The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Features  |  Reviews
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Love Comes Lately

Splendid and dreamlike
By BRETT MICHEL  |  July 9, 2008
3.0 3.0 Stars
lovecomeslately_inside.jpg

After finding few venues outside of film festivals to screen his splendid 2001 short film “Old Love” (based on the story by Yiddish writer Isaac Bashevis Singer), German director Jan Schütte (Drachenfutter) expanded it to feature length, incorporating two more of Singer’s seminal stories (“Alone” and “The Briefcase”). Feisty octogenarian Otto Tausig plays Austrian émigré Max Cohn, a Manhattan-based short-story writer. Like Frank Langella’s Leonard Schiller in Starting Out in the Evening (but with a far more active libido), Max (along with his fictive alter egos) engages in a series of relationships with younger women (Elizabeth Peña, Barbara Hershey) that blur fiction and reality. Given the film’s genesis, it’s unsurprising that Singer’s spirit is best captured during the segment (featuring the wonderful Tova Feldshuh) culled from “Old Love,” but Singer’s fear of impotence and death remains deftly woven into the dreamlike patchwork of Schütte’s narrative. Kendall Square | 86 minutes

Related: The Artist's Body, edited by Tracey Warr, Amelia Jones, Jackass: Number Two, The paper trail, More more >
  Topics: Reviews , Entertainment, Health and Fitness, Movies,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/14 ]   The Addams Family  @ Shubert Theatre
[ 02/14 ]   "Aphrodite and the Gods of Love"  @ Museum of Fine Arts
[ 02/14 ]   "Processes and Dreams"  @ Panopticon Gallery
ARTICLES BY BRETT MICHEL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: THE VIRAL FACTOR  |  January 17, 2012
    Made for a modest budget of $17 million — and feeling like it (who needs convincing explosions in an action movie?), Dante Lam's latest still gets the job done from a run-and-gun standpoint.
  •   REVIEW: EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE  |  January 17, 2012
    Too soon? For Stephen Daldry's 9/11 drama, the right time is "never."
  •   REVIEW: THE DIVIDE  |  January 10, 2012
    Many a teleplay for The Twilight Zone threatened atomic Armageddon, and though Frontier(s) director Xavier Gens nukes New York in the opening shots of his latest thriller, he finds more inspiration in the horrors of human nature as seen in the old TV show's episode "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street."
  •   REVIEW: MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – GHOST PROTOCOL  |  December 20, 2011
    Impossible Missions Force agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) returns to the screen in dramatic fashion as new teammate Jane (Paula Patton) and the returning Benji (Simon Pegg) break him out of a Russian prison.
  •   REVIEW: WE BOUGHT A ZOO  |  December 20, 2011
    Matt Damon plays Mee, a journalist who decides that he and his daughter (a precocious Maggie Elizabeth Jones) and sullen teenage son (Colin Ford) need a new start after the death of his wife, so he spends his life savings on a house in the country.

 See all articles by: BRETT MICHEL

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed