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Heart of Darkness
Heath Ledger peers into the void as Christopher Nolan's Batman returns.
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WALL-E blasts off to the future by boldly going where every sci-fi movie's gone before. And that's a good thing.
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Violence Is Golden
With its secret boys club and bloody good fun, Wanted has all of the fight with none of the guilt.
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Superzero
Hancock squanders potential greatness with lame humor and a half-baked hero.
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Beyond Gonzo
Call hell-raiser Hunter S. Thompson's style what you will — a new doc succeeds when saluting his substance.
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The Business of Being Born
Published on January 16, 2008
Most of the advance buzz about The Business of Being Born has centered on an image of its producer, Ricki Lake. Naked. Giving birth. In a bathtub. If you couldn't handle the crowning scene in Knocked Up, you should probably pass on this one. Lake's real labor is about a million times more explicit (she flops and writhes for a long while, then a gunk-covered infant slowly emerges from between her legs), and we see quite a few other women popping out babies as well, in every imaginable contortion. Even the director, Abby Epstein, joins the club, turning the camera on her own attempt at natural childbirth for her doc about the birthing biz. The tone of the film is polemical and occasionally strident, and some of its balder assertions need to be taken with a damned big grain of salt (one "expert" claims that mothers don't bond with babies delivered by C-section and that the proliferation of Cesareans in the West portends the end of love). There's also an obliviously upper-class, sanctimoniously yuppie-crunchy slant to the whole production. Still, Epstein and Lake have crafted an absorbing, thought-provoking inquiry into what modern birth has become and how to make it better.