Christopher Kelly

You’d think a movie critic might relish passing thumbs-up, thumbs-down judgments on all the latest flicks, but for Fort Worth–based writer-at-large Christopher Kelly, that’s the least interesting part of his job. “Movies and TV and celebrities are more than entertainment,” says the Staten Island native. “I like to figure out how they relate to life and the place they take within culture.” The former film critic for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Kelly’s work has also appeared in the New York Times, Salon, the Chicago Tribune, Slate, Film Comment, and many other publications. His debut novel, A Push and a Shove, was published by Alyson Books and won the 2008 Lambda Literary Foundation award for Best Debut Novel. His favorite movies, in no particular order, are A Hard Day’s Night, All That Jazz, The Silence of the Lambs, and Nashville.

Stories

Frozen Asset

The best sitcom you may never get to see.

Urbane Cowboy

Julian Schnabel’s metrosexual Texanness.

Bombing Iraq

Hollywood loses the Iraq war.

Action Heroes

Action Heroes 2008.

All Your Movie Are Belong to Us

Geeks from Austin will destroy American cinema.

Sorry, Charlie

Charlie Wilson’s warts.

Crude Truth

Paul Thomas Anderson drills a dry hole.

Blood Brothers

The Coen brothers do Cormac.

Blood Brothers

The Coen brothers do Cormac.

Fatally Hip

Hip-checking Wes Anderson.

Grounds for Suspicion

Conspiring minds want to know …

Please Stop Directing

An open letter to Ethan Hawke.

This Just In

The news about Making News.

We’ll Always Love You

The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas at 25.

Arousing Success

A slasher flick to die for.

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