The title is taken from the prefatory narration of a one-time mental patient diagnosed with an ill-defined Borderline Personality Disorder: "Maybe I was crazy, or maybe it was the Sixties, or maybe I was just a girl, interrupted." Kinship with One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest has been intimated, but …
The child in the curtailed rape scene that opens the picture matures into the woman with the Moe Howard haircut (Claire Foy), a torture artist whose idea of revenge amounts to little more than sticking out a hand and demanding that her aggressors “Pick two!” A few moments of tense …
A tale of love! Love so strong it leads a city boy into the country!
Kristen Wiig’s performance adds a new dimension to frazzled, but the closer the former skit-comedian inches toward big screen stardom, the more far-flung her choice of star vehicles becomes. Dumped by her boyfriend and unable to maintain a job writing descriptive blurbs for a New York magazine, Wiig feigns suicide …
Superficial portrait of porn star Stacy Valentine — or maybe it goes as deep as the person — made up of old home movies, school photos, family snapshots, clips from her films, and principally Christine Fugate's fuzzy, dull, nonprurient footage of her: on the set (where she must battle ants …
The name's the same as the 1999 documentary on porn queen Stacy Valentine. Which is fitting because the girl who moves in next door to the teenage hero (Emile Hirsch), who plans someday to be President but who acts as if he wants to be Leo DiCaprio, is in truth …
An Italian tour bus driver proposes to a German stewardess before a careless collision with the empyreal French cyclist in the title finds him playing daddy to her two adorable kids, fathered by an estranged Australian ex. Its bright lighting, even lines, cheery Technicolor hues, and nauseatingly intrusive imitation-Karen Carpenter …
A flaky French pastry molded around a twenty-two-year-old suicidal gamine and the middle-aged professional knife-thrower who recruits her (from the bottom of the Seine) as his nothing-to-lose assistant. Or in another word, target. The capering camera, when it can manage to sit still (when it is not, for example, buzzing …
Don Koch (erstwhile WWE wrestler CM Punk), a professional remodeler with a checkered past, leaves his pregnant wife (Trieste Kelly Dunn) behind to spend a week performing a few sizable renovations on the haunted mansion his family will soon call home. The welcome wagon packs a bottle of bourbon, and …
Tate Taylor’s adaptation of Paula Hawkins’ novel (the source is worth mentioning, given the morose chunk of voiceover that opens the proceedings and the appearance of high-octane lines like “she loved you in ways that people only dream of being loved” — this said to a distraught husband immediately after …
Judy Chaikin's documentary about the struggles of female jazz musicians for recognition and respect.
After moving to a small Oregon town to live with her estranged father, young Coley meets the charismatic Sonya, her boyfriend, Trenton, and the rest of their friends. Content to observe from a distance, Coley gets pulled into their world as sparks start to fly between the new girl and …