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E. Nina Rothe

Film. Fashion. Life.
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Favorite movies only need apply. Life is too short to write about what I didn't enjoy. 

Harvey Schein, photo courtesy of the Schein family archives

Justin Schein's 'Death & Taxes' reexamines the American Dream, all the while painting a bold family portrait

E. Nina Rothe July 16, 2025

And this documentary proves one to be watched, if you find yourself in NYC starting July 18th and LA from July 25th.

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In Features, Film, review, Interviews Tags Death & Taxes, Justin Schein, Harvey Schein, Joy Schein, Mark Schein, IFC Center, Laemmle Theaters, Los Angeles, NYC, Estate Tax, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Obamas, GI Bill, US Government, Grover Norquist, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR), NY Times, Paul Krugman, James Bandler, ProPublica, Felicia Wong, Roosevelt Institute, No Impact Man, America Rebuilds: A Year at Ground Zero, Sony, Crip Camp, Higher Ground Productions, Netflix
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A photo of the Weber siblings in Bremerhaven, Germany in 1946

Courage decoded: Beth Lane's 'UnBroken' is the film you need to watch on Netflix

E. Nina Rothe April 21, 2025

A film which tells the real story of seven Jewish siblings, separated by war and reunited after 40 years, helped by the kindness of strangers along the way, and told by the miraculous offspring of the youngest sister. And now you can watch this inspirational gem on Netflix, starting on Holocaust Remembrance Day — April 23rd.

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In Film, review Tags Beth Lane, The Weber family, UnBroken, documentary, Shoah, Holocaust, Holocaust Remembrance Day, The Weber Family Arts Foundation, Submarine Entertainment, Netflix, Yom HaShoah, 92NY Bronfman Center for Jewish Life, Michel Hazanavicius, Guillame Ribot
2 Comments

Wildlife filmmaker Ashwika Kapur's 'Catapults to Cameras' nominated for prestigious award at Jackson Wild

E. Nina Rothe August 5, 2024

Roundglass Sustain, a non-profit foundation which commissioned this film, is the only conservation platform in India that collaborates with partners such as photographers,  filmmakers and NGO’s to create stories that impact change and behavior. 

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In Features, Film Tags Ashwika Kapur, Catapults to Cameras, Roundglass Sustain, India, wildlife, Kolkata, Panda Award, the green Oscar, New Zealand, Kakapo Parrot, Sirocco, BBC Natural History Unit, National Geographic., Netflix, Animal Planet, Discovery Network, Disney+, David Attenborough, Life in Colour, Suvrajyoti Chatterjee, Bengal, Jhargram, Jackson Wild Media Awards, USA, UK, Nature Film Awards, Apple TV, The Elephant Queen, The Redford Center, Watershed, Robert Redford, film, documentary, HEAL, Neha Dara, Washington D.C.
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Richard Linklater's 'Hit Man' is an all around hit you should watch in cinemas, and on Netflix

E. Nina Rothe May 24, 2024

Here are a few reasons why… One hint? Glen Powell smolders. You’re welcome.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Netflix, Hit Man, Marrakech International Film Festival, Glen Powell, Richard Linklater, Adria Arjona, Retta, Sanjay Rao, Golden Globes, Venice Film Festival, TIFF
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The Amazing Netflix' 'Ripley' premieres this week!

E. Nina Rothe April 1, 2024

Maybe it’s the way the 8-part series — spearheaded, written and directed by Steven Zaillian — showcases a kind of world gone by, in its hauntingly perfect B&W. Or maybe it’s how there is a bit of Tom Ripley in each and every one of us. Whatever the reason, the Andrew Scott starrer is now deeply embedded in my heart… and thoughts.

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In Features, Film, Interviews Tags Ripley, Tom Ripley, Andrew Scott, Steven Zaillian, Netflix, Patricia Highsmith, The Talented Mr. Ripley, Anthony Minghella, Alain Delon, Atrani, Amalfi Coaast, Italy, Amalfi Coast, Johnny Flynn, Dakota Fanning, Kenneth Lonergan, NYC, Maurizio Lombardi
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'Maestro' -- A personal review

E. Nina Rothe October 2, 2023

Once the absurd discourse about Bradley Cooper’s nose will have finally quieted down, those who have been lucky enough to have watched ‘Maestro’ on the big screen will realize they’ve witnessed a masterpiece.

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In Film Festivals, review Tags Bradley Cooper, Maestro, Venice International Film Festival, Golden Globes, Oscars, Academy Awards, Nina Bernstein, Leonard Bernstein, Carey Mulligan, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Josh Singer, Lady Gaga, A Star is Born, Netflix
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Netflix's 'NYAD' brings together the brilliance of Annette Bening & Jodie Foster

E. Nina Rothe September 9, 2023

An Oscar win has always eluded the wonderful Annette Bening, while it has been more than 30 years, and her official coming out, since Foster won the last of her Academy Awards. ‘NYAD’, a Netflix film could change the game.

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In Film Tags NYAD, Annette Bening, Jodie Foster, Rhys Ifans, Netflix, Diana Nyad, Sienna Miller, Anna Friel, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin, Free Solo, The Rescue, Julia Cox, TIFF, Telluride Film Festival, BFI London Film Festival
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Reviewing David Fincher's 'The Killer' without giving too much away...

E. Nina Rothe September 7, 2023

Starring the magnificently contained Michael Fassbender as the unnamed hitman, this is one film that must be viewed without any previous knowledge of its story and possibly on a cool Fall evening, with a shot of premium whiskey nearby. But you’ll have to see for yourself why that is.

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In Film, review, Film Festivals Tags David Fincher, The Killer, Netflix, Michael Fassbender, Keto diet, matz Alexis Nolent, Andrew Kevin Walker, Le Tueur, Home Depot, Venice International Film Festival, Erik Messerschmidt, Donald Graham Burt, Cate Adams, Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, Ren Klyce, Ceán Chaffin, William Doyle, Peter Mavromates, Alexandra Milchan, BFI London Film Festival, Kirk Baxter
Comment

The vampire wore sneakers: 'El Conde' Venice Review

E. Nina Rothe September 1, 2023

Once again, Pablo Larrain proves he is one of the smartest filmmakers around, but never once does he talk down to us, his audience. And this dictator vampire romp in B&W is just what this writer needed to kick off the festival in style.

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In Film, review Tags Jaime Vadell, Gloria Münchmeyer, Alfredo Castro, Paula Luchsinger, Catalina Guerra, Marcial Tagle, Amparo Noguera, Diego Muñoz, Antonia Zegers and Stella Gonet, Pablo Larrain, Ed Lachmann, El Conde, Netflix, Venice International Film Festival
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Bradley Cooper transforms into Leonard Bernstein in first images & trailer released by Netflix for 'Maestro'

E. Nina Rothe August 16, 2023

The film, which is also directed, co-written and co-produced by Cooper, chronicles the lifelong relationship between Leonard Bernstein and Felicia Montealegre Cohn Bernstein.

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In Film, Film Festivals Tags Bradley Cooper, Josh Singer, Netflix, Maestro, Leonard Bernstein, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Fred Berner, Amy Durning, Kristie Macosko Krieger, Carla Raij, Bobby Wilhelm, Weston Middleton, Tracey Landon, Carey Mulligan, Matt Bomer, Maya Hawke, Sarah Silverman, Josh Hamilton, Scott Ellis, Gideon Glick, Sam Nivola, Alexa Swinton, Miriam Shor, WGA, DGA, strikes, Venice International Film Festival, Jamie Bernstein, West Side Story, Candide, On the Town, gay, Felicia Montealegre Cohn Bernstein
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Netflix drops Pablo Larrain Venice-bound 'El Conde' trailer and poster

E. Nina Rothe August 11, 2023

The highly anticipated dark comedy horror by the Chilean auteur will premiere at this year’s Venice Film Festival, before going into theaters on Sept. 7th and finally streaming on the site from September 15th.

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In Film, Film Festivals Tags Pablo Larrain, El Conde, Venice International Film Festival, Netflix, Alfredo Castro, Antonia Zegers, Paula Luchsinger
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Achintya Bose and Manish Chauhan in ‘Yeh Ballet’, image courtesy of Netflix

Achintya Bose and Manish Chauhan in ‘Yeh Ballet’, image courtesy of Netflix

"The poetry of it!": An interview with Sooni Taraporevala on her 'Yeh Ballet' currently streaming on Netflix

E. Nina Rothe July 4, 2020

If you google the film ‘Yeh Ballet’ you’ll find that the Wikipedia short description reads like this: “Discovered by an eccentric ballet master, two gifted but underprivileged Mumbai teens face bigotry and disapproval as they pursue their dancing dreams.” And those sort of stories are always the best kind — yet Sooni Taraporevala’s film goes one step further. Or rather several beautiful, seamless dance steps further.

As someone who had fallen in love with Taraporevala’s heartfelt way of making films through her directorial debut ‘Little Zizou’ — a childhood story taking place in the Parsi community in South Bombay — ‘Yeh Ballet’ only intensified this cinematic love story.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Yeh Ballet, Sooni Taraporevala, Netflix, interview, Julian Sands, Bombay, Mumbai, India, ballet dancers, Virtual Reality, documentary, film, Manish Chauhan, ehuda Maor, Amiruddin Shah, Achintya Bose, Supriya Kantak, Memyses Lab, Aanand Gandhi, Jahan Bativala, Shubhangi Swarup, The Namesake, Mississippi Masala, Salaam Bombay, Little Zizou, Parsi community, Irrfan Khan, Royal Ballet, Cindy Jourdain, Tony Kushner, Abraham Verghese, Hari Kunzru, Mira Nair, Shahrukh Khan
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The Two Popes on Netflix

'The Two Popes' on Netflix: Sounds from a cinematic gem

E. Nina Rothe January 19, 2020

I crave for a film to do something more than entertain me, when I sit down to write about it. A work of the 7th art has to change me. I need to feel like something magical clicked deep inside me to walk out of a theater, or in this case the room where I watch my TV, and sit to pen my thoughts. ‘The Two Popes’ did that. It not only showed me a different side to a story I thought I already knew — the changing of the guard between one pope and the other in 2013 — but also reinterpreted a character, former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio now Pope Francis, in a way that changed my negative opinion of him. And I know at least one other person who felt the same way, my movie-watching partner.

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In Film Tags Netflix, The Two Popes, Anthony Hopkins, Jonathan Pryce, Fernando Meirelles, Juan Minujín, Argentine, Brazil, Italy, The Vatican, Cardinal Ratzinger, Pope Benedict, Jorge Bergoglio, Pope Francis, Lucrecia Martel, Ariwacumbé, Dancing Queen, Abba, Neil Fraser, Bella Ciao, The Swingle Singers, Cuando tenga la tierra, Mercedes Sosa, Sastanàqqàm, Tinariwen
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Khalid Abdalla in a still from 'In the Last Days of the City'

Khalid Abdalla in a still from 'In the Last Days of the City'

Tamer El Said's 'In the Last Days of the City': "What do you do when the world is collapsing around you and you only have a camera?"

E. Nina Rothe April 26, 2018

I believe there are two types of films. There are those that take you on an adventure -- meaning you go through a rollercoaster of emotions and excitement while sitting in the theater, surrounded by others who share the same thrills with you.

Then there are movies which bring you on a journey, one that can last you a lifetime. Egyptian filmmaker Tamer El Said's 'In the Last Days of the City' belongs to the latter category. Once you inhabit its well-shot landscapes and meet its unforgettable cast of characters, they never, ever let go of you. And that's a good thing! More than a year and a half later, after my first viewing they continue to color my dreams and tint my emotions, but most importantly, they have changed the way I think of Cairo, Egypt and its courageous inhabitants.

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In Film, Interviews Tags In the Last Days of the City, Cairo, Egypt, Tamer El Said, Berlinale, BFI London Film Festival, Arab Spring, Netflix, Arab cinema, Museum of Modern Art, NYC, Los Angeles, Revolution, Khalid Abdalla
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Chris Hondros/Getty Images; Courtesy of HONDROS Film

Chris Hondros/Getty Images; Courtesy of HONDROS Film

Greg Campbell's 'Hondros' honors the courage of one man to tell the truth

E. Nina Rothe March 6, 2018

Just as the sound of bullets hitting a tin ceiling is heard, a mobile phone rings. "Call me back in about half an hour," says the man answering the phone. 

And thus begins 'Hondros' one of the most beautifully terrifying cinematic looks into what it means to be a tried and true photojournalist. The man answer the phone is Chris Hondros. The late, great Hondros, who for years was the man behind the lens of some of the most iconic photographs of our times.

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In Film Tags Hondros, Chris Hondros, Jake Gyllenhaal, Netflix, NYC, Los Angeles, London, Amazon, Google, Fandango, Vudu, Sierra Leone, Frank Capa, D'Day, Nine Stories Productions, Riva Marker, Greg Campbell, Tim Hetherington, Guy Martin, Iraq, Libya, Liberia, Monrovia, Misrata
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