Rated:NONE A documentary film crew follows the lives of several knee-jerk patriots as they enter a radio contest during the early days of the War on Terrorism.
Rated:NONE "Zero Day" brings us into the world of best friends Andre and Cal, alienated teens determined to carry out a violent attack on their high school. This self-named �Army of Two� uses video cameras to record everything relevant to their final �mission.� These video diaries provide a window into the boys� chillingly ordinary lives, and as we get to know them we are seduced by their intelligence, their humor, their directness, the inward and outward expression of their adolescence, and their terrible single-mindedness. Unsentimental, unnerving and truly compelling, "Zero Day" points no fingers and wisely leaves it to us to judge its characters. The film features a cast of non-professional actors, including the boys' real-life parents.
Rated:R Adapted from the same Patricia Highsmith Ripley novels as The Talented Mr. Ripley, the third in the series is set some decades later. The now wealthy and wedded Ripley (John Malkovich), needing a hit man to take care of two enemies, makes a deal with an innocent English picture framer (Dougray Scott) who has leukemia and simply needs the money for his family.
Rated:PG-13 Realizing that he has to reignite his career at 35, former child star Dickie Roberts (Spade) sets his sights on a comeback role as an "everyday guy", but realizing that he never had an "everyday life", he decides to hire a family, complete with parents and siblings, to recreate a "normal life", so he can feel what that's like, in preparation for his role.
Rated:R Heath Ledger plays Alex Bermier, a conflicted New York City priest who is helping a female detective (Shannyn Sossamon) investigating the murder of the French ambassador � the body was discovered covered with mysterious religious symbols and Aramaic text. The investigation leads Bermier to Rome, where he discovers that the murder may have been the work of an ancient Christian order, the Sin Eaters.
Rated:R Set in the New York nightclub scene of the late 1980's and 1990's, this is the story of Michael Alig , a Club Kid party organizer originally from Indiana, whose extravagant life was sent spiralling downward when he boasted on television that he had killed his drug dealer and roommate, Angel Melendez.
Rated:NONE After it is killed in a bullfight (though not before goring the matador, played by Atkine), a bull's body parts are transported across Europe, in Spain, France, Italy and Belgium, with this ensemble drama showing us the people who are the recipients of the remains in one way or another, like an Italian actress (Mastroianni) selling the bones in a supermarket promotion, a Spanish woman (Molina) who dines on its steaks, a little girl (Molinier) in northern France who imagines a world where animals are much larger than humans, and a taxidermist (Gamblin) whose wife is simultaneously giving birth to quintuplets.
Rated:R The aftermath of a high school shooting leaves Deanna (Christensen), seriously wounded and nine others dead. Det. Van Zandt (Garber), is assigned the task of finding someone to hold responsible. His attention settles on Alicia (Philipps), a troubled outsider considered both the key witness and a possible suspect. Worlds collide when the high school principal compels Alicia to pay a reluctant visit on the still-hospitalized Deanna. United by their traumatic experience, the two young women form an unlikely friendship -- one tested by depression, despair, and the growing weight of the police investigation.
Rated:NONE Harvey Keitel stars as an American officer involved in the post-World War II hearings of German conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler (Skarsg�rd). Although the conductor was a symbol of German culture at the height of Nazi power, he used his influence to help several Jewish artists. The story revolves around the officer's desire to unearth evidence showing Furtwangler's collaboration with the Nazis.