Patricia Clarkson

Sir Ben Kingsley Plays Roth’s Concupiscent Kepesh as Cruz Nudes Up

Shwing! Kingsley awaits Cruz’ marvelous breasts.
Samuel Goldwyn Films; United International Pictures
Shwing! Kingsley awaits Cruz’ marvelous breasts.

ELEGY
Running time 108 minutes
Written by Nicholas Meyer
Directed by Isabel Coixet
Starring Penélope Cruz, Ben Kingsley, Patricia Clarkson, Peter Sarsgaard

Isabel Coixet’s Elegy, from the screenplay by Nicholas Meyer, based on the short novel The Dying Animal by Philip Roth, enters a metaphysical region between life and death that few films have ever dared to explore. Ms. Coixet and Mr. Meyer have managed to capture much of the bittersweet humor of Mr. Roth’s brilliant confrontation of old age, his own included. The director and the scenarist are aided in no small measure by a very accomplished cast headed by Ben Kingsley as David Kepesh, Mr.  read more »

Just How 'Indie' Is The New York Film Festival?

A portrait of Ira Sachs taken for the Toronto Film Festival, where his film <i>Married Life</i> debuted.
Getty Images
A portrait of Ira Sachs taken for the Toronto Film Festival, where his film Married Life debuted.

Late last night in the front room of O’Neals Restaurant at West 64th Street and Broadway, director Ira Sachs was explaining the importance of the New York Film Festival.

“A commitment to cinema—over a long period of time—as an art form,” the 42-year-old director said, was the hallmark of the festival, which for the first time was presenting his work, the film Married Life, starring Pierce Brosnan, Patricia Clarkson, Chris Cooper and Rachel McAdams.

“To me, that’s something that’s been lost in the independent movement, which is something that I came out of, which is to think of film in the same context as a painting, or a photograph, or a ballet, or the Met, or whatever else it may be that is artful in cinema that is significant in itself,” Mr. Sachs said.  read more »

Mighty Windbags

It looks like there is at least one Hollywood star who thinks a political endorsement from a celebri  read more »

Oedipal Drama, Russian Style: Zvyagintsev's The Return

Andrei Zvyagintsev's The Return has been likened to the obsessive cinema of Andrei Tarkovsky (1932-1  read more »

Mystic River Drifts Into Dark And Deep Waters

The more complex movies become in the commitments they demand of their audience, the harder it becom  read more »