Sara Vilkomerson
Articles by Sara Vilkomerson
Sara Vilkomerson's Guide To This Week's Movies: Whatcha thinkin', Wachowskis?
May. 6th, 2008, 11:49 am
O.K., temperatures may only sporadically hitting the 70s, but summer blockbuster season is officially here. Iron Man opened last weekend with a whopping $104.2 million stateside and another 96.8 million overseas ($201 million all together in its first five days). That beats even what the studio was hoping for (a mere $90 million domestically) and out there in Hollywoodland, executive types are thrilled that all the bemoaning and hand-wringing over the death of the box office was premature. read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: Nostalgia Knocks Back a Decade or Two; Plus Sissy Spacek!
May. 2nd, 2008, 9:30 am
Strangers, AMC Village VII, 2 p.m.
It could be a setup for some sort of awesome romantic comedy: a man and woman lock eyes on a train while both traveling to Berlin for the World Cup finals before accidentally switching backpacks. But, of course, things get more complicated, as the couple in question is an Israeli man, and the woman hails from Ramallah but has been living in Paris, trying to escape the daily terrorism that comes with life in the Palestinian territories. Brace yourself for relationship metaphor for political conflict! Directed by Erez Tadmor and Guy Nattiv. (Watch the trailer above.) read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: Lou Reed's Berlin; Leighton Meester Horror-Show
May. 1st, 2008, 10:00 am
Everywhere at Once, Village East Cinema, 1:15 p.m.
can’t help but think that inspiration for Everywhere at Once must have been born during a late-night heavy-talking/drinking session…in this film photographer Peter Lindbergh and “experimental filmmaker” (uh-oh) Holly Fisher collaborated to “weave together a tapestry of images” using Mr. Lindbergh’s photographs and clips from the 1966 Tony Richardson film Mademoiselle starring Jeanne Moreau. Ms. Moreau narrates using a poem by Kimiko Hahn. Got it?
Donkey in Lahore, Village East Cinema, 3:45 p.m. read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: Kevin and Meryl; Mariah; The Return of Harmony Korine
Apr. 30th, 2008, 3:16 pm
Theater of War AMC Village VII 1 p.m.
Doesn't it seem like just yesterday (or 2006) that Kevin Kline and Meryl Streep were rehearsing for the great summer outdoor production of Mother Courage and her Children? John Walter (How to Draw a Bunny) brings the behind-the-scenes drama of staging the bleak Bertolt Brecht play (try saying that three times fast!). Mr. Walter also examines Brecht's life and career, and the includes moments with his Brecht's daughter, his collaborator Carl Weber, and vintage footage of Brecht's testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee. read more »
Beastie Boy MCA Made Me Fall in Love With Basketball
Apr. 29th, 2008, 1:11 pm
At the after party for Beastie Boy Adam Yauch’s documentary, Gunnin’ for that #1 Spot, it was pretty easy to recognize who was in the movie … just look for the giants! The film documents a 2006 game between 24 of the best high school basketball players in the country at Rucker Park in Harlem (referred to many manytimes by players as a “Mecca”). A few of the players—including Michael Beasley, whose name is constantly followed by the extended sobriquet "expected to be the No. 1 draft pick this year"—were in attendance, and the almost-seven-footers looked shy and big-footed among an adoring, rain-frizzled crowd. (During the Q and A after the film, many in the crowd kept asking Mr. Beasley if he’d come to New York. Wishful thinking). read more »
Sara Vilkomerson's Guide to This Week's Movies: Downey Dons Robot Suit!
Apr. 29th, 2008, 12:32 pm
All hail Tina Fey! The lady we are forever indebted to for making smarts, sass and eyeglasses sexy propelled Baby Mama to the No. 1 spot last weekend with over 18 million smackeroos, beating the stoner set who chose Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay. What does this mean for you? That between this and last year’s Knocked Up and Juno, expect Hollywood to start spawning (hee!) tons of pregnant-y flicks, which will get less funny with each trimester.
This Week at Tribeca Festival: The Weissbergs of Gramercy Park, Waiting for Hockney, Scary Spooks in Afghanistan
Apr. 29th, 2008, 12:21 pm

Whoo-hoo, we’re a week into the Tribeca Film Festival and we can hardly remember a time when it wasn’t Tribeca Film Festival time. We’ve now learned how to avoid the blinking-light madness of the red carpet, how to navigate the (sorta crazy) long lines outside the theaters, and that our laminated pass gets entree into clean East Village restrooms. Oh, and the movies! read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: Moore Crazy! Cindy Sherman Doc; Fast Times at Baghdad High
Apr. 29th, 2008, 9:57 am
Savage Grace, AMC 19th Street, 3 p.m.
It’s a good thing the filmmakers of Savage Grace make sure to throw the “based on a true story” tag everywhere they can, because this film is bananas. Julianne Moore (who continues to surprise us with roles like this one), plays Barbara Baekeland, a beyond eccentric and certainly troubled socialite. As her husband Brooks (Stephen Dillane, a.k.a. Thomas Jefferson for all you John Adams fans) starts to become more aloof, Baekeland becomes, er, inappropriate with her son Tony (played by Eddie Redmayne, who was quite the Sundance superstar this year). We won’t give away the ending, except to say it is based on a real story, one that ends in murder, and has a scene in it that still has us feeling traumatized. read more »
Beastie Boy's B-Ball Doc Debuts at Tribeca
Apr. 28th, 2008, 6:43 pm
In just a few hours, Gunnin’ For that #1 Spot, a documentary from Adam “Beastie Boy” Yauch (aka MCA), will premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival.
The film records the “Boost Mobile Elite 24 Hoops Classic" from September 2006, an event that brings 24 top high-school basketball players from all over the country to play at famed Rucker Park on 155th Street and Frederick Douglas Boulevard in Harlem. The park has had plenty of previous basketball greats grace it—including Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Dr. J.
“I think it’s really cool that they do this game up there,” said Mr. Yauch. “They could have done it in some gymnasium like other All-Stars type games. It’s cool that they do it at Rucker—a place with so much history.” read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: More 90's Nostalgia; Mike Figgis Speaks!
Apr. 28th, 2008, 8:29 am
The Wackness, AMC Village VII, 7 p.m.
This funny and sweet coming-of-age film was a crowd-pleaser when it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and should no doubt do quite well for itself when it opens up this July. Jonathan Levine directed and wrote the clever script that follows Luke Shaprio, a smart alecky New York City kid waiting out his last summer before college, dealing pot in Washington Square Park, and listening to Notorious B.I.G. A few things to know about this movie: Sir Ben Kingsley is hilarious (though we kept wondering how Dustin Hoffman didn’t get cast in this role), and—disturbingly—has an onscreen makeout with an Olsen twin. Method Man shows up briefly, and Olivia Thirlby (best known as Juno’s bestie) takes on lead female love interest. Oh, dear. First Squeezebox, and now this. (And keep reading for a Beastie Boy cameo!) The 1990's are not too recent for nostalgia. (Watch the trailer above.) read more »
He's a Phedon-enon! From Within Director Speaks
Apr. 25th, 2008, 3:16 pm
"It’s not just another psychological horror film—it has some other issues it deals with as well,” said Phedon Papamichael, director of From Within, which premieres tonight at the Tribeca Film Festival. The stars of the film—Mad Men’s Elizabeth Rice, celebrity-spawn Rumer Wills, and Thomas Dekker will sashay down the red carpet outside of the AMC movie theater at 19th Street and Broadway. read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: 90's Nostalgia (And We Don't Mean Just Mamet!), And the Festival's Big Deal
Apr. 25th, 2008, 9:24 am
JUVENILE DELINQUENTS!
Boy A., Pace University, 5 p.m.
Boy A. is about Jack Burridge, recently released from a British prison after serving a 14-year sentence for a crime he committed as a child. From director John Crowley, also known in the theater world (he was nominated for a Tony for directing Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman). Oooh, and oh also! According to the notes on the film provided by the festival, “this story also sheds light on the vast difference between the American and British criminal justice systems”—we’re guessing the British jails are much more polite. Lots of people have buzzed around on this one, and Harvey Weinstein’s company is releasing it so take from that what you want.
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A DANE
Worlds Apart, Village Cinema East, 5:30 p.m.
Is Danish film where it’s at these days? In 2006 we had Susanne Bier’s excellent After the Wedding (she went on to do the stinker Things We Lost in the Fire, but we don’t blame her really for that one). At this past Sundance there was the excellent Just Another Love Story (which so far is being released here around ... let me check my calendar ... never), and now at Tribeca there’s Worlds Apart. Making its North American premiere this evening, this film gets into the murky waters of Jehovah Witnesses, following a devout 17-year-old who falls in love with a nonbeliever. Based on a true story! Expect lots of men named Niels. read more »
Today at Tribeca: Trucker, The Objective, and Thriller Party
Apr. 24th, 2008, 12:08 pm
Tribeca has officially begun! The festival gets going with public screenings this afternoon. Our picks:
Trucker, Village East Cinema 1, 9 p.m.:
One of the 12 films in competition (and the only American offering), this movie has a shot at being the elusive high-profile sale out of Tribeca this year. Michelle Monaghan, who has shown up as the pretty girl in movies like Mission Impossible 3 and Gone Baby Gone (and is the star of next weekend’s Made of Honor) takes on a different kind of role: badass truck driver. When her estranged son—whom she hasn’t seen since he was an infant—shows up to stay with her, things begin to change … but not, perhaps, in the predictable ways. As one acquisition executive told us, “You can already see the poster!” read more »
Tina Fey's Gushy Inner Core Explodes All Over Ziegfeld Theater
Apr. 24th, 2008, 8:33 am
Baby Mama opened the 7th annual Tribeca Film Festival last night at the Ziegfeld Theater, and the temple of Hollywood in New York was packed full of celebrities tramping a red carpet that snaked down 54th Street almost to Sixth Avenue.
It was a comedy-loving crowd, judging from the laughs that started even before the film did, during the pre-movie Tribeca Film Festival promo short about a man as a film junkie (it’s actually funnier than it sounds), and when the lights went up you could see the proof: Chevy Chase, Steve Martin, Lorne Michaels, Chris Kattan, and Molly Shannon were all there to bask in the easy charms of Tina Fey's slight comedy. read more »
Today at the Tribeca Film Festival: Baby Mama at the Ziegfeld
Apr. 23rd, 2008, 8:00 am
The Tribeca Film Festival kicks off its seventh year tonight at the Zeigfeld Theater with the big sparkly premiere of Baby Mama. The movie is about a single and successful businesswoman (Tina Fey) who hires a working-class woman (Amy Poehler) to be her surrogate. Can you believe we’ve gotten this far along in life without a wacky surrogate movie? read more »
Sara Vilkomerson's Guide to This Week's Movies: Errol Morris' Awful Truth
Apr. 22nd, 2008, 5:35 pm
We woke up Monday morning to a pretty big surprise: the funniest-naked-breakup-scene movie Forgetting Sarah Marshall did not take top box office honors last weekend. That spot went to The Forbidden Kingdom (Tag line: “The path is unsafe. The place is unknown. The journey is unbelievable.” Read: boy movie), which features Jet Li and Jackie Chan co-starring for the first time. Kung fu kicked Apatow ass! read more »
Tribeca’s 7-Year Itch
Apr. 22nd, 2008, 4:56 pm
There will be 120 feature films screening at the Tribeca Film Festival between April 23 and May 4, among them the documentary Run for Your Life, about the origins of the New York City Marathon and its founder, Fred Lebow. “[The marathon] was about trying to bring everybody, all five boroughs, together,” said Jane Rosenthal, co-founder of the film festival. “I found—as someone who’s put on this event—watching someone else create this major cultural event … fascinating.” Ms. read more »
Sara Vilkomerson's Guide to This Week's Movies: How Now, Apatow?
Apr. 15th, 2008, 3:37 pm
We could go into an oh-so-increasingly-familiar rant about the fact that Prom Night—a movie whose tag line is “It’s midnight. Everyone’s ready to go home … but someone has other plans”—was the most popular amongst audiences last weekend (lesson learned: people cannot resist the horror flicks) … but what’s the point? read more »
H&M Stole My Heart With ’60s Swirls and Poppy Prints!
Apr. 15th, 2008, 9:06 am
Last Friday, the windows of various H&M outlets across the city were transformed into a brain-boggling, Austin Powers-dazzle of color. Orange, yellow, red, and grape soda-purple, exploded in 60s-esque chaos: a swingy hot-pink-and-orange trapeze dress, an ankle-length high-waist skirt in olive green with tangerine lava-lamp bubbles, a canary yellow and purple tunic.
Marimekko has officially arrived to the masses. read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: A Keanu Is a Comforting Thing
Apr. 8th, 2008, 2:30 pm
Hollywood types are scratching their heads over George Clooney’s Leatherheads, which only brought in $13.5 million when Universal reportedly had been hoping for something closer to $20 million. How could this be? Didn’t the moviegoing public realize this was George Clooney? read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: Stones Shine a Light, Clooney Hits the Mud
Apr. 1st, 2008, 3:56 pm
Every time we think the weekend box office can’t surprise us, something comes along to make us say … really? Last weekend, the surprise prize went to 21, the blackjack movie we know, logically, we can’t truly judge without seeing, but yet we still feel like we kind of can. Doesn’t the preview tell us all we need to know? read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: Ryan Phillippe’s Tour of Duty
Mar. 25th, 2008, 2:54 pm
Guess who (yuk-yuk) cleaned up again at the box office this weekend? read more »
La Vie En Rose: Total Movie Wonkitude!
Mar. 25th, 2008, 8:22 am
The name Rose McGowan calls many things to mind—red lips, curves, porcelain skin, Charmed, Scream, Grindhouse or that unforgettable barely-there chain-mail dress she wore to the 1998 MTV Video Music Awards with then-boyfriend Marilyn Manson. But old movie buff … who knew?
Starting this month, the 34-year-old beauty is taking on the role of co-host, with beloved white-haired film historian Robert Osborne, of Turner Classic Movies’ series The Essentials. “I’m not just a complete movie geek, I’m actually a total weirdo,” Ms. McGowan said via phone from Los Angeles (where she had just returned from her brother’s Las Vegas wedding. “At a gay chapel. He’s not gay. It was awesome.”). “I’ll read someone’s out-of-print autobiography, and then I’ll go and read two more biographies about them just so I can cross-reference them. That is what I do in my spare time,” she laughed. “I don’t really like to boast about such things, and I can’t tell you what I did yesterday, but I have a strange encyclopedic knowledge and savant-esque memory of random things. Like, I can tell you all about the fantastic character actors in Shirley Temple movies, or who and how someone is related to Norma Shearer. That’s the kind of thing I love discussing.” read more »
Stinky Cheese and 120 Kinds of Booze: A Gilded Gourmet-ocracy Grows in Brooklyn
Mar. 19th, 2008, 12:05 am

Last Saturday, around noon, two couples stopped in front of the JakeWalk—a new cocktail, wine and cheese bar on the corner of Smith Street and Sackett in Brooklyn—and peered at the menu. The foursome almost comprised a typical Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill tableau: Their ages seemed to range between 28 and 38; the women were fresh-faced with determinedly wavy I-don’t-do-blowouts hair, dressed in ballet flats and expensive-looking coats; and the men sported tortoise-rimmed glasses, dark jeans and mussed hair—but in a preppier, Hugh Grant-y kind of way than in a Christian Siriano one. The only things missing were a baby stroller and/or a dog.
“It’s the Stinky people,” said one of the men, running his finger down the list of cocktails, wine, 40 available cheeses, fondue and charcuterie.
“Awesome,” said his friend, peering in the darkened windows. read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: ’Toons and a Moon
Mar. 18th, 2008, 4:10 pm
Get ready for lots more animated films to head our way thanks to the gigantic opening of Horton Hears a Who! last weekend, which pulled an amazing $45 million-plus at the box office, making it the biggest opening thus far of 2008 (beating Cloverfield, for which we are thankful). Prepare yourself for all sorts of puns. (Don’t believe us? read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week's Movies: Sputnik, I Think I Love You!
Mar. 11th, 2008, 3:03 pm
Golly, is it summer blockbuster season already? read more »
Spring Reawakening
Mar. 4th, 2008, 5:54 pm
Tulips might not be shooting through the Park Avenue median just yet, but spring has definitely arrived at your local multiplex. Over the next few weeks, comedy, action, romance, major franchises and—of course—comic-book superheroes will, ahem, spring into action on screens all over the city. In other words: wave buh-bye to the sludge that the studios have been spooning on us during the past few months, and say hello to the movies they’re hoping will pay for next year’s Oscar campaign. read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: It’s Teen Week!
Mar. 4th, 2008, 5:14 pm
Do you ever get the feeling that a good majority of the country would line up just to watch Will Ferrell eat beef jerky and read the phone book (probably in his underpants)? read more »
Road Movie Molls
Feb. 29th, 2008, 1:56 pm
On a recent blustery February morning, Jessica Lange and Joan Allen sat at a conference table, joking around with each other about the ills of fluorescent lighting. The two women co-star, along with Kathy Bates, in Bonneville, a film about three friends who drive from Utah to Southern California after Ms. Lange’s character’s husband passes away. “I have always wanted to do a road movie,” said Ms. Lange, 59, naming Terrence Malick’s Badlands and Bonnie and Clyde as two of her favorites. read more »
Olivia Thirlby: Juno’s Bestie on the Brink
Feb. 27th, 2008, 1:35 am
“My brain hasn’t really processed it. I actually can’t believe it,” said Olivia Thirlby, via phone, early in the morning of Oscar Sunday. The 21-year-old actress, in Los Angeles, was eating breakfast (“I’m sorry for the crunching”) and about to embark upon the daylong process of readying herself for the red carpet to end all red carpets at the Kodak Theatre for Hollywood’s glitziest, puffed-up night. Ms. Thirlby portrayed Leah, Ellen Page’s braid-wearing best friend in this year’s little-movie-that-could, Juno—a film that not only surpassed expectations at the box office, but was the one bright spot in a lineup of Best Picture nominees that skewed dark and heavy.
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: Oink, Oink, Christine’s a Piggy
Feb. 26th, 2008, 5:38 pm
Hey, how about those Oscars? We doubt it was just the DayQuil that had us thinking this was one of the best shows in ages … it had more to do with the fact that this year the movies were just so darn good and deserving (all those sweet foreigner acceptance speeches really helped, too). Isn’t it hard to come back to reality and realize that it’s still just February and we’ve got some time to kill before we see anything new that will be worthy of an Oscar? read more »
The Observer's Interview With Oscar-Winner Daniel Day-Lewis
Feb. 25th, 2008, 7:55 am
In December, The Observer interviewed last night's Best Actor winner Daniel Day-Lewis about his performance. Here is Sara Vilkomerson's account of her afternoon with the real-life Daniel Plainview.
“For the most part I try to hear the voice, which is one of the most deep and personal ways we present our very selves. It’s like a fingerprint of the soul,” said Daniel Day-Lewis. Last week, the 50-year-old actor was discussing his character, Daniel Plainview, in Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest film, There Will Be Blood, based upon Upton Sinclair’s turn-of-the-century novel Oil! “Little by little a voice started to talk in my head, and then the problem becomes how to make those sounds—to get it out of your head.” read more »
Be Kind Rewind Perfect for Home Viewing
Feb. 22nd, 2008, 12:40 pm
When we first heard tell of Be Kind Rewind, the latest movie from Michel Gondry – the innovative director of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (mmmm, if only!) and countless music videos– we were kind of excited. Then we watched the trailers, which seemed to feature Jack Black being Jack Black (again), running around singing some wacked out version of “Ghostbusters,” and we started to get this funny and familiar feeling that this movie was not going to be able to live up to any expectations. And, we hate to say it, we were right. read more »
2008 Best Picture Nominees Show the Nation in Mid-Squall
Feb. 19th, 2008, 9:11 pm

Ellen Page, meets Daniel Plainview, via
Daniel Day-Lewis.
This Sunday night, the 80th Academy Awards will take place at the Kodak Theater in Los Angeles, bringing the usual glitzy glut of red carpet fashion, faux-improvised speeches and what is perhaps the most important industry honor of the year: The Best Picture Oscar. Two thousand seven was heavy, judging from the nominees: No Country for Old Men, Atonement, There Will Be Blood, Michael Clayton and Juno. read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: Embrasse Moi, Guillaume Depardieu!
Feb. 19th, 2008, 5:12 pm
Just as we feared it would, Jumper ruled the box office this weekend, demonstrating either the fact that no one reads reviews, people inexplicably want to see Hayden Christensen’s work or there really is nothing else around in this inter-season dredge of studio pictures out there. Sigh. Prepare yourselves for Jumper 2, and you guys have no one to blame but yourselves. So! read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: Americans Get Dumb. And Dumber.
Feb. 12th, 2008, 5:41 pm
And it will be—those slick Super Bowl commercials looked pretty irresistible, right? read more »
At the Westminster Dog Show: Wiener Dogs Are Top Guns
Feb. 12th, 2008, 1:10 pm
Meet Emma Jean Stephenson, of Beaver Falls, Penn. Ms. Stephenson has been in the dog-showing business for 48 years, breeding and showing Dachshunds (longhair, smooth, and wiry)—many, she said, who end up with New York City owners.
Behind her was one of her dogs, Gunner (Ch. E.J’s Gunner’s Grandson), who didn’t seem to be the least bit perturbed by the noise and din of the back room.
He is indeed the grandson of one of Ms. Stephenson’s champions dogs, E.J.’s Top Gun. read more »
At the Westminster Dog Show: A Quebecois and his Bouviers des Flandres Find Americans 'So Very Intense'
Feb. 12th, 2008, 8:49 am
Poppy, a one-and-a-half-year-old Bouvier des Flandres, might be the youngest dog at the Garden tonight. She didn’t win anything in her group, but her triple threat owner/breeder/handler Brian Gunther said he was very proud of her, as she is seventh in a generational line he has raised since puppyhood.
Mr. Gunther, the president of the Bouvier des Flandres Club of Canada, hails from Quebec (English is his second language). He’s a retired architect.
“This is a hobby that has somehow turned into my passion,” he said. read more »
At the Westminster Dog Show: Hair Clips and the Silent Treatment
Feb. 12th, 2008, 8:46 am
This dog, Shaggy (of course), borrowed a hair clip from his owner, who was too unhappy with his performance today to talk.
At the Westminster Dog Show: Shit Happens
Feb. 12th, 2008, 8:21 am
You won't see this bit of indignity on television.
At the Westminster Dog Show: Six Ladies Give Sax Sexy 'Call Name'
Feb. 12th, 2008, 8:13 am
This is Ch. Sylvan Argent Simply Irresistible. Her father’s name was Ch. Sylvan's Above And Beyond read more »
At the Westminster Dog Show: Dog-Show Fashion Tips From the 'Nicole Kidman' of the Business
Feb. 12th, 2008, 8:04 am
Hunter (Ch. Sunbursts Huntsman at Machta), is the four-year-old, one-hundred-pound winner of his Best of Breed (Borzoi) earlier today.
Now he’s waiting patiently with his co-owner and handler, Marilyn McGraw, to compete in the Hound group, which is the first group up tonight. Borzoi were originally bred in Russia as status symbols, Ms. McGraw, of San Juan Bautista, Calif. said. She was wearing a blue shiny suit, and is considered, amongst the dog-handling folks, to be kind of a knockout (“Nicole Kidman’s got nothing on Marilyn,” a woman from a neighboring stall said). read more »
At the Westminster Dog Show: Terrierism.
Feb. 12th, 2008, 7:58 am
It sure is nice to see someone with a chance of winning at Madison Square Garden (cough—Knicks!).
At the Westminster Dog Show: A Plott Thickens
Feb. 12th, 2008, 7:49 am
Ch. Black Monday, a Plott—the first of the four new breeds acknowledged by the Westminster Kennel Club this year—made his Madison Square Garden debut last night.
At the Westminster Dog Show: Meet Pricilla (Ch. Extacee Neon Moon)
Feb. 12th, 2008, 7:40 am
We spent last night at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show at Madison Square Garden.
File this under things we didn't know about the dog show: There is a lot of frantic grooming during the commercial break. (Like morning television programs, perhaps?) And howling ... how come you can't hear that on TV? (Again ...) Also? When did Bloodhounds get so popular? read more »
Bruges Brothers
Feb. 8th, 2008, 8:14 am
A few days before the opening of their movie In Bruges, actor Colin Farrell and writer-director Martin McDonagh sat comfortably beside one another at the Regency Hotel. The film, which co-stars Brendan Gleeson, is about two hit men holed up in Bruges—a perfectly preserved medieval city in Belgium—after a job gone horribly awry. “I was sort of struck by how beautiful and cinematic the place was,” said Mr. McDonagh of the inspirational weekend trip he once took to the city. “But then you saw all the museums and got bored out of your head,” chimed in Mr. Farrell (who might have heard this story a few times before). “Yes,” Mr. McDonagh said. “It was like beautiful, beautiful, beautiful on one side of my brain, and then boring, boring, boring on the other. The two characters evolved from there.” read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: I Love(d) the 80’s
Feb. 5th, 2008, 12:52 pm
Okay … so we had the weirdest dream this weekend. Some movie we had never heard of, something that rhymed “Hannah” with “Montana,” came out of nowhere and broke all sorts of records. Oh, wait, that actually happened? Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour (featuring a young lady born in the early 90’s, sigh), which plays in 3-D (augh!), made $29 million even though it only played in 683 theaters. This means it did better than any other movie playing over the Super Bowl weekend. Ever. It even did better than Titanic. O.K.? read more »
Carrie’s Sister
Jan. 29th, 2008, 9:15 pm

Brooke Shields share a merged moment
as two Bushnellian creations.
Last Thursday, on a cold and blustery January afternoon, the cast and crew of Lipstick Jungle, the new NBC series premiering Feb. 7, scuttled about the Ukrainian Institute of America on 79th Street and Fifth Avenue.
Bright lights illuminated the high ceilings, ornate moldings and chandeliers within the 1898 mansion, which was standing in as a billionaire bachelor’s New York City apartment. Banks of additional lights outside the building created artificial sunlight streaming through the windows. The grand staircase was covered in plastic wrap. read more »
Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide To This Week’s Movies First The Eye, then The Tongue?
Jan. 29th, 2008, 11:50 am
Oh, America … what are you doing to us? Meet the Spartans, the latest spoofy, goofy film from the Scary Movie franchise, was tops at the box office this weekend. Beating … Rambo! Really? Interesting to see what will happen this week … and we wish we could give a more informed opinion on things, except that none of the movies were screening for critics before press time. Hmmmm! Suspicious? read more »
My Three Nights in Sundance
Jan. 22nd, 2008, 10:20 pm
The Sundance Film Festival is its own little world, set in the otherworldy state of Utah. Smack in the what-surely-must-be-quaint-when-not-overrun-by-wankers town of Park City, nestled between spectacular, somewhat sci-fi-looking snow-covered mountains, it’s a universe where the inhabitants wear puffed-up coats (think duvets with sleeves), big clompy boots, silly hats and shiny laminates hanging around their necks designating their station (press, talent, producer, lawyer, etc). read more »
































