Plus, a critic's farewell.
The Oscars are now in the rearview mirror, and I can't tell you how relieved I am that there wasn't another slap-like incident. Between the historic wins for Asian performers and emotional acceptance speeches, it was a great ceremony from my perspective. Here are the evening's best and worst moments as the film desk saw them. |
This year, the end of awards season coincides with the end of another great run: A.O. Scott, our co-chief film critic for more than two decades, is stepping down. (He has written a lovely farewell.) One of my early jobs on the arts desk involved editing letters to the editor, and I'll never forget the sincere response to one of his articles that began, "Dear A.O. Scott — Can I call you A.O.? I feel like I know you." That gets at the relationship readers have with his work: They might agree or disagree, but they often felt a strong connection to him. He isn't going far — he'll be a critic at large for the Books section — but I'll miss his weekly reviews. |
Speaking of which, his final one is of "Moving On," with Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin. The title is pure coincidence but, alas, it's not a rave. The film "takes refuge in pleasantness, and in the easy charm of its stars," he writes. |
There are several Critic's Picks this week, though, including Louis Garrel's "The Innocent" (a French heist movie that's frothy, in a good way), "Drylongso" (Cauleen Smith's newly restored 1998 debut, about a photographer in Oakland) and Ulrich Seidl's "Rimini" (about a lounge singer coasting on former glories). |
Whatever you decide to watch, have fun at the movies! |
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