Can’t Stand Losing You: Surviving The Police (Grieve, 2012)
You will see light in the darkness / you will make some sense of this / and when you've made your secret journey / you will find the love you miss.
You will see light in the darkness / you will make some sense of this / and when you've made your secret journey / you will find the love you miss.
The studio is celebrating the DVD release of Can't Stand Losing You: Surviving the Police, which arrives July 14th. Based on Andy Summers' memoir, One Train Later, the documentary recounts the band's rise to stardom and provides an inside look at preparations for its 2007 reunion tour.
The Mekons are bad. Like, really. honestly bad. They’ll be the first to tell you.
“I have forgiven Michael Dunn,” Lucy McBath says when questioned about the man who murdered her son, Jordan. “I’ve had to forgive him.”
Seemingly harmless misdemeanors affect entire communities.
From Paris With Love is not going to make Signed, Sealed, Delivered the next breakout show, but on a weekend where the choices at the multiplex are pretty crass (Entourage, Spy), it's a serviceable diversion for the audience segment that eschews R-rated films altogether.
Evan Cogswell gives 4/5 stars to Belle and Sebastian: "Great Pyrenees are beautiful dogs, and the one the filmmakers got to play Belle is absolutely elegant."
This much talked about documentary from Sundance is now on Netflix. I reviewed it for Christianity Today Movies & TV.
Spinney realizes the similarities between himself and Big Bird, and acknowledges the influence that the show and the character have had on his life.
Billed as "The Film Hollywood Doesn't Want You to See," Amy Berg's documentary claims the practice of child molestation in the entertainment industry is pervasive.