Gary M. Kramer, Salon.com

Gary M. Kramer

Salon.com

Philadelphia, PA, United States

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Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Salon.com
  • Metro US
  • Slant

Past articles by Gary:

Colin Farrell's best, most quietly smoldering roles, from "Banshees of Inisherin" to "Phone Booth"

The Irish actor's first Oscar nomination is for just one role among a slew of intense and understated performances → Read More

In "Operation Fortune," Aubrey Plaza saves Guy Ritchie's latest action-packed but lackluster caper

Jason Statham, Hugh Grant, Josh Hartnett and more also do their charming best in this disappointing action film → Read More

"Take yourself to the ocean": "Blueback" star Radha Mitchell on how to care about the environment

Radha Mitchell spoke to Salon about her aquatic "Blueback" costar, doing her own diving and a dream about a dolphin → Read More

In the affable "Call Me Chihiro," a former sex worker provides friendly bento comforts to all

Netflix's film based on the popular manga is a bright, humanistic vibe → Read More

Predictable "Cocaine Bear" never achieves the level of dumb fun to elicit laughs – not even a snort

Review of action-comedy movie "Cocaine Bear" starring Keri Russell, Alden Ehrenreich and O'Shea Jackson, Jr. → Read More

"She feels things deeply": How "A Radiant Girl" slowly realizes the persecution of the Holocaust

Sandrine Kiberlain spoke to Salon about her film set in 1940s occupied France, centered on an everyday teenager → Read More

In "One Fine Morning" Léa Seydoux experiences the exquisite heartbreak and passion of everyday life

Mia Hansen-Løve's poignant film follows Sandra, a young woman involved with two splintering families → Read More

"You have a religious devotion to this sport": Director on bodybuilding movie "Magazine Dreams"

Elijah Bynum talks Sundance film starring Jonathan Majors as a man focused on his body but out of touch with people → Read More

"Slow" director on creating an intimate, asexual romance: "We wanted this film to be very corporeal"

A dancer begins a relationship with a sign-language interpreter in this Sundance film that rethinks expectations → Read More

"It is a civil war": "Heroic" director on how the Mexican military makes ordinary men into killers

David Zonana's latest film is an indictment on the power imblance that forces Mexican men to turn on their own → Read More

From "Cat Person" to "Little Richard," here are 12 Sundance Film Festival titles to watch online

Biopics, docs, thrillers and more – over 75 feature films are available to check out from home → Read More

"Free press supports tribal sovereignty": The Muscogee reporter fight against tyranny in "Bad Press"

Journalist Rebecca Landsberry-Baker and filmmaker Joe Peeler spoke to Salon about the new doc showing at Sundance → Read More

As "A Man Called Otto," Tom Hanks' gruff yet noble curmudgeon will warm your heart

The adaptation of the Swedish film leans into Hanks' strengths to help a sentimental film go down easy → Read More

"Corsage" star Vicky Krieps says Austria's Empress Elisabeth had a "darkness that attracted me"

The actor spoke about learning Hungarian, horseback riding, fencing and ice swimming to embody the rebellious royal → Read More

"Saint Omer" examines the darkest maternity taboos and the "language of the accused"

Director Alice Diop's acclaimed film about a woman on trial for killing her child is France's Oscar entry → Read More

"This film is Poe's origin story": "The Pale Blue Eye" director on his gothic whodunit at West Point

Scott Cooper discusses his Netflix film placing Edgar Allan Poe in a detective story starring Christian Bale → Read More

The year's most powerful nudity in film

From Emma Thompson's liberation to Viking confrontations, cinema revealed skin in artful, deliberate ways in 2022 → Read More

"Broker" is the absorbing slow-burn chase film with a baby, a cop and a makeshift family of liars

Hirokazu Kore-eda examines what happens when two men take a surrendered baby to sell → Read More

Why, Damien Chazelle, why?!: "Babylon" is a busy, bawdy and bad orgy of Hollywood nothingness

Perhaps Chazelle's greatest accomplishment here is to make Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt boring → Read More

Cozy up to "Glass Onion," the droll "Knives Out" sequel that delivers all the murder mystery goods

Rian Johnson's Netflix whodunit packs in more stars, more fun and even more bodies for your holiday viewing → Read More