Minnesota's Tim Pawlenty grooms himself for vice-presidential consideration--by being a jerk.
Our reporter sets out in search of a naked lunch.
Before swinging a bat in a lesbian softball league, pick a side: gay or straight?
At JFK, Erhan Yildirim clears corpses for takeoff.
The Bridesmaid
(First Run) Claude Chabrol has made more than 50 films in his 76 years, but still he's best known as "the French Hitchcock." It may be useful shorthand, but it's also lazy. This story of a man who falls for his sister's bridesmaid (Benoît Magimel and Laura Smet, both excellent), who eventually asks him to prove his love in a very unpleasant way, owes as much to steamy film noir and the novels of James M. Cain and Jim Thompson as it does to a certain fat Englishman. Of course, all these big names are also a roundabout way of saying that The Bridesmaid is a very good movie. It unfolds at a stately pace that some may find maddening, but once it gets rolling, it's a wonderful mass of psychosexual amorality and suspense. Twenty minutes in, and you're hooked. It's practically Chabrollian. -- Jordan Harper
Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall
of the Slasher Film
(THINKFilm) Going to Pieces, a made-for-cable documentary based on Adam Rockoff's book of the same name, gouges deeper into its subject than your average low-budget doc would, covering everything from the gory antics of Paris's Grand Guignol theater to the recent works of Rob Zombie. And it's not afraid to get its hands dirty: The many interviews with horror luminaries are broken up with plenty of piercings, stabbings, and beheadings. Even if you're not crazy about Sleepaway Camp or Prom Night, you may find interest in the earnest discussion of teen murders and marketing. The film's also great for middle-aged uncles to share with budding horror fans: "In the good old days, there was none of this torture garbage -- they just chopped their heads off!" -- Harper
Michael Shayne Mysteries
(Fox) This boxed set, consisting of four '40s films starring writer Davis Dresser's long-forgotten private dick, is probably two years too late. After all, while hawking the underrated Kiss Kiss Bang Bang in 2005, writer-director Shane Black insisted that his own smart-ass film (starring Robert Downey Jr. as the accidental private eye) sprang from Dresser's character, the wisecracking deadbeat Shayne. As played by Lloyd Nolan, Shayne comes across as a guy who's in on the same joke as the audience: that this is all a big flim-flam sham -- whodunit nonsense shot on a studio back lot. The first movie (Michael Shayne, Private Eye -- the only one based on an actual Dresser book) is the best, but the others aren't without their considerable charms -- which is to say, Lloyd Nolan. -- Wilonsky