DAVID BIANCULLI

Founder / Editor

ERIC GOULD

Associate Editor

LINDA DONOVAN

Assistant Editor

Contributors

ALEX STRACHAN

MIKE HUGHES

KIM AKASS

MONIQUE NAZARETH

ROGER CATLIN

GARY EDGERTON

TOM BRINKMOELLER

GERALD JORDAN

NOEL HOLSTON

 
 
2020
Jun
13
 
 
The Monkees was a mid-Sixties TV series – and, for that matter, a band – created specifically for television, and just as specifically to ride the coattails of, and ape, The Beatles. (Ape? Monkees? See what I did there?) At first, the four Monkees cast for the NBC musical sitcom only sang on their records, with studio musicians playing the instruments and, at first, with other composers writing the music and lyrics. But even before The Monkees premiered on TV in the fa
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
13
 
 
Surely I’m not going to recommend this super-silly comedy movie, starring Leslie Nielsen, yet again, even though it’s now 40 years old, and most of the punch lines, by now, are etched in cultural memory. Yes, I am – and don’t call me Shirley…
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
13
 
 
Next weekend, Matthew Rhys, charismatic and chameleonic co-star of FX’s The Americans, will star in a new miniseries adaptation of Perry Mason, playing TV’s most famous lawyer in a prequel “origin story” drama before he was a lawyer. But tonight, you can see Rhys in a role that is not only pre-Mason, and pre-Americans, but culturally significant for a surprising reason. In 2003, which I remind you is now 17 years ago, young Rhys had a me
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
13
 
 
In this 2019 drama, Helen Mirren, Ian McKellen and Downton Abbey downstairs head Jim Carter star as… oh, what does the rest matter? When those three actors are in one movie, it’s incumbent upon anyone who cares about quality entertainment to watch.
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
12
 
 
MOVIE PREMIERE: Judd Apatow, as comedian, producer and director, can be counted on to find and highlight the humanity and humor in even the most absurd of circumstances, and vice versa. Now here he comes, as one of the principal collaborators of a new comedy-drama character study starring Pete Davidson in a film drawing on his own life, and his own father’s death, for partial inspiration. Davidson became a star on NBC’s Saturday Night Live by playing a thinly veiled, highly
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
12
 
 
MOVIE PREMIERE: When this film was financed, planned and produced, it was as a big-budget Disney movie aimed at launching a new fantasy film franchise in the Harry Potter vein. That’s the way it arrives, too, with Ferdia Shaw starring as the title character from the Eoin Colfer young-adult novels: there are mysteries and missions, and trolls and faeries. But this Artemis Fowl arrives in the pop-culture landscape smack in the middle of a pandemic – so instead of it
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
12
 
 
MOVIE PREMIERE: This new Spike Lee “joint” shows up as a premiere on Netflix, one more example of how films once seen in theaters are finding other ways to find audiences. Da 5 Bloods is about a quintet of African-American soldiers who served together in the Vietnam War. One, their squad leader, died there, and the survivors reunite decades later to meet in Ho Chi Minh City and take a bittersweet nostalgia tour up river. Lee’s bold move here is to stage flashback scen
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
12
 
 
Released in 1987. Still one of the two best family fantasy movies ever made – 1939’s The Wizard of Oz being the other. Still haven’t seen it? Incontheivable!!
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
12
 
 
Released in 1964. And Dick Van Dyke’s kooky cockney accent aside, this Disney film, based on the P.L. Travers story and starring Julie Andrews as the titular mystery nanny who arrives to help an imperious banker and his children in turn-of-the-century London, is another family-film charmer. My suggestion: Find the 2013 drama Saving Mr. Banks, which is about the making of this movie and stars Emma Thomson as Travers and Tom Hanks as Walt Disney, and watch it and Mary Poppins&
 
 
 
  
 
 
2020
Jun
12
 
 
Among the guests scheduled for this new distance-appropriate edition of Bill Maher’s backyard talk show, one in particular is perfectly timed, given the week’s news events: Larry Wilmore, the former Daily Show “Senior Black Correspondent” was canceled much too soon in 2016. Larry, have anything to say about the continuing demonstrations, or the push to rename military bases named after Confederate generals, or anything else? Wilmore did an amazing and passionate