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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
El cantante
Cookie-cutter bombast
By
BETSY SHERMAN
|
August 1, 2007
EL CANTANTE
2.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
El cantante
.
Until the upcoming satire
Walk Hard
blows the musical-bio-pic genre into tatters, we’ll have to put up with cookie-cutter bombast like
El cantante
, a warts-and-all tribute to salsa star Hector Lavoe (Marc Anthony), the Puerto Rican singer who ignited New York’s Latin-music boom of the ’70s and ’80s, became addicted to heroin, and died from AIDS. Puchi (Jennifer Lopez, Anthony’s real-life spouse), Lavoe’s wife and a combative firecracker, tells the couple’s story, which fluctuates from the joy of Hector’s music to the misery caused by his inability to cope with responsibility. Her voiceover often states the obvious, and director Leon Ichaso uses that edgy-gritty-ugly DV style that really isn’t edgy anymore. But as an actor and a singer, Anthony excels. Unlike Lopez, he digs beneath the soap-opera dialogue and bares his character’s soul.
Related
:
The Yacoubian Building
,
La Mujer de mi Hermano
,
Where everything is meant to be seen
,
More
The Yacoubian Building
A massive Arabic soap opera, a Cairo-based Gone with the Wind.
La Mujer de mi Hermano
This silly would-be soap opera directed by Ricardo de Montreuil takes a steamy premise and drains all the fun out of it.
Where everything is meant to be seen
So I’ve been reading Introducing Baudrillard (Verso).
Marketing magic
When you dial the Disney Channel headquarters in Burbank and ask to be transferred, the operator will cheerily instruct you to have a “magical day.”
Taking the B-boys to School
You may have noticed, hip-hop dance has gone legit — or at least slightly commercial.
Where’s Lindsay?
Dina Lohan and her 14-year-old daughter, Ali, made the rounds on the talk-show circuit last week to promote their new reality series, Living Lohan .
Blue (-Eyed) Devils?
Once the sensational Duke University rape case — with its irresistible brew of race, class, and sex — triggered the predictable media circus, an equally predictable chorus of earnest-sounding criticism began to roll in.
Splendid Theory
Producer extraordinaire Nigel Godrich’s new Internet TV show, From the Basement, is splendid in theory.
Phantom of the Oprah
Letters to the Boston editor: February 24, 2006
Get it while you can
A couple of months ago, a man with the screen name x-amount logged on to Recidivism.org , the blog he maintains with a few of his friends, and made a pronouncement.
Tilda Swinton's mixed metamorphoses
Most people know Tilda Swinton either from her role as the White Witch in the Narnia movies or as the striking-looking woman who in her speech accepting the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance in Michael Clayton said she was going to give the trophy to her agent. Or perhaps as the actress whom Conan O'Brian said he would like to portray him if there's ever an HBO movie made about his life.
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ARTICLES BY BETSY SHERMAN
REVIEW: THE THREE STOOGES
| April 23, 2012
The Farrelly Brothers' Three Stooges pastiche, while not poifect, is funny and faithful, recreating slap-shtick (and sound effects!) and adding sharp one-liners.
REVIEW: GOON
| April 12, 2012
A Slapshot-worshipping, proudly raunchy ode to hockey's enforcers, Goon repeats a mock-poetic motif of blood and teeth wafting slo-mo towards the ice.
REVIEW: THE WRATH OF THE TITANS
| April 10, 2012
The folks who gave us the bombastic 3D remake of Clash of the Titans unleash Jonathan Liebesman's Wrath , and it's sensational — if you like being stuffed into a trash can and rolled down a hill.
A MOMENT OF ILLUMINATION
| March 29, 2012
Last Friday, Brandeis University brought together two legends of nonfiction filmmaking: Errol Morris and Claude Lanzmann.
SALMON FISHING IN THE YEMEN
| March 08, 2012
This winning British movie, in which rumpled fisheries expert Fred (McGregor) and sleek exec Harriet (Emily Blunt) help realize the dream project of a sheik, brings to mind the classic Ealing comedies that starred Guinness.
See all articles by:
BETSY SHERMAN
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