Tribeca ’03: Justice (review)

All praise Evan Oppenheimer for daring to acknowledge what too many people tiptoe around: that black humor is often the best way to deal with grief. Another New Yorker coping with 9/11, Oppenheimer gives us a Manhattan comic book artist, Drew (Erik Palladino), who works through his own grief by creating a reactionary vigilante character … more…

Tribeca ’03: The Event (review)

Gay men are dying under suspicious circumstances in Manhattan, and district attorney Parker Posey is determined to prosecute someone. When one AIDS sufferer (Don McKellar) meets his death by apparent suicide, Posey is on the case, and what she finds is indescribably heartbreaking and unexpectedly comforting. Set in Chelsea and shot on DV in downtown … more…

Tribeca ’03: Catch That Girl! (review)

It’s a nonstop action movie for kids, featuring an appealing gang of misfits led by the spunkiest 13-year-old girl since Pippi Longstocking, so of course it’s slated for a Hollywood remake. I’m glad I had the chance to see the Danish original before it gets watered down and prettied up and made boring and bland. … more…

Tribeca ’03: Risk/Reward (review)

With their intimate and compelling look at several powerful women in what is still the man’s world of high finance, Xan Parker and Elizabeth Holder demonstrate that even when discrimination isn’t holding women back, their own specially female fears and concerns do a fine job of competing with their drive and ambition. For these four … more…

Tribeca ’03: Girlhood (review)

How often must we hear the same story over and over again before someone in a position to do something about it starts to listen? Oscar-nominated documentarian Liz Garbus relates a familiar tale — of horrible sexual abuse and parental neglect and indifference from the justice system — with a shocking, powerful intimacy that’s a … more…

Tribeca ’03: Cinemania (review)

If I ever worried that there might be something, you know, wrong with me and my passion for movies, I can now rest easy. Because this funny, sad film — by Angela Christlieb and Stephen Kijak — assures me that I am nothing but the greenest amateur compared to the cinemaniacs profiled here. Jack, Eric, … more…

Tribeca ’03: Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer (review)

In 1992, Brit Nick Broomfield’s Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer documented how the sensational media coverage of the woman who was supposedly America’s first female serial killer may have compromised her defense, how nearly everyone around her, from her mother to the police, was more interested in selling their stories to the … more…

Tribeca ’03: Confection (review)

A brief and sweet slice of New York City street life, with whipped cream on top, from filmmaker Eva Saks. A little girl, Amanda (Blaire Restaneo), having agonized over a bake shop full of delectable goodies, carries her treat proudly as she walks with her mother (Orlagh Cassidy) near Central Park, jealously protecting the confection. … more…

Tribeca ’03: Cane Toad (review)

Cane toads are an object lesson in not fooling with Mother Nature: Introduced into Australia in the hopes that they’d eat a pesky beetle that was destroying sugar cane crops, the toads instead became pests themselves. Now, David Clayton and Andrew Silke’s deliciously sick and twisted animated film gives these much maligned critters a voice … more…

The Order (review)

So there are these passive little ragamuffin children hanging around in the beginning of *The Order,* not doing much, just sorta *there* and not being particularly scary or interesting or anything — which is a good general description of *The Order* as a whole — and all of a sudden, for no reason except that the script said for him to do this then, Heath Ledger decides to whip out his big…