Movie Features Archive - New York Magazine

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Movie Features Archive

August 13, 2007
Dirty Mind: Julie Delpy

With the title 2 Days in Paris, Julie Delpy’s film sounds like another lovely romance. Instead, it’s an acerbic, often-crude comedy that’s so harsh on France, senators may toast it with freedom fries.

August 13, 2007
A Viral Victim on the Undulating Curve of Shifting Expectations!

There’s already a backlash against the J.J. Abrams�produced horror film, Monstrous, which is weird, because not only has the movie not yet come out, but it’s currently still filming on the streets of New York.

July 30, 2007
The Stiles Ultimatum

The native New Yorker stands up for herself in Bourne 3.

July 23, 2007
I Made It, But It’s Not My Movie. I Swear.

Though the credit reads �Harry Kirkpatrick,� Alec Baldwin is none too happy that his directorial debut Shortcut to Happiness (formerly The Devil and Daniel Webster) is seeing the light of day. Others know that pain.

July 16, 2007
Burnt Sienna

Besieged by gossip��The media want me to be this partying, shagging girl��Sienna Miller hits back onscreen.

July 2, 2007
Influences: Werner Herzog

"I think I have a peculiar humor that becomes a cross that I bear. I always complain that nobody sees my sense of humor, but it comes across when you have a movie theater filled with people."

July 2, 2007
Knocked Up by the Undulating Curve of Shifting Expectations!

As good as Knocked Up is, it’s a perfect candidate for Curvedom; in fact, we’ve recently heard people saying, �I don’t see what all the fuss is about.�

July 2, 2007
Meryl’s Progeny: Mamie Gummer

Sara Cardace spoke with Mamie Gummer, 23, about starring with her mother Meryl Streep in Evening.

June 25, 2007
Portraying Pearl: Dan Futterman

Dan Futterman’s screenplay for Capote earned him an Academy Award nomination. Now he’s stepping into an adaptation of a potentially more charged real-life character as Daniel Pearl in A Mighty Heart.

June 25, 2007
NYScreen: Weird Is Good

Instead of programming yet another slate of quiet art-house dramas, the New York Asian Film Festival has become one of the city’s most exciting film events.