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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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'Modi, Three Days on the Wing of Madness' by Johnny Depp is the film that should be on everyone's watch list

E. Nina Rothe July 14, 2025

I was lucky to witness a special London screening of the film, thanks to Fashion and Cinema’s Joana Granero, featuring her Q&A with costume designer Penny Rose. And found myself falling in love with an artist whose breaking of conventions has become the stuff of legends… But I’ll leave you guessing just who that is.

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In Features, review, Film Tags Modi Three Days on the Wing of Madness, Amedeo Modigliani, Johnny Depp, Riccardo Scamarcio, Penny Rose, Fashion and Cinema, Joana Granero, Red Sea Film Foundation, Antonia Desplat, Beatrice Hastings, Pirates of the Caribbean, Jack Sparrow, Chaïm Soutine, Ryan McParland, Reclining Nude, Stephen Graham, Bruno Gouery, Maurice Utrillo, Al Pacino, Lucas Englander, Maurice Gangnat, Modigliani – A Play in Three Acts, Dennis McIntyre, Jerzy and Mary Kromolowski, Dariusz Wolski, Nicola Pecorini, David Warren, Sacha Puttnam and Steve McLaughlin, Tom Waits, Disfruto, Carla Morrison, IN.2 Film, Salome Productions, Barry Navidi Productions, Proton Cinema
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Paolo Sorrentino by © Michael Avedon, courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

Paolo Sorrentino's 'La Grazia' (Grace) will open this year's Venice Film Fest

E. Nina Rothe July 7, 2025

And I’ll tell you why I’m excited, plus reveal a bit of the story and where it will take place.

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In Film, Film Festivals Tags Paolo Sorrentino, La Grazia, Venice International Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Fremantle Film, The Apartment, PiperFilm, Mubi, The Match Factory, Alberto Barbera, Michael Avedon, Turin, Accademia delle Scienze, Giovannino Galliari, Sala dei Mappamondi, Napoli, Parthenope, La Grande Bellezza, Toni Servillo, Anna Ferzetti, Academy Awards
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'Saint Damian' Raindance Review: It's a big, bad world out there

E. Nina Rothe July 1, 2025

It is rare to encounter a film that is so utterly honest and true to its subject, no matter how difficult a tale that is to tell. Gregorio Sassoli and Alejandro Cifuentes, the duo behind the documentary ‘Saint Damian’ have managed such a feat, and in the process, have created a masterpiece that will crack open some much needed truths, all the while conquering every heart in the audience.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags San Damiano, Saint Damian, Raindance Film Festival, Alejandro Cifuentes, Gregorio Sassoli, Termini Station, Rome, Italy, Rome Film Festival, Roberto Minervini, On the Bowery, Documentary, Gianfranco Rosi, Below Sea Level, La Dolce Vita, Federico Fellini, Agnes Varda, Sans toit ni loi, Edoardo Bennato, Quando sarai grande, Red Sparrow SRL
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A still of Karla Murthy with her father, courtesy of the filmmaker

A very personal review: 'The Gas Station Attendant' premieres at Sheffield Doc Fest

E. Nina Rothe June 20, 2025

Back when I was growing up in the US, there was a saying: “Everybody loves a winner” a phrase derived possibly from the 1967 song. Nowadays, from social media to the movies, and through everything in between, we’ve come to love the “losers” much much more. In her personal documentary, award winning filmmaker Karla Murthy talks about one such person. Someone very very close to her — her dad.

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In Film, review, Film Festivals Tags Sheffield Doc Fest, The Gas Station Attendant, Karla Murthy, Texas, Immigrant story, H. N. Shantha Murthy, The Simpsons, Bangalore, Oriana Fallaci, John Wayne, America, USA, Greene Fort Productions
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Wholesome fun: my thoughts on Disney's 'Elio'

E. Nina Rothe June 18, 2025

I attended a special Father’s Day UK screening of the film this past weekend and was impressed by the hold ‘Elio’ had on the younger audiences. But the story has completely changed from the one announced in 2023 — from “sci-fi horror” to a lighthearted, yet meaningful comedy adventure about a little boy’s need to be accepted.

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In Film, review Tags Elio, Disney, Pixar, Golden Globes, Yonas Kibreab, Communiverse, alients, aliens, Earth, space, Zoe Saldaña, NASA, Remy Edgerly, Brad Garrett, Keiko Murayama, Talking Head, David Byrne, Once in a Lifetime, Vicente García, Carmesi, Carl Sagan
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Soad Hosny and Hussein Fahmy in a still from ‘Watch Out for Zouzou’ by Hassan el-Imam

Holding up a mirror to a time of possibilities: 'Watch Out for Zouzou' opens this year's SAFAR film festival in London

E. Nina Rothe June 13, 2025

The 1972 Egyptian classic enjoys a gorgeous, brand new restoration, allowing younger audiences to discover its magic and its message, while bestowing on those revisiting the film an eerie sense of “what could have been?”

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In Features, Film, review, Film Festivals Tags Watch Out for Zouzou, SAFAR Film Festival, Hassan el-Imam, Soad Hosny, Hussein Fahmy, Khally ballak men ZouZou, Cairo, Egyptian cinema, Egypt, Red Sea Film Festival Foundation, Media Production City, Egyptian Ministry of Culture, Arab Radio and Television Network (ART), Cairo Opera House, Mohammed Ali Street, Totò, Rione Sanità, Napoli, Eduardo De Filippo, 1967 Arab-Israeli War, Taheyya Kariokka, Mohiy Ismail, Arab diaspora
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Five reasons to love the new 'How to Train Your Dragon'

E. Nina Rothe June 9, 2025

I’ll give you five reasons to watch the upcoming live action adaptation of the beloved 2010 animated film, which will open in US theaters on June 13th.

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In Film, review Tags How to Train Your Dragon, Gerard Butler, The Wild Robot, Dean DeBlois, Universal, Universal Pictures, Nick Frost, Thandiwe Newton, Nico Parker, Tom Wilton, Mason Thames
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Rodrigo Santoro and Denise Weinberg in a scene from ‘The Blue Trail’ by Gabriel Mascaro

A [feminine] case for 'The Blue Trail' by Gabriel Mascaro

E. Nina Rothe June 6, 2025

While another Cannes title may be a heavy contender for Brazil’s submission to the Best International Feature Film category for the Oscars this year, I would argue that the reason the previous Brazilian film fared so well in last year’s award season race is one: an extraordinary woman at the center of its story.

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In Film, review Tags The Blue Trail, Brazil, Gabriel Mascaro, Sebastian Sepulveda, Love in the Time of Cholera, Miriam Socarrás, Rodrigo Santoro, Thelma and Louise, Denise Weinberg, Berlinale, Silver Bear, Oscars, Golden Globes, Desert Warrior, Tibério Azul, Murilo Hauser and Heitor Lorega, Memo Guerra, Guillermo Garza, Lucky Number, Sydney Film Festival
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Benicio del Toro and Mia Threapleton in a still from ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ in theaters on Friday

The Magnificent Wes Anderson: Why 'The Phoenician Scheme' is my fave since 'Grand Budapest'

E. Nina Rothe May 20, 2025

At the core of his latest film, Anderson, along with co-writer Roman Coppola and leading man Benicio de Toro, has created a wonderfully entertaining antihero of contradictions: European yet eerily Trumpian, bigger than life yet soft spoken, bearing many passports yet without a fixed address, a self professed diplomat who carries a crate of hand-grenades — just in case they are needed. And more often than not, they are.

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In Film Festivals, Film, review Tags Wes Anderson, Benicio del Toro, Universal, Focus Features, Middle East, The Phoenician Scheme, Cannes Film Festival, Competition, Benedict Cumberbatch, Fouad Malouf, Milena Canonero, Adam Stockhausen, Jasper Sharp, Alexandre Desplat, Cartier, Prada, Dunhill, Juman Malouf, Studio Babelsberg, Tom Hanks, Riz Ahmed, Bryan Cranston, Jeffrey Wright, Mathieu Amalric, Scarlett Johansson, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bill Murray, Michael Cera, Mia Threapleton, Roman Coppola
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Reinventing the narrative: 'Nino' by Pauline Loquès Cannes Review

E. Nina Rothe May 19, 2025

If you thought a film following a man’s weekend after discovering he’s ill couldn’t be charming, funny, tender, warm and thoroughly entertaining from beginning to end, journalist turned filmmaker Pauline Loquès will change your mind. And your hearts, forever.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Théodore Pellerin, William Lebghil, Salomé Dewaels, Jeanne Balibar, Pauline Loquès, Nino, Cannes, festival de cannes, Critics Week, Semaine de la Critique, Pauline Loques, Mathieu Amalric, The Film Party Sales
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Cannes Gem: A review of 'Urchin' by Harris Dickinson

E. Nina Rothe May 18, 2025

A film that, aside from its spellbinding leading man and touching crucial themes about the habits that bring us down, again and again, also begs the question: “Who do the streets of London belong to? Those who thread upon them or those who call them home?”

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In Features, Film, review, Film Festivals Tags Scott O’Donnell, Archie Pearch, Josée Deshaies, Leos Carax, Vittorio De Sica, Robert De Niro, Martin Scorsese, Taxi Driver, Midnight Cowboy, Amr Waked, Triangle of Sadness, Nicole Kidman, Babygirl, Festival de Cannes, Urchin, London, Harris Dickinson, Frank Dillane, Lisa Mustafa, Charades Films, BBC Film, BFI
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To be Muslim, French and Queer: 'The Little Sister' Cannes review

E. Nina Rothe May 17, 2025

What do you do when you don’t see people like you represented in French literature? Well, if you are Fatima Daas, you write a character that has never been shown before — a lesbian, Muslim young woman, first generation French daughter of Algerian immigrants. And then, a great filmmaker and actress like Hafsia Herzi might make it into a film that ends up in Cannes, in Competition. Well, this is what happened.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Festival de Cannes, The Little Sister, Jérémie Attard, Halima Benhamed, Fatima Daas, The Last One, Park-ji Min, Nadia Melliti, La Petite Derniere, Hafsia Herzi, Mouna Soualem
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Tom Cruise must need a nap after 'Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning'

E. Nina Rothe May 15, 2025

He runs across London, dives to the depth of the Baltic Sea, flies through the South African sky, most of the time outside an airplane, and never misses a beat — and I was exhausted just watching him do it all…

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In Film Festivals, Film, review Tags Tom Cruise, Mission Impossible The Final Reckoning, Paramount, festival de cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Christopher McQuarrie, Philip Seymour Hoffman, AI, The Entity, Pom Klementief, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Esai Morales, Gabriel, Ashley Atwell, Angela Bassett, Richard L. Gelfond, IMAX, Shea Whigham, Cineum, Lucy Tulugarjuk, Katy M. O’Brian, Rolf Saxon, Ethan Hunt, MI films
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The power of one, letter: 'The Extraordinary Miss Flower' review

E. Nina Rothe May 2, 2025

If I were to sum up this wondrously dreamy doc in a couple of words, I would say it’s a hippie, trippy psychedelic cinematic joy of a film, and one you should not dare to miss.

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In Film, review Tags The Extraordinary Miss Flower, Zoe Flower, Geraldine Flower, Nick Cave, Richard Ayaode, Caroline Catz, BFI release, Emiliana Torrini, Miss Flower
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To be young, gifted and... gay! A review of Iair Said's 'Most People Die on Sundays'

E. Nina Rothe April 28, 2025

A personal tale based on the filmmaker’s own experience centering around the death of his father, this succinct film mixes a successful blend of realism, absurdity, comedy and drama to create a wondrous work of the Seventh Art.

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In review, Film Tags Most People Die on Sundays, Big World Pictures, Quad Cinema, Laemmle Theaters, ACID Cannes, Jewish, Argentina, Antonia Zegers, Juliana Gattas, Rita Cortese, Iair Said
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The brothers hanging out in ‘The Accountant 2’, courtesy of Warner Bros.

I'll give you one, no make that 2 good reasons to watch 'The Accountant 2' with Ben Affleck

E. Nina Rothe April 25, 2025

Do you really want to know what those are? Well, for one, the brothers’ duo the American star creates along with Jon Bernthal is cinematic chemistry 101. And the other reason? Read on!

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In Film, review Tags Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal, The Accountant 2, The Accountant, film, Everyman Borough Yards, Christian Wolff, line dancing, Amazon MGM Studios, Warner Bros Pictures, SXSW
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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
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Olmo Schnabel's 'Pet Shop Days', EP'd by Martin Scorsese to finally release in the US

E. Nina Rothe March 12, 2025

Starting out limited, in NYC and LA, the film is a wonder to behold and Schnabel, a filmmaker to watch.

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In Features, Film, Interviews Tags Martin Scorsese, Jeremy O. Harris, Giovanni Corrado, Raffaella Viscardi, Moreno Zani, Malcom Pagani, Renato Ragosta, Livio Strazzera, Theo Niarchos, Aimone Ripa Di Meana, PJ Van Sandwijk, Peter Brant Jr., Michel Franco, Reka Posta, Jack Irv, Galen Core, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard, Maribel Verdú, Jordi Mollà, Camille Rowe, Emmanuelle Seigner, Louis Cancelmi, Olmo Schnabel, Utopia, Pet Shop Days, Venice International Film Festival, Roxy Cinema NYC, Now Instant Image Hall LA, Hand of Dante, Olatz López Garmendia
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Worst work if you can get it! Why I love Bong Joon-ho's 'Mickey 17'

E. Nina Rothe March 10, 2025

Beyond the sci-fi comedy starring Robert Pattinson, in the story of a man who gets reprinted in 3D every time he dies — and comes out of the machine with the same quirks and patterns of a regular paper printer — there lies a profound film about learning to live with all parts of our personality — even those we may not always like.

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In Film, review Tags Mickey 17, Bong Joon-ho, Robert Pattinson, Rich Cline, Shadows on the Wall, Mickey Barnes, Mark Ruffalo, Toni Collette, Naomi Ackie, Terra Lontana, Nino Rota, Plan B, Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner
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Featured Posts

Featured
Harvey Schein sitting on a couch, courtesy of Schein family archives for ENinaRothe copy.jpg
Jul 16, 2025
Justin Schein's 'Death & Taxes' reexamines the American Dream, all the while painting a bold family portrait
Jul 16, 2025
Jul 16, 2025
modi, three days on the wings of madness Riccardo Scamarcio for E Nina Rothe.jpg
Jul 14, 2025
'Modi, Three Days on the Wing of Madness' by Johnny Depp is the film that should be on everyone's watch list
Jul 14, 2025
Jul 14, 2025
Paolo Sorrentino by Michael Avedon for ENinaRothe copy.jpg
Jul 7, 2025
Paolo Sorrentino's 'La Grazia' (Grace) will open this year's Venice Film Fest
Jul 7, 2025
Jul 7, 2025
SAN DAMIANO St Damian at Raindance for ENinaRothe.jpg
Jul 1, 2025
'Saint Damian' Raindance Review: It's a big, bad world out there
Jul 1, 2025
Jul 1, 2025
H.N. Shantha Murthy and Karla Murthy - courtesy of Greene Fort Productions The Gas Station Attendant for EninaRothe.jpg
Jun 20, 2025
A very personal review: 'The Gas Station Attendant' premieres at Sheffield Doc Fest
Jun 20, 2025
Jun 20, 2025
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