Seven years after Roger Avary won an Oscar for his work on Pulp Fiction, he jumped behind the camera for his second directorial feature, The Rules of Attraction. It was ranting guntoters meets Bret ...
Watching the supposedly bubbly romantic comedy “Laws of Attraction” is much like gulping down a glass of flat champagne: the taste is there but the effervescence is gone. “Laws of Attraction,” which ...
The Rules of Attraction (2002; dir. Roger Avary)—Last weekend I was on my way to a donut shop near the University of Minnesota when I noticed a group of well-dressed young women lined up on the ...
Reid Goldberg is a features writer for Collider. Having grown up in the Midwest, he attended the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. While he's begrudingly accepted that a FIlm Studies degree wasn't ...
Paul has a crush on Sean, Sean wants to sleep with Lauren, Lauren was Paul's ex-girlfriend. In an affluent college town where students attend more parties than classes, and sexualities are more fluid ...
Roger Avary returns from relative obscurity (the last film he directed was 1994's Killing Zoe) with an ambitious undertaking: the transference of Bret Easton Ellis' second novel to the silver screen.
Looks aren’t everything: We pick partners based on an intricate calculus of who we think will make us happy. The simple story of pleasure is that animals evolve to enjoy what’s good for them; pleasure ...