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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
Offside
A game of universal humanity
By
TOM MEEK
|
April 25, 2007
OFFSIDE
" alt="photo of 'OFFSIDE'">
3.0
Stars
IT'S ANYBODY'S GAME: But Jafar Panahi's pro-feminist drama actually scores.
As it did the director’s pro-feminist 2000 neo-realist drama
The Circle
, the Iranian government has banned Jafar Panahi’s latest contemplation of the oppression of women in Iran.
Offside
takes a lighter tack as it challenges the law barring women from public sporting events. Six disparate females — ranging from shy and mousy to acerbic and tomboyish — dress up as boys (one audaciously as a soldier) and get caught as they try to sneak into Iran’s World Cup 2006 qualifier against Bahrain. They’re relegated to a makeshift holding pen atop Tehran’s Azadi Stadium, able to hear the roar of the crowd with cutting clarity but just a few tantalizing feet from seeing the game (which Iran won, 1-0). Instead they engage in a debate with the young soldiers guarding them; the men aren’t happy about enforcing the law, but they fear reprisal if they show any leniency. Amid the back and forth of the game, Panahi taps into universal humanity and delivers a liberating twist in the contest’s aftermath.
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Crimson green
"In the summer before the revolution [against the shah], if you asked someone if there might be a revolution, an optimistic person would say, maybe in a century."
Persian miniatures
You can see what is probably the most significant filmmaking right now in Iran by going to YouTube and viewing the artless images of brutality in the streets of Tehran captured by scores of average Iranian citizens armed with cell-phone cameras.
Boston film group protests arrest of Iranian director
At the Montreal Film Festival last summer, I had the pleasure of interviewing the Iranian director Jafar Panahi, who was serving as president of the international jury.
Los Zafiros
As with anything Cuban, politics is never far away.
When George met Nuri
The US president, George Bush, made his first visit to Baghdad’s green zone today, in a trip so secret even the new Iraqi prime minister was kept in the dark.
Crossword: ''So cute''
If it gets any cuter, I'll get a toothache.
The Curse of the Big Dig
Call it the Curse of the Big Dig: virtually every politician with statewide significance who has over the years become intertwined with the Central Artery Project (as it is officially known) has seen his or her dreams of higher office dashed.
Taking gay rights to Obama
You might have seen Chase Whiteside and Erick Stoll, seniors at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio, around town in the days leading up to November 3.
Fantasy World
The conclusion is inescapable: the position of the United States in the Middle East is far worse today than it was even two or three weeks ago.
Journey to the surface of the Earth
Looking at the landscape brings out the artist in everyone.
Fear itself
The smell of fear is thick in the air these days.
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ARTICLES BY TOM MEEK
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| May 17, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture ( i.e. , Paris Hilton, the Kardashians, and American Idol ) and the indignity of being an office drone.
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| April 24, 2012
Peter Lord, animator behind claymation staples Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run , directs this very British, very dry romp on the high seas during the time when Britannia did indeed rule the waves.
REVIEW: GOD BLESS AMERICA
| April 18, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture (i.e., Paris Hilton, the Kardashians and American Idol) and the indignity of being an office drone.
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| March 15, 2012
Dan Lindsay and T. J. Martin's Oscar-winning documentary about an underequipped high-school football team competing against big-time programs across Tennessee offers a potent contemplation on race and opportunity.
REVIEW: DR. SEUSS' THE LORAX
| March 01, 2012
Regrettably, this team loses a lot of Seuss's quirkiness, though not the message about corporate greed and slash-and-burn imperialism.
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TOM MEEK
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