Read issue Subscribe to access more than 300 print issues of Film Comment in our comprehensively indexed, searchable archive. March-April 2008 Read online Readers Comments: The Best Movies of 2007 by Film Comment Readers Comments: The Best Movies of 2007 Extended Readers Poll Results: The Best Movies of 2007 The 50 best movies of 2007, as ranked by our readers, for your pleasure and ours by Film Comment Extended Readers Poll Results: The Best Movies of 2007 The Body Politic The films of Nicolas Klotz interrogate the new world order from the lower depths to the executive suite by Irina Leimbacher The Body Politic Finding Herself: Meryl Streep The everlasting prime of an acting powerhouse who gracefully eludes definition yet is every inch a star by Molly Haskell Finding Herself: Meryl Streep Department Editor’s Letter by Gavin Smith Opening Shots by Film Comment Letters by Film Comment Critics’ Choice by Film Comment Closing Shots by photographers Godlis, C.J. Contino, and Marcy Garriott Column Distributor Wanted: Captain Ahab by Elisabeth Lequeret Flashback: Sleep Furiously by Alex Cox Site Specifics: Observations on Film Art and Film Art by Paul Fileri Olaf’s World: Patrick Tam by Olaf Möller Sound & Vision: No Country for Old Men by Philip Brophy Sound & Vision: Antonioni’s Technically Sweet by Chris Chang Art of the Real: Hearts of Darkness by Paul Arthur Encore: It Always Rains on Sunday by Bertrand Tavernier Year in Review Readers’ Poll: The 30 Best Films of 2007 by Film Comment Feature The Return of the Repressed: Horror Remakes by Nathan Lee A Better Tomorrow: Munyurangabo Lee Isaac Chung’s astonishing debut, Munyurangabo, finds life after death in the killing fields of Rwanda by Robin Wood Shine a Light by Paul Arthur The 33rd Annual Grosses Gloss by Alec Harvey and Donald Wilson Festival Coverage Sundance Film Festival: Back from the Brink by Amy Taubin Sundance Film Festival: The Monster That Ate Main Street by Laura Kern Rotterdam Film Festival: Faces and Places by Chris Darke Rotterdam Film Festival: Small Is Beautiful by Gavin Smith Screenings Boarding Gate by Jessica Winter Stalags by Stuart Klawans Standard Operating Procedure by Michael Chaiken Flight of the Red Balloon by Megan Ratner Paranoid Park by David Ehrenstein J’entends plus la guitare by Paul Fileri Love Songs by Kristin M. Jones Home Movies Films of Frederick Wiseman by Nicolas Rapold Gangsters Collection, Vol. 3 by Kent Jones Nathalie Granger by David Zuckerman Jones by Amy Taubin Love Unto Death by Michael Chaiken Summer Palace by Aily Nash Antonio Gaudi by Evan Davis The Living End by Nathan Lee Day Break by Gavin Smith Tooth and Nail by Chris Chang Readings The World and Its Double by Chris Fujiwara by Robert Horton In Brief by Nicolas Rapold, Joshua Cody, and Patrick Friel
Read issue Subscribe to access more than 300 print issues of Film Comment in our comprehensively indexed, searchable archive. March-April 2008
Read issue Subscribe to access more than 300 print issues of Film Comment in our comprehensively indexed, searchable archive.
Extended Readers Poll Results: The Best Movies of 2007 The 50 best movies of 2007, as ranked by our readers, for your pleasure and ours by Film Comment Extended Readers Poll Results: The Best Movies of 2007
Extended Readers Poll Results: The Best Movies of 2007 The 50 best movies of 2007, as ranked by our readers, for your pleasure and ours by Film Comment
The Body Politic The films of Nicolas Klotz interrogate the new world order from the lower depths to the executive suite by Irina Leimbacher The Body Politic
The Body Politic The films of Nicolas Klotz interrogate the new world order from the lower depths to the executive suite by Irina Leimbacher
Finding Herself: Meryl Streep The everlasting prime of an acting powerhouse who gracefully eludes definition yet is every inch a star by Molly Haskell Finding Herself: Meryl Streep
Finding Herself: Meryl Streep The everlasting prime of an acting powerhouse who gracefully eludes definition yet is every inch a star by Molly Haskell
A Better Tomorrow: Munyurangabo Lee Isaac Chung’s astonishing debut, Munyurangabo, finds life after death in the killing fields of Rwanda by Robin Wood