Where the Buffalo Roam – Review

December 1, 1996

Bill Murray is indeed the funniest man on the planet, and Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, at one point, was the most dangerous man on the planet.

Romeo & Juliet – Review

December 1, 1996

By now, you’ve heard the howls from Shakespearean purists over Luhrmann’s attempt to make the most famous love story palatable for the Tarantino generation.

Curdled – Review

November 1, 1996

The death-obsessed taxi driver from Pulp Fiction who grilled Bruce Willis about how it feels to kill a man, actress Angela Jones, was drafted for that role.

Michael Collins – Review

November 1, 1996

Momentary glimpses of Irish history and a timeline of Collins’s life just aren’t enough to crack open his world, which was pretty damn revolutionary.

Secrets and Lies – Review

November 1, 1996

Celebrations of life in all its flawed, mundane glory, of the beautiful imperfections of the human heart and our conflicted courses through the everyday.

Guttervision – Review

November 1, 1996

As Frank puts it, “The truly creative people aren’t making $150,000 a year at NBC; they’re the renegades with $100 in their pocket and an idea.”

Bounty Dog – Review

November 1, 1996

With a video industry rife with stories about mechanized warriors, robots, and monsters, Bounty Dog stands out with a peculiar plot and excellent animation.

American Buffalo – Review

October 1, 1996

Ethics, honor, responsibility, and hunger. These are the elements that float American Buffalo, one of Mamet’s more popular productions.

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