Film
Boredoms Just Another Vice: Jim Jarmuschs Coffee and Cigarettes
By Lisa RosmanAll laurels eventually become resting grounds, and with Coffee and Cigarettes, Jim Jarmusch rides his own coattails, with none of the panache that defined his earlier work.
The Blonds: Slippery Slope of Truth
By Douglas SingletonThe Blonds (Los Rubios) is a fascinating, well-crafted quasi-documentary that nonetheless is a study in frustration. It is frustrating in its inability to ever really confront the material it purports to explorethe political murder of its filmmaker Albertina Carris leftist parents by the Argentine secret police in 1977.
Docs In Sight
Docs in Sight
By Williams ColeDespite the increased bastardization of what is called "documentary" film in recent yearsfrom "reality" shows to MTV profiles of club kidsthe form has always been deeply rooted in the social-political. Of course, trying to tell you what is "truth" or "real" is an epistemological mess, but at a time when most television, purporting to deliver real news, real wars or real people, has huge credibility problems, social-political documentaries are the alternative that offers in-depth and illuminating perspectives.
Outtakes: The Words of Kill Bill Volume 2
By Galen WilliamsF. Scott Fitzgerald wrote scripts in Hollywood for two years. A complete flop, he was fired as a screenwriter. He was a born novelist. On the other hand, Quentin Tarantino, who wrote and directed Kill Bill, is a born screenwriter and hes not shy talking about it.
In Conversation
in conversation: Taylor Mead
By Sissi TaxTaylor Mead is a legendary actor and poet who has appeared in over 100 films. He currently can be seen in Jim Jarmuschs Coffee and Cigarettes. Recently, Austrian writer and film theorist Sissi Tax, who is currently based in Berlin, sat down with Taylor Mead at the Rails headquarters.
Bukowski: Born into This
By Williams ColeThe cult of Charles Bukowski, based as it is on reverence for the drunken down-and-out poet who speaks the truth, is ready-made fodder for both celebrities as well as hipsters seeking literary street cred.