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	<title>Observer &#187; Sharon Stone Flashes Instincts;  And, Hey, So Many Jareckis!</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Sharon Stone Flashes Instincts;  And, Hey, So Many Jareckis!</title>
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		<title>Sharon Stone Flashes Instincts;  And, Hey, So Many Jareckis!</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2006/03/sharon-stone-flashes-instincts-and-hey-so-many-jareckis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Mar 2006 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2006/03/sharon-stone-flashes-instincts-and-hey-so-many-jareckis/</link>
			<dc:creator>Jake Brooks</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/030606_article_spring_brooks.jpg?w=241&h=300" />In the spring, movies are like New Yorkers&mdash;pale and flabby after the winter thaw, tannish and muscular by May. </p>
<p>So let&rsquo;s get the easy ones out of the way. Come May 5, Tom Cruise will be pushing<i> Mission: Impossible III</i> hard, an excuse to get away from his pregnant wife. A week later, <i>Poseidon</i>, a remake of the 1972 disaster film <i>The Poseidon Adventure</i> starring Ernest Borgnine&mdash;I miss him. Then, well, only God (or perhaps Opus Dei) could stop<i> The Da Vinci Code</i> (May 19). </p>
<p>March boasts two&mdash;yes, two!&mdash;films to hope for the best from: the dark comedy<i> Thank You for Smoking</i> (March 17), by Jason (&ldquo;Son of Ivan&rdquo;) Reitman, and the futuristic<i> V for Vendetta</i> (March 17), from the furtive minds behind <i>The</i> <i>Matrix</i>, the Wachowski Brothers. (They&rsquo;re still brothers, right? Didn&rsquo;t one have a sex change? If so, are they still brothers? <i>Discuss</i>.) <i>Smoking </i>boasts what looks like a breakout performance from the perennially impressive Aaron Eckhart as a tobacco lobbyist at the top of his game. As for <i>V for Vendetta</i> &hellip; the last two <i>Matrix</i> installments were disappointments, but here&rsquo;s hoping that the brothers have been energized by new material and a new muse (Natalie Portman). If you can&rsquo;t get enough of this raven-haired ing&eacute;nue, check out the small but poignant Israeli film <i>Free Zone</i> on April 7.</p>
<p>The sequel to 1992&rsquo;s <i>Basic Instinct</i> arrives on March 31. Yes, Sharon Stone returns as the murderously sexy novelist Catherine Tramell. But no Wayne Knight. Why didn&rsquo;t they bring him back? He <i>made </i>the crotch scene in the first film&mdash;his sweaty brow, his jaw-dropped expression. Michael Douglas had to play it cool, but Mr. Knight, he played it like the rest of us. But I digress &hellip;. </p>
<p>On April 7, Nicholas Jarecki&rsquo;s documentary <i>The Outsider</i> debuts, about James Toback and the 12 days he had to shoot<i> When Will I Be Loved</i>, making Nicholas the third Jarecki brother to release a nonfiction film in the last three years. It should be good, considering the pedigree: Eugene&rsquo;s <i>Why We Fight</i> is in the theaters now and has received decent reviews; Andrew&rsquo;s<i> Capturing the Friedmans</i> was nominated for an Academy Award in 2004. Watch out, Maysle Brothers!</p>
<p>Nicole Holofcener&rsquo;s<i> Friends with Money</i>, with a great cast, opens in &hellip; April? It has Frances McDormand, Joan Cusack, Catherine Keener (yum!) and Jennifer Aniston. Are studios afraid of another<i> In Her Shoes</i>, a well-received &ldquo;chick flick&rdquo; that didn&rsquo;t make any money?</p>
<p>Two promising comedies emerge toward the end of spring: Terry Zwigoff&rsquo;s <i>Art School Confidential</i> (April 28) and Scott Marshall&rsquo;s <i>Keeping Up with the Steins </i>(May 12). With the deliciously aloof John Malkovich playing the mentor to a bunch of burgeoning painters in <i>Confidential</i>, Mr. Zwigoff (<i>Crumb</i>, <i>Bad Santa</i>) looks like he&rsquo;s found another subject to appeal to his fascination with the high art of the lowbrow (and vice versa). Meanwhile, Mr. Marshall, the son of director Garry Marshall, makes his feature-length, big-screen directorial debut with <i>The Steins</i>. The plotline: A boy uses his bar mitzvah to reconcile his feuding parents. (That&rsquo;s nice. I used it to buy a car &hellip;. ) It stars Jeremy Piven (yes!) and Daryl Hannah (weird!). </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/030606_article_spring_brooks.jpg?w=241&h=300" />In the spring, movies are like New Yorkers&mdash;pale and flabby after the winter thaw, tannish and muscular by May. </p>
<p>So let&rsquo;s get the easy ones out of the way. Come May 5, Tom Cruise will be pushing<i> Mission: Impossible III</i> hard, an excuse to get away from his pregnant wife. A week later, <i>Poseidon</i>, a remake of the 1972 disaster film <i>The Poseidon Adventure</i> starring Ernest Borgnine&mdash;I miss him. Then, well, only God (or perhaps Opus Dei) could stop<i> The Da Vinci Code</i> (May 19). </p>
<p>March boasts two&mdash;yes, two!&mdash;films to hope for the best from: the dark comedy<i> Thank You for Smoking</i> (March 17), by Jason (&ldquo;Son of Ivan&rdquo;) Reitman, and the futuristic<i> V for Vendetta</i> (March 17), from the furtive minds behind <i>The</i> <i>Matrix</i>, the Wachowski Brothers. (They&rsquo;re still brothers, right? Didn&rsquo;t one have a sex change? If so, are they still brothers? <i>Discuss</i>.) <i>Smoking </i>boasts what looks like a breakout performance from the perennially impressive Aaron Eckhart as a tobacco lobbyist at the top of his game. As for <i>V for Vendetta</i> &hellip; the last two <i>Matrix</i> installments were disappointments, but here&rsquo;s hoping that the brothers have been energized by new material and a new muse (Natalie Portman). If you can&rsquo;t get enough of this raven-haired ing&eacute;nue, check out the small but poignant Israeli film <i>Free Zone</i> on April 7.</p>
<p>The sequel to 1992&rsquo;s <i>Basic Instinct</i> arrives on March 31. Yes, Sharon Stone returns as the murderously sexy novelist Catherine Tramell. But no Wayne Knight. Why didn&rsquo;t they bring him back? He <i>made </i>the crotch scene in the first film&mdash;his sweaty brow, his jaw-dropped expression. Michael Douglas had to play it cool, but Mr. Knight, he played it like the rest of us. But I digress &hellip;. </p>
<p>On April 7, Nicholas Jarecki&rsquo;s documentary <i>The Outsider</i> debuts, about James Toback and the 12 days he had to shoot<i> When Will I Be Loved</i>, making Nicholas the third Jarecki brother to release a nonfiction film in the last three years. It should be good, considering the pedigree: Eugene&rsquo;s <i>Why We Fight</i> is in the theaters now and has received decent reviews; Andrew&rsquo;s<i> Capturing the Friedmans</i> was nominated for an Academy Award in 2004. Watch out, Maysle Brothers!</p>
<p>Nicole Holofcener&rsquo;s<i> Friends with Money</i>, with a great cast, opens in &hellip; April? It has Frances McDormand, Joan Cusack, Catherine Keener (yum!) and Jennifer Aniston. Are studios afraid of another<i> In Her Shoes</i>, a well-received &ldquo;chick flick&rdquo; that didn&rsquo;t make any money?</p>
<p>Two promising comedies emerge toward the end of spring: Terry Zwigoff&rsquo;s <i>Art School Confidential</i> (April 28) and Scott Marshall&rsquo;s <i>Keeping Up with the Steins </i>(May 12). With the deliciously aloof John Malkovich playing the mentor to a bunch of burgeoning painters in <i>Confidential</i>, Mr. Zwigoff (<i>Crumb</i>, <i>Bad Santa</i>) looks like he&rsquo;s found another subject to appeal to his fascination with the high art of the lowbrow (and vice versa). Meanwhile, Mr. Marshall, the son of director Garry Marshall, makes his feature-length, big-screen directorial debut with <i>The Steins</i>. The plotline: A boy uses his bar mitzvah to reconcile his feuding parents. (That&rsquo;s nice. I used it to buy a car &hellip;. ) It stars Jeremy Piven (yes!) and Daryl Hannah (weird!). </p>
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