DarkStreets Tagged Articles at Cinematical
Indie Spotlight: New Releases for Dec. 12
Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Gay & Lesbian », Horror », Independent », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », New Releases », Columns », Cinematical Indie », Indie Spotlight »
Not that it's any of my business, but are your halls decked? Is your gay apparel donned? Good! Then you have time to go to the movies, and the Indie Spotlight is here to tell you what's playing beyond the multiplexes!'Tis the season for limited-release pictures that are sort of indie films and sort of studio productions. For example, this weekend there's Doubt (in NY, LA, Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco), The Reader (NY and LA), and Che (NY and LA) -- but you've heard plenty about those films elsewhere. There's also Delgo, which is a truly independent animated film -- but it's opening on 1,800 screens, so you don't need me to tell you about it here.
Our focus is the stuff that might be under the radar, which this week includes: Adam Resurrected, Dark Streets, Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi, Timecrimes, What Doesn't Kill You, Where God Left His Shoes, While She Was Out, and Wendy and Lucy. For the details, read on!
Wendy and Lucy (pictured)
What it is: A quiet drama about a penniless woman (Michelle Williams) whose car breaks down in rural Oregon while she's heading West to find a job. Lucy is the name of her dog and traveling companion. The film is not, as I previously believed, a biopic about the red-haired girl from the fast food place and Linus' older sister.
What they're saying: Cinematical raved about it at Cannes earlier this year, and 89% of the critics at Rotten Tomatoes agree. The consensus is that it's a tender, beautifully shot, emotionally intimate little film.
Where it's playing: New York City (Film Forum), Los Angeles (Laemmle Sunset 5).
More info: The official site has a list of release dates for a few dozen other cities.
Exclusive: 'Dark Streets' Poster Premiere
Filed under: Drama », Music & Musicals », Movie Marketing », Posters »
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Click image to enlarge
Cinematical has received this exclusive poster for the film Dark Streets, which is being described as an "atmospheric film noir musical fantasy" (right on) starring Gabrial Mann, Bijou Phillips, Izabella Miko and Elias Koteas. Featuring music from Etta James, Natalie Cole, Aaron Neville, Richie Sambora and Chaka Khan, among others, Dark Streets follows a naive playboy and owner of the city's hottest nightclub whose life begins to spiral out of control upon investigating the shady death of his rich pop. Reviewing the film from this year's CineVegas Film Festival, Cinematical's Eric D. Snider noted that there are "many things to admire about Dark Streets" -- adding the "sumptuous cinematography and smooth, fluid camera movements bring the nightclub performance scenes to life, while the rest of the film plays with light, shadows, and colors."
Dark Streets will sing and dance its way into theaters on December 5th. Check out a larger version of the poster in the gallery below.
Gallery: Dark Streets Poster
CineVegas Film Festival Winners Announced
Filed under: Independent », Awards », DIY/Filmmaking », CineVegas »
Last week, I did some reporting from the CineVegas Film Festival, where I served as a juror. The winners were announced this weekend, and they have me wishing I had been able to see more stuff. She Unfolds By Day, Rolf Belgum's film about "a frustrated middle-aged son trying to manage his misanthropic 80-year-old mother," took home the Grand Jury Prize. A Special Jury Award went to Dark Streets, which our own Eric D. Snider gave a decent review to here. Bill Pullman took home a Special Jury Award for his performance in Your Name Here, reviewed by Eric here. The documentary jury, which included Super Size Me director Morgan Spurlock, selected Beautiful Losers, about "the lives of a loose-knit group of artists in the '80s who created their own art movement outside the mainstream." Hi, My Name is Ryan, focusing on "the clown prince of the downtown Phoenix art scene," picked up a Special Documentary Jury Prize.CineVegas Review: Dark Streets
Filed under: Drama », Independent », New Releases », Noir », Theatrical Reviews », Festival Reports », Cinematical Indie », CineVegas »

There are many things to admire about Dark Streets, a film noir set against a 1930s backdrop of jazz, blues, and booze. Unfortunately, the story isn't one of them. It's your basic Chinatown-inspired tale of double crosses and femmes fatales, with dialogue that has the form of the classics but not the content. Take this exchange, for example, between a nightclub owner and the singer who has been displaced in his affections by a new girl:
HIM: You're a great belter, but we've got a real chanteuse now.
HER: She can chanteuse my ass!
Yeah. Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame you ain't.
But plot and dialogue aside (and sometimes those elements really are secondary), Dark Streets effectively creates its world in other ways. Sharone Meir's sumptuous cinematography and smooth, fluid camera movements bring the nightclub performance scenes to life, while the rest of the film plays with light, shadows, and colors. Director Rachel Samuels, in her third feature, shows a singularity of vision that will serve her well later, when she gets a better script to work with. (This one is by Wallace King, based on a play by Glenn Stewart.)









