• Home
  • Faces
  • Movies
  • The Diaries
  • The Briefly
  • Minimalist Fashionista
  • Selfies Interviews
  • About
  • contact
Menu

E. Nina Rothe

Film. Fashion. Life.
  • Home
  • Faces
  • Movies
  • The Diaries
  • The Briefly
  • Minimalist Fashionista
  • Selfies Interviews
  • About
  • contact
×

In-depth interviews and casual chats with the personalities and influencers of today, yesterday and tomorrow.

rachid-bouchareb.jpg

Rachid Bouchareb at Berlinale 2016: "Peace Should Be a Subject Taught in Schools"

E. Nina Rothe January 3, 2020

I find that there is a leitmotif running through three-time Oscar nominated filmmaker Rachid Bouchareb’s work. It’s the idea that peace is fragile, no matter how idyllic the setting of your life, there could always be something threatening to invade it, to destroy the status quo.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Rachid Bouchareb, Iran crisis, peace, Berlinale, Road to Istanbul, film
Comment
Olivier Assayas at the Rome Film Festival -- Photo by Ernesto S. Ruscio/Getty Images courtesy of the Rome Film Festival

Olivier Assayas at the Rome Film Festival -- Photo by Ernesto S. Ruscio/Getty Images courtesy of the Rome Film Festival

The Fascinating Olivier Assayas at this year's Rome Film Festival

E. Nina Rothe November 2, 2019

Olivier Assayas is a filmmaker who also happened to have been a film critic. He's a French auteur who also spoke to journalists in perfect Italian while at the recent Rome Film Festival. He is a man born in the mid-50's who looks and dresses like he could be 40-something, as well as a revered name in world cinema who admits that film students today have created their own relationship with movies thanks to the internet. He makes for a fascinating read.

Read More
In Celebrity, Interviews, Festivals Tags Olivier Assayas, Rome Film Festival, Mostra del cinema di Roma, Rome, French film, cinema
Comment
John Travolta, photo courtesy of the Rome Film Festival

John Travolta, photo courtesy of the Rome Film Festival

Five questions for John Travolta at the Rome Film Festival

E. Nina Rothe October 29, 2019

Earlier last week, onstage, John Travolta appeared at ease, elegant and way younger than his 65 years. I mean, all newly bald headed and such, still how does he do it?? Maybe it was the leather jacket, maybe his calm demeanor and philosophy of life or maybe just his contentment at being a superstar — and obviously loving it! There is none of that tormented famous person attitude, or apologizing for having become a household name so young. No, Travolta is the actor and the actor is the superstar — no apologies needed or required.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews Tags John Travolta, The Fanatic, Rome International Film Festival, Rome Film Festival, Festa del cinema di Roma, Marlon Brando, Sofia Loren, Federico Fellini, Saturday Night Fever, Grease, Pulp Fiction
Comment
Photo by © Stephane Cardinale, courtesy of the Marrakech International Film Festival

Photo by © Stephane Cardinale, courtesy of the Marrakech International Film Festival

Can't get better than this! Robert Redford at the Marrakech International Film Festival

E. Nina Rothe October 24, 2019

There is one actor who has been able to give me goosebumps throughout my life and his career — it’s Robert Redford. And the love I have for his work doesn’t stop at him as screen star either. As a not-quite-yet teenager in Florence, Italy I went to watch ‘Ordinary People’ 14 times at the movies. I remember because my parents thought it had been enough on number 13 but I didn’t want that number looming over my viewing and threw a tantrum until they finally drove me to watch it the 14th time. I dragged a few of my friends, and each drew the line at the second viewing. But to me, that film represents part of the cinematic soundtrack of my youth.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Movies Tags Marrakech International Film Festival, Robert Redford, Ordinary People, Morocco, Marrakech
Comment
Ethan Coen at Rome Film Festival

Dissecting the movies: Ethan Coen at the Rome Film Festival

E. Nina Rothe October 20, 2019

It was all hush hush. Rome Film Festival artistic director Antonio Monda came to greet us at the press screening of the opening film, Edward Norton’s ‘Motherless Brooklyn’ where he told us Ethan Coen didn’t want to give a press conference prior to his encounter with the public. Why? Because the subject and theme of his conversation was a secret worthy of, it seemed, J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI.

So, I waited. I wondered and imagined that Coen, one half of the wondrous brother duo that makes those incredible films full of humor and human tragedy — I’m talking about Ethan and Joel Coen of course — would make the wait worth while and introduce us, the audience, to something utterly wild. And when it came time for his public talk, he did.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Movies Tags Ethan Coen, Rome Film Festival, Festa del cinema di Roma, Antonio Monda, J. Edgar Hoover, Hollywood, Joel Coen, Surgery!, Casablanca, Paul Henreid, Hollow Triumph, noir genre, The Doctor, William Hurt, Mandy Patinkin, Rock Hudson, John Frankenheimer, Takashi Miike, Audition, MeToo
Comment
Ralph Fiennes

Ralph Fiennes to receive Outstanding Achievement Award at this year's Cairo Film Fest

E. Nina Rothe October 26, 2018

Most who know me have heard by now what a big fan I am of the recently elected president of the Cairo International Film Festival, Mohamed Hefzy. To learn more about this great cinematic personality and wonderful supporter of film in and from the Arab region, you can read my interview with Hefzy on The National.

But perhaps not as many people know what a huge fan of Ralph Fiennes I am. I mean, the man redefined acting for anyone who frequented the movies from the 1990s onward. One word, or actually two — ‘Wuthering Heights’ — and with Juliette Binoche. I gotcha right?

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals Tags Ralph Fiennes, Cairo International Film Festival, Egypt, Cairo, CIFF, Mohamed Hefzy, Shakespeare, Kathryn Bigelow, Wes Anderson, Steven Spielberg, The Hurt Locker, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Hamlet, Coriolanus, Wuthering Heights, The English Patient, Game Show, BAFTA Award, Oscar nominated, Juliette Binoche, Arab cinema, Egyptian cinema, Antony & Cleopatra, London, The White Crow, Viggo Mortensen Mahershala Ali, Mahershala Ali
Comment
Robert De Niro

This year's Marrakech International Film Festival pays homage to Robert De Niro

E. Nina Rothe October 1, 2018

International Film Festival is bringing Robert De Niro to the desert city in Morocco. You know, the favorite home of world renowned fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent and one of the most beautiful cities on earth, complete with oasis, luxury and camels, is going to host the wondrous movie star himself! Now that got me thinking about this shot I took above.

But more on that a bit later…

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals Tags Robert De Niro, Spike Lee, Tribeca Film Festival, Tribeca All Access, Tribeca Film Institute, Marrakech International Film Festival, Morocco, Yves Saint Laurent, Arab cinema, Doha Tribeca Film Institute
Comment
Giona A. Nazzaro flanked by the filmmakers of ‘Still Recording’ Ghiath Ayoub and Saeed Al Batal

Giona A. Nazzaro flanked by the filmmakers of ‘Still Recording’ Ghiath Ayoub and Saeed Al Batal

"Would you live in the world of this director?”: Venice Film Critics Week's Giona A. Nazzaro discloses his most personal programming secret

E. Nina Rothe September 26, 2018

Having just closed its thirty-third edition, the Settimana Internazionale della Critica (Venice International Film Critics Week also known as SIC for short) is the Venice festival sidebar that can boast the discovery of such world cinema masters as Olivier Assayas (SIC 1986), Pedro Costa (SIC 1989), Bryan Singer (SIC 1993), Peter Mullan (SIC 1998), Abdellatif Kechiche (SIC 2000), as well as Ronit and Shlomi Elkabets (SIC 2004). Each year, and year after year since the early ‘80s, the Venice International Film Critics Week has been changing cinema and in the process, also reshaping us and making us better. Because I do believe that cinema is undisputedly the fastest and most efficient way to change the world.

For the past three years renowned Italian film journalist and critic Giona A. Nazzaro has been SIC’s General Delegate, a duty he was elected to by a committee and for which the current mandate expires with this edition. Inshallah, as those of us who have spent more than a day or two in the Arab world are used to saying, he will be reelected to another mandate. I’ve grown quite fond of Nazzaro, in a truly professional way. He’s kind and very talented, but he also has an incredible instinct for discovering the unprecedented. And the past three years have been exciting ones at the SIC.

Read More
In Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Olivier Assayas, Ghiath Ayoub, Saeed Al Batal, Settimana Internazionale della Critica, Venice International Film Critics Week, Venice International Film Festival, Bryan Singer, Peter Mullan, Pedro Costa, Abdellatif Kechiche, Ronit and Shlomi Elkabets, Giona A. Nazzaro, MENA region, Qumra, Doha, Bertrand Mandico, The Wild Boys, Ala Eddine Slim, Tunisia, Syria, Lotfi Bouchnak, Still Recording, Neorealism, New Deal, Roosevelt, A Kasha, Sudan, Hajooj Kuka, Africa, Anna Eriksson, M, Marilyn Monroe
Comment
Photo of Bruno Dumont by Locarno Festival/Samuel Golay

Photo of Bruno Dumont by Locarno Festival/Samuel Golay

Bruno Dumont in Locarno: "I believe in the power of cinema"

E. Nina Rothe August 8, 2018

Back in 1999, at the Festival de Cannes, Bruno Dumont presented 'Humanity' ('L'humanité') a film that caused an uproar among critics, who initially mocked and then went on to three of the top awards from the Competition jury headed by David Cronenberg.

So, in case you were wondering, Dumont seems to always manage the last laugh. 

Fast forward almost two decades and Dumont is getting quite a lot of laughs indeed, this time from audiences at the Locarno Festival watching the world premiere of the latest installment of the TV series the French filmmaker started for ARTE in 2014. The original installment was 'Li'l Quinquin', now his characters are all four years older and the second season is titled 'CoinCoin and the Extra-Humans'. 

Read More
In Celebrity, Interviews, Festivals Tags Bruno Dumont, Locarno Festival, Locarno 71, Humanity, Festival de Cannes, David Cronenberg, Grand Prix, Li'l Quinquin, ARTE, CoinCoin and the Extra-Humans, Peter Sellers, France, French cinema, Camille Claudel, Juliette Binoche
Comment
Demian Hernandez in Dominga Sotomayor's 'Too Late to Die Young'

Demian Hernandez in Dominga Sotomayor's 'Too Late to Die Young'

Dominga Sotomayor wraps us in colors of nostalgia with 'Too Late to Die Young' in Locarno

E. Nina Rothe August 7, 2018

It was the film I most craved to watch at this year's Locarno Festival, and it happened to be the very first film I watched here. It didn't disappoint me!

Dominga Sotomayor's 'Too Late to Die Young' ('Tarde Para Morir Joven') is a beautiful shot, strangely evocative and perfectly soothing piece of filmmaking. Yet it somehow has stayed with me throughout the festival, a meter by which I have been judging everything else I've watched in Locarno.

Sotomayor’s film tells the simple enough yet unusual tale of a teenager, Sofia (played by Demian Hernandez) coming of age in a commune on the slopes of the Andes just above Santiago, Chile and the surrounding cast of characters that accompany her journey all the way to the final climax of the film. It is accented by this etherial cinematography and cool sounds and you can't help, as an audience member, but become wrapped in nostalgia. In this film's case, unlike a Syrian filmmaker once said to me when I interviewed him for his film, childhood is a geographical place and Sotomayor brings us there to experience it along with her. It's her memories of growing up in a community very much like the one in the film.

I caught up with the cool and self assured Sotomayor in Locarno where the film screens as part of the festival's International Competition. 

Read More
In Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Dominga Sotomayor, Doha Film Institute, Qumra, Too Late to Die Young, Tarde Para Morir Joven, DFI, Locarno Festival, Locarno 71, Chile, Latin America, cinema, woman filmmaker, Inti Briones
Comment
Kyle Cooper with his Vision Award Ticinomoda, photo copyright: @ Locarno Festival

Kyle Cooper with his Vision Award Ticinomoda, photo copyright: @ Locarno Festival

Kyle Cooper in Locarno: The magic within each new beginning (titles)

E. Nina Rothe August 7, 2018

Film and TV titles designer Kyle Cooper was at the Locarno Festival this year to be bestowed with the Vision Award Ticinomoda for his career. In fact, if you research Cooper you will be impressed by how much he's done. Guaranteed. Almost every single title sequence for favorite films and beloved TV series have been designed or influenced in some way or another by Cooper.

From 'Se7en' to 'Indecent Proposal', from 'The Joy Luck Club' to 'Quiz Show', from 'Mission: Impossible' to 'The Secret Life of Walter Mitty', and for TV 'The Walking Dead', 'Feud' and 'American Horror Stories' among much, much more, Cooper has been involved in creating those titles. 

And if you've ever tried to watch a film without titles, to me it's a bit like traveling without buying a ticket first. Yes, it can be done and you will probably get to the destination desired, but the experience you have set yourself up for won't be quite the same. Disorganized, late and without a clue is never a good way to start off. And arrive.

Read More
In Celebrity, Interviews, Festivals Tags Kyle Cooper, Locarno Festival, Locarno 71, Ben Stiller, Se7en, To Kill a Mockingbird, American Horror Story, Feud, The Walking Dead, Netflix, Welcome Back Kotter, The Wild Wild West, Nanny and the Professor, Richard Alan Greenberg, UMass, Vision Award Ticinomoda, Indecent Proposal, Quiz Show, Mission: Impossible
Comment
Mohamed Hefzy

Mohamed Hefzy

Mohamed Hefzy is the new Cairo Film Festival president, and here's why that's great news!

E. Nina Rothe July 13, 2018

Just over a month before the Festival de Cannes kicked off on the Croisette, an announcement rocked the world of Arab cinema: Egyptian producer extraordinaire Mohamed Hefzy would be the new head of the Cairo International Film Festival. There are many reasons why Hefzy is the perfect man for the job, since CIFF has had its share of troubles following the revolutions of the Arab Spring. Among them, that he's long been a great cinematic bridge between the Arab world and the West. Also to keep in mind, the movie business in Egypt has gone through changes that would have shut the industry down in most other countries, and yet out of those ashes it is thanks to a visionary producer like Hefzy that Egyptian films are now seen beyond the Arab world.

I can easily quote the 'Yomeddine' example -- a simple, straight from the heart indie-like film that competed for the Palme d'Or this year in Cannes. Yes, in Competition, in Cannes. Not bad for a debut feature film!

So knowing that Hefzy will be at the helm of the oldest and most prestigious festival in Egypt is great news to this lover of Arab cinema.

Read More
In Celebrity, Interviews, Festivals Tags Mohamed Hefzy, Cairo International Film Festival, CIFF, DIFF, Dubai International Film Festival, Cairo, Egypt, Egyptian films, Yomeddine, Villa 69, Rags and Tatters, Clash, Mohamed Diab, A B Shawky, producers, Ahmad Abdalla, Film Clinic, Arab Spring, Egyptian cinema, Mad Solutions, Cannes film festival, Festival de Cannes, CNN, Inside the Middle East, E. Nina Rothe
Comment
Andy Warhol and Edie Sedgwick

Andy Warhol and Edie Sedgwick

The "Youthquaker" and her Mentor: Edie Sedgwick and Andy Warhol finally reunite in a retrospective of their collaboration at FIDMarseille

E. Nina Rothe July 4, 2018

"I'm in love with everyone I've ever met in one way or another. I'm just a crazy, unhinged disaster of a human being." -- Edie Sedgwick

You can have your Kim Kardashians, your Gigi Hadids, your newly transformed princesses and Instagram sensations, I'll take Edie Sedgwick every day over any of them. In fact, nearly fifty years after her death, she remains for this child of the 70s a favorite fashion icon, an "It Girl" like no other and an example whose style and attitude I always keep in my consciousness.

So why has Sedgwick remained such a star, even though she could appear to have done little more than be born a socialite and die at age 28, of an overdose-slash-suicide after several stretches in mental institutions? Because she once met Andy Warhol, whom with his usual flair for discovering the broken yet utterly fascinating -- see Jean-Michel Basquiat and Candy Darling among many many more -- made of Sedgwick the original reality star. She is the predecessor of the Kardashians, only her reality was captured on film, by Warhol, a master artist of creation.

Read More
In Celebrity, Fashion, Festivals, Movies Tags Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick, FIDMarseille, Youthquaker, it Girl, Kim Kardashian, Gigi Hadid, NYC, Marseille International Film Festival, Marseille, France, Isabelle Huppert, Albert Serra, Roi Soleil, Khaled Abdulwahed, Backyard, FIDLab, Andy Warhol Museum, Museum of the Moving Image, MoMA, David Schwartz, Poor Little Rich Girl, Reality TV
Comment
Lee Daniels at DIFF 2014

Five Perfect Lessons I Learned from Lee Daniels in Dubai

E. Nina Rothe June 15, 2018

Back in 2014, filmmaker and producer Lee Daniels visited the Dubai International Film Festival. What came out of our chat fueled my love for cinema and made me believe in humanity again. It was the age of Obama then, a different America and a different world. 

But I discovered I need to revisit his wisdoms today. They make even more sense now.

Read More
In Festivals, Celebrity, Interviews Tags Lee Daniels, DIFF, Dubai, Life lessons, cinema, Empire, Terrence Howard, FOX, Absolutely Fabulous, Prime Suspect, Idris Elba, Arabic culture, America, Nadine Labaki, Virginia Madsen, The Butler, Burj Al Arab, Getty Images
Comment
Matteo Garrone, photo by Stefano Baroni

Matteo Garrone, photo by Stefano Baroni

Matteo Garrone on 'Dogman' and the man who finally made the film happen, his actor Marcello Fonte

E. Nina Rothe May 20, 2018

The magic of Matteo Garrone's latest 'Dogman' lies in the Italian filmmaker's fantastical vision -- a creativity simply like no other in narrative cinema. There is something about how this Cannes Competition title was shot, almost surrealistic and old timey, and how the story has been told without compromise that left me breathless. 

'Dogman' is a true collaboration between two exceptional individuals, Garrone as its director of course and his leading man Marcello Fonte, whom the filmmaker allows to steal the show without any ego or possessiveness to the story he wrote (along with Massimo Gaudioso and Ugo Chiti). In fact, Fonte manages to be even more mesmerizing than the dogs in 'Dogman' and those four legged creatures are plentiful and quite spellbinding themselves. Some would say that by the final image of 'Dogman' Fonte has become one of them, an ownerless dog who just lost his master. 


Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Matteo Garrone, Dogman, Festival de Cannes, Cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Competition, Gomorrah, Reality, Tale of Tales, The Embalmer, Mid-August Lunch, Marcello Fonte, Buster Keaton, Stefano Baroni, Best Actor prize Cannes, Palme d'Or
Comment
Photo courtesy of Annemarie Jacir

Photo courtesy of Annemarie Jacir

Why Cannes' Un Certain Regard Jury member Annemarie Jacir is a personal favorite

E. Nina Rothe May 9, 2018

I fell in love with her film 'Salt of This Sea' first, captured by its heroine Soraya, who was unapologetically woman and so perfectly angry. Then I got to interview her during the now defunct Abu Dhabi Film Festival and found her to be as wonderfully real as her film characters are. Once again, one of her films 'When I Saw You' made me dream from my cinema seat and I found its omissions from that year's Oscar race a large oversight. 

Read More
In Festivals, Interviews Tags Annemarie Jacir, Un Certain Regard, Jury, Cannes Jury, Benicio del Toro, Cannes, Festival de Cannes, Cannes Film Festival, When I Saw YOu, Salt of This Sea, Wajib, Abu Dhabi Film Festival, MENA region, Saudi Arabia pavilion Cannes, Palestinian, Palestine
Comment
Jeffrey Wright with Luke Hemsworth on the Dubai International Film Festival red carpet in 2016Photo courtesy of DIFF

Jeffrey Wright with Luke Hemsworth on the Dubai International Film Festival red carpet in 2016

Photo courtesy of DIFF

"We are American, no matter who we are": Jeffrey Wright on 'Westworld', role-playing and trusting "the Other"

E. Nina Rothe April 21, 2018

In early December of 2016, just as the last episode of the first season of the HBO series 'Westworld' aired in the US, I sat down with Jeffrey Wright -- at the Dubai Intentional Film Festival. 

I've always been a fan of Wright's work, from his unforgettable Tony and Emmy award winning performance on Broadway and TV as Belize in 'Angels in America' to his always welcomed appearances in political thrillers such as 'Syriana', 'The Ides of March' and 'The Manchurian Candidate'. Yet the final straw of my enchantment with this understated actor who is also a relentless human rights advocate, was his performance as Jean-Michel Basquiat in the 1996 Julian Schnabel film on the American artist. In one beautiful performance, Wright portrayed all the vulnerability and talent of a man who seemed to live in a world of his own, and yet had his cultural roots deeply planted in the American way.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews Tags Jeffrey Wright, Dubai International Film Festival, Dubai, Westworld, HBO, Angels in America, Syriana, The Ides of March, The Manchurian Candidate, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julian Schnabel, Basquiat, America, Bernard Lowe, Jonathan Nolan, Lisa Joy, J. J. Abrams
Comment
Nadine Labaki photographed by Ammar Abd Rabbo

Nadine Labaki photographed by Ammar Abd Rabbo

Nadine Labaki on Directing, Freedom and Cinema’s True Power

E. Nina Rothe April 15, 2018

A good forty-four years after Lebanese director Heiny Srour had her film featured in the Official Competition at the Festival de Cannes, Nadine Labaki once again breaks all records, foregoes all the unspoken rules and becomes the second woman filmmaker from the Arab world ever to be chosen to be part of the prestigious lineup. And in fact, we can count the women directors who have been on that list on the tips of our fingers... 

It's no wonder that the cool, glamorous and utterly fantastic Labaki and her crew (including her composer husband Khaled Mouzanar, who lends the music to all her cinematic masterpieces) celebrated the news of her latest 'Capernaum' being nominated for a Palme d'Or with a video that has gone viral on her social media.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews Tags Nadine Labaki, Festival de Cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Caramel, Where do we go now?, Ammar Abd Rabbo, cinema, Isabella Rossellini, Tahar Rahim, Haifaa Al Mansour, Panos Koutras, Martin Scorsese, Lebanon, Lebanese cinema, Arab cinema, MeToo, Capharnaum, Official Competition, Khaled Mouzanar, Palme d'Or, Heiny Srour, SAAT EL TAHRIR DAKKAT, BARRA YA ISTI 'MAR, Capernaum
Comment
Photo courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

Photo courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

“Being a woman I see as a great advantage”: Lucrecia Martel on ‘Zama’, Quentin Tarantino and Avoiding Gender Violence in Films

E. Nina Rothe April 7, 2018

While I interview Argentinian filmmaker Lucrecia Martel in Venice I can’t help but feel incredibly vulnerable. For one, I started writing about cinema and attending film festivals after her previous film ‘The Headless Woman’ was presented at the Cannes Film Festival in 2008. And I never had a chance to watch either ‘The Holy Girl’ or ‘La Ciénaga’ before that. So I’m a Martel virgin going into her latest ‘Zama’.

But mostly, I feel unguarded, bare in the presence of this quietly powerful woman. She is a filmmaker, an artist, an undeniable trendsetter — Martel smokes a cigar during our interview and of course, there are those trademark cool glasses she wears — but she is first and foremost a formidable woman. I gush constantly and I’ll admit hearing myself on tape to transcribe our interview afterwards is painful.

Read More
In Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Lucrecia Martel, Zama, IFC Center, Film Society of Lincoln Center, Laemmle Royal Theater, NYC, Los Angeles, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Argentina, women filmmakers, Come and See, George Clooney, Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino, Antonio di Benedetto, Kathryn Bigelow, Latin America, The Headless Woman, La Cienaga, The Holy Girl, New York, Variety, Strand Distribution
Comment
A still from ‘Super Size Me 2: Holy Chicken!’

A still from ‘Super Size Me 2: Holy Chicken!’

“I think movies can be revolutionary”: Morgan Spurlock Talks ‘Super Size Me 2: Holy Chicken!’

E. Nina Rothe March 3, 2018

Morgan Spurlock’s latest film ‘Super Size Me 2: Holy Chicken!’ is quite simply a perfectly truthful, wonderfully watchable, life-changing and good habit forming example of why movies will always show us the way forward.

Following is the interview I conducted with Spurlock in Dubai, where he talked about the mafia of “Big Chicken”, how poultry farmers get the short end of the nugget in the U.S. and how to vote for better food practices using the power of our wallets.

Read More
In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Morgan Spurlock, Super Size Me 2: Holy Chicken!, Dubai International Film Festival, DIFF, Dubai, YouTube, Big Chicken, TWitter, Warrior Poets, vegetarians, meat-eaters
Comment
← NewerOlder →
Post Archive
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • November 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • April 2020
  • February 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
 

Featured Posts

Featured
SONS OF DETROIT Jeremy Xido for ENinaRothe.jpg
Nov 19, 2025
Jeremy Xido's 'Sons of Detroit' shines the light on our own preconceptions about race and the American dream
Nov 19, 2025
Nov 19, 2025
Park Avenue by Gaby Dellal for ENinaRothe.jpg
Nov 13, 2025
Gaby Dellal's latest film 'Park Avenue' starring Fiona Shaw is a feast for the senses
Nov 13, 2025
Nov 13, 2025
Belen film Argentina Oscar submission for ENinaRothe.jpg
Nov 6, 2025
When truth is courage: Argentinian Oscar submission 'Belén' is a serious Oscar contender
Nov 6, 2025
Nov 6, 2025
It Was Just an Accident Jafar Panahi for ENinaRothe.jpg
Oct 29, 2025
Why Jafar Panahi's 'It Was Just an Accident' is a serious awards contender this year
Oct 29, 2025
Oct 29, 2025
is-this-thing-on Will Arnett for ENinaRothe.jpg
Oct 20, 2025
Bradley Cooper's 'Is This Thing On?' is that delicious adult romcom you didn't know you needed!
Oct 20, 2025
Oct 20, 2025