks

Winter's Bone, an arthouse detective drama now out on DVD, is the Scots-Irish hillbilly equivalent of all those fine recent movies about the Irish Catholic Massachusetts underclass such as The Fighter and The Town (which Winter's Bone edged out for a Best Picture Oscar nomination). It's splendidly ...

Ed Harris and Colin Farrell in <i>The Way Back</i>

The Way Back: Hollywood Discovers the Gulags

To be Oscar-eligible, a movie had to have played for one week last year in Southern California. Last Christmas, I had looked forward to heading down to the ArcLight on Sunset Boulevard to a see The Way Back, a modest epic about an escape from a 1940s concentration camp. It's the first film since ...

Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling

Blue Valentine and the Decline of Men

Blue Valentine, a superbly acted indie drama about a middle-class nurse falling out of love with her working-class house-painter husband, is both a timeless look at how sexual attraction actually works and an increasingly timely depiction of male-female troubles. Since director Derek Cianfrance ...

A Miserable Slog Called Biutiful

Who's the leading leading man these days? Having sat through all 147 dolorous minutes of Biutiful, Alejandro González Iñárritu's follow-up to 2006's Babel (a pretentious clunker gifted with seven Oscar nominations), I"€™ll nominate Javier Bardem. The Spaniard won"€™t win Best Actor ...