“It took some time for me to figure out why The Room Next Door sounded so familiar, and then I realized that the dialogue is straight out of an ‘80s Woody Allen movie. These are verbose New Yorkers musing about art, literature, morality and death. If you recast the leads with Mia Farrow and Dianne Wiest, the film could be from Allen’s Another Woman era.” – WBUR’s Arts & Culture, 01/07/2025
Author Archives: Sean Burns
THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO
“Hurtles through the 178-minute running time at a breathless clip, with nods to modern franchise films that remind us how Dumas was writing the original action blockbusters some 200 years ago. The movie feels like it owes a lot to Nolan’s Dark Knight pictures, then you remember how much Nolan’s Dark Knight pictures owe to The Count Of Monte Cristo.” – North Shore Movies, 01/07/2025
FOUR FROSTY FILMS
Had a nice chat with Hanna Ali for WBUR’s The Weekender. The subject was movies where snow sets the scene, so I picked Robert Altman’s McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Curtis Hanson’s Wonder Boys, Steven Soderbergh’s Out Of Sight and Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining. Also, shout-outs to Dr. Zhivago, Batman Returns and anything where James Bond is skiing. – WBUR’s Arts & Culture, 01/03/2025
NICKEL BOYS
“The entire film is shot from the perspectives of our protagonists, two Black teenagers sent to a brutal, segregated reform school in the Jim Crow-era South. But Nickel Boys doesn’t aspire to be a work of muckraking outrage, instead opting for something more lyrical and experiential. You’re not just in there with the kids, you’re seeing everything through their eyes.” – WBUR’s Arts & Culture, 12/27/2024
WATCH WITH JEN SEASON 5: EPISODE 33 – PHYSICAL MEDIA
Joined my dear friend Jen Johans to discuss the new Criterion Collection disc of Howard Hawks’ Scarface on the season finale of Watch With Jen. This episode also includes the time S.A. Cosby took a date to see No Country For Old Men, William Boyle talking Paris, Texas and a slightly intoxicated Jed Ayres on Galaxy Quest and The Long Good Friday. – Watch With Jen, 12/27/2024
NOSFERATU
“By my rough estimate, it is the eleven-billionth adaptation of this material. We’ve seen it all before, but you’ve never seen it looking quite like this. The movie is a triumph of period-accurate production design and silvery, moonlight cinematography. I saw Nosferatu about a month ago and had a blast, though I haven’t thought about it once since leaving the theater.” – WBUR’s Arts & Culture, 12/24/2024
BABYGIRL
”So much of the post #MeToo discourse has addressed the inevitable power imbalances inherent in relationships and writer-director Reijn wants you to know she’s read it all. But desire is something messier and more mysterious than can be sorted out by a human resources department. You could even classify Babygirl as a romantic comedy. Sort of.” – WBUR’s Arts & Culture, 12/24/2024
A COMPLETE UNKNOWN
”He’s got all the tics and mannerisms, the smoked eyelids and punched cigarettes, but what’s missing is Dylan’s mischief. The role needed the rascally charisma of a young Jack Nicholson or Leonardo DiCaprio’s ability to coax the audience into a conspiratorial relationship. Chalamet nails Dylan’s smirk but not the sly twinkle behind it. It ain’t him, babe.” – WBUR’s Arts & Culture, 12/23/2024
DREAMING OF A WHITE CHRISTMAS
”White Christmas really isn’t much of a Christmas movie. It’s more of a backstage musical with Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye as Broadway superstars putting together a benefit show while romancing a singing sister act played by Rosemary Clooney and the dazzling Vera-Ellen. They’re all awfully cute and it’s written in such a way that nobody has to try very hard.” – Crooked Marquee, 12/20/2024
MUFASA: THE LION KING
“As in the ghastly 2019 remake, thousands of digital artists have been employed to render almost-but-not-quite photorealistic animals who sing Elton John songs. Except this time they’re Lin-Manuel Miranda songs. Disney honcho Bob Iger insists on calling Mufasa ‘live-action’, even though nothing in the film was live or acted. It’s just an uglier kind of animation.” – North Shore Movies, 12/17/2024









