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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to August Diehl published by this site and its partners.

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    Jul 23, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Movie review: Jolie is worth her 'Salt'

    "Salt" the film and Evelyn Salt the character are perpetually in motion and that's a good thing for its own sake and because it keeps audiences from dwelling on how unapologetically preposterous the plot in question is.
    "Salt" the film and Evelyn Salt the character are perpetually in motion and that's a good thing for its own sake and because it keeps audiences from dwelling on how unapologetically preposterous the plot in question is. And really, who goes to summer...

    Tags: Politics, Salt, Wanted (movie), Salt (movie), Andrzej Wajda

  2. Jul 21, 2010 | Orlando Sentinel
  3. Movie Review: Salt

    Frankly My Dear - Orlando Sentinel
    Salt is a Hollywood stuntman (and stunt woman) stimulus package, an espionage thriller filled with epic brawls, shootouts and a chase across the roofs of assorted semi trucks and tankers along the highway interchanges of Greater Washington, D.C. What, you...
  4. Jul 22, 2010 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  5. 'Salt'

    "Salt" is a Hollywood stuntman (and stunt woman) stimulus package, an espionage thriller filled with epic brawls, shootouts and a chase across the roofs of assorted semi trucks and tankers along the highway interchanges of Greater Washington, D.C. What,...

    Tags: Inglourious Basterds (movie), Politics, Salt, Wanted (movie), Salt (movie)

  6. Jul 8, 2005 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. ''The Ninth Day'

    Volker Schlöndorff's "The Ninth Day," an engrossing film from the director of "The Tin Drum," takes the viewer into an all-too-familiar world of the hell on Earth of Dachau — but with a difference. The grim setting is the so-called Priests' Block, reserved for dissidents among the clergy of all faiths, especially Roman Catholics. The guards are uniformly virulent anti-papists and resort to crucifixion as a form of punishment.
    Times Staff Writer
    Volker Schlöndorff's "The Ninth Day," an engrossing film from the director of "The Tin Drum," takes the viewer into an all-too-familiar world of the hell on Earth of Dachau — but with a difference. The grim setting is the so-called Priests' Block,...

    Tags: Education, Foods and Beverages, Roman Catholicism, Lifestyle and Leisure, Family

  8. Jun 16, 2005 |Story| Metromix
  9. Movie review: 'The Ninth Day'

    Special to the Tribune
    2 stars (out of four) "The Ninth Day," Volker Schloendorff's story about a priest in an ethical crucible during the Holocaust, is a film that strives for meaning and resonance but doesn't quite work. Based loosely on the prison diaries of the Rev. Jean...

    Tags: Roman Catholicism, Death, Gebhardts, Movies, The Holocaust (1934-1945)

  10. Oct 4, 2006 |Story| Metromix
  11. Lots more film fest reviews!

    Stranger Than Fiction (U.S.) **1/2 In this bit of Charlie Kaufman lite, IRS agent Harold Crick (Will Ferrell) hears his life narrated, and the voice tells him he's going to die soon. He's actually a character in a novelist's (Emma Thompson) book. Cute...

    Tags: Channing Tatum, John C. McGinley, John Heard, Toby Keith, Literature

  12. Jun 11, 2003 |Story| Metromix
  13. Movie review: 'Tattoo'

    Chicago Tribune Staff Writer
    3 1/2 stars (out of 4) Unlike their cinematic ancestors, today's movie serial killers are collectors. In 1999, there was Denzel Washington in "The Bone Collector," and eight years before that, Buffalo Bill from "The Silence of the Lambs" was stockpiling...

    Tags: Denzel Washington, New York City Police Department, Crimes, Movies, Death

  14. Jun 13, 2003 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. 'Love the Hard Way'

    The ersatz-grunge look of "Love the Hard Way" almost makes this independent film worth a peek, but it's likely that most eyes will be fixed on Adrien Brody parading about in his knickers. Shot before "The Pianist," the modestly mounted feature gives the young actor's admirers ample opportunity to indulge in their admiration since cinematographer Guy Dufaux captures Brody's every squint and bedroom move like an obsessive lover. Too bad the rest of the film, packed with characters wallowing in self-conscious cool that's as tedious as their anomie, doesn't merit such scrupulous attention.
    Times Staff Writer
    The ersatz-grunge look of "Love the Hard Way" almost makes this independent film worth a peek, but it's likely that most eyes will be fixed on Adrien Brody parading about in his knickers. Shot before "The Pianist," the modestly mounted feature gives the...

    Tags: Crimes, Pam Grier, Prostitution, Charles Bukowski, Movies

  16. Jul 11, 2003 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. 'Tattoo'

    Times Staff Writer
    Robert Schwentke's sleek, chilling "Tattoo" lets us know from its opening shot of a young woman running naked along dark Berlin streets, blood streaming down her back, that we're in for strong stuff. The film is an engrossing and original police...

    Tags: Movies, Crimes, Mother (movie), Entertainment, Berlin (Germany)

  18. Jun 25, 2003 |Story| Metromix
  19. Movie review: 'Love the Hard Way'

    Chicago Tribune Staff Writer
    2 1/2 stars (out of 4) In a snakeskin jacket, Adrien Brody echoes Nicolas Cage's character in "Wild at Heart." Sure, Brody is a bit skinny - maybe in need of a haircut, much like Cage's Sailor Ripley. But the swagger is there, minus Cage's Elvis-inspired...

    Tags: Crimes, Pam Grier, Prostitution, Theft, Movies

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