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Ben Kenigsberg

Articles written by the author

Uganda New York Times entertainment
25 Jul 2019
In TV terms, the biographical film “Mike Wallace Is Here” is effectively a feature-length recap. Using only archival footage, the director Avi Belkin distills more than five decades of the longtime “60 Minutes” correspondent’s career on camera to an hour and a half. Presenting Wallace with relatively little mediation is a natural way to tell this story, even as it creates a limitation. Documentary as autobiography, the movie shows a man who is always cultivating his appearance for an audience...
Uganda New York Times entertainment
18 Jul 2019
It takes confidence and a healthy amount of narcissism to direct yourself in a farce about two women who engage in competitive psychological gamesmanship for the pleasure of your company. That is true even if you are not the script’s sole author (and the other is veteran screenwriter and longtime Luis Buñuel collaborator Jean-Claude Carrière).
Uganda New York Times entertainment
5 Jul 2019
In “Phil,” Greg Kinnear acts and directs, which has left him without at least one important person to say “no.” Still, even the most exacting auteur might have labored to help him make sense of this title character. The film opens with Phil, a suicidal dentist, preparing to throw himself off a bridge, then backing off, despite the encouragement of onlookers and the thematically appropriate musical accompaniment of “(I Never Promised You a) Rose Garden” on his car radio.
'Phil' review: A messy story about a suicidal dentist
Uganda New York Times entertainment
9 May 2019
“Pokémon Detective Pikachu” is the first feature to pivot on a pairing of animated characters from the Japanese merchandising juggernaut and real live actors. But why even bother? The human stars barely look like they have pulses. The plotting proceeds with the one-mission-then-the-next logic of a video game, and even the notion of film noir feels bogus. When we see a clip from a gangster picture on screen, it’s the fake movie from “Home Alone.”
Uganda New York Times entertainment
11 Apr 2019
It’s fitting that “Missing Link,” which concerns a lovable creature a step behind on the evolutionary ladder, has been made with stop-motion animation, the painstaking process by which models and puppets are photographed to create the illusion of movement. In form and content, it’s a movie about fighting obsolescence. The perfection of the computer animation would simply be wrong.
Uganda New York Times entertainment
5 Apr 2019
Apart from Frederick Wiseman’s “Ex Libris: The New York Public Library,” few movies have celebrated book-lending institutions as havens of fair-mindedness and pluralism, so it’s tempting to give a pass to “The Public” as a rousing, lovingly made civics lesson, even if its screenplay does not seem fated for shelves.
Uganda New York Times entertainment
3 Apr 2019
Adapted by David Hare from a monologue he performed on stage in London and at the Public in New York, the animated feature “Wall” begins with a plane arriving in Israel and ends with one flying away.
'Wall' review: A writer reflects on borders
Uganda New York Times entertainment
27 Mar 2019
Despite its surface-level placidity, the Israeli feature “Working Woman” unfolds like a psychological thriller — a procedural that, as it tightens its grip, captures how workplace sexual harassment slowly takes over one woman’s life.
'Working Woman' review: Plumbing a toxic work environment in Israel
Uganda New York Times entertainment
9 Mar 2019
By NASA’s estimate, 530 million people watched Neil Armstrong’s walk on the moon in July 1969, making it one of the most widely seen television events in history. Now a new film allows moviegoers to experience the Apollo 11 mission from unexpected angles through mesmerizing footage and recordings that were never intended for a large viewership — or even necessarily for the public.
Uganda New York Times entertainment
21 Feb 2019
In the first movie (2010), Hiccup (voiced by Jay Baruchel), through a secret friendship with a not-so-fearsome dragon, Toothless, broke with centuries of Viking tradition to bring about a cease-fire (and cease-firebreathing) in human-dragon affairs.
'How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World' Review: A series scales up
Uganda New York Times entertainment
14 Feb 2019
For roughly the first 50 minutes of “Parkland: Inside Building 12,” students and teachers recall last year’s attack at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in harrowing detail: who heard what and when, who hid where, which doors were locked, who was bleeding or killed. Much of the second hour is then devoted to remembering the 17 dead, one by one. At the close, when Emma González is shown reciting their names at the March for Our Lives rally, we have a mental image of each person.
'Parkland: Inside Building 12' Review: Recounting the Attack in Painful Detail