Tag Archives: made-on-tiny

Darren Criss Talks About Life Before Glee, Relating to Blaine, and Old Hollywood

It’s rare that an Internet star and self-described theater junkie can be called “debonair,” but 23-year-old Glee heartthrob Darren Criss fits the bill. The San Francisco native catapulted to offline fame with a suave rendition of Katy Perry’s “Teenage Dream” during Glee ‘s “Never Been Kissed” episode, and two months later, he shares an EW cover with co-star Chris Colfer. Just shy of Glee ‘s big post-Super Bowl episode this Sunday, we caught up with Criss to discuss his character Blaine, ambitions, and the movie scene he loves most.

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Darren Criss Talks About Life Before Glee, Relating to Blaine, and Old Hollywood

REVIEW: Aaron Katz’s Cold Weather Wants to Have a Plot, and Almost Does

No filmmaker wants to be lumped in with the Mumblecore movement anymore, and for good reason: The problem with the pictures made by the likes of Joe Swanberg, Andrew Bujalski and the Duplass brothers in the early to mid-2000s wasn’t that they were made on tiny budgets; it was that they were aimless and peopled with characters who were supposedly like “real people,” even though they weren’t anyone you’d particularly care to watch in a movie. (Typical plot: So a guy goes here, and then he walks down the street, and then he meets this girl, and they talk about stuff, and then maybe they go to bed or maybe not.) What’s more, they were punishment to look at. This was low-budget filmmaking made by people who seemed to think innovation and cleverness on a shoestring were bourgeois.

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REVIEW: Aaron Katz’s Cold Weather Wants to Have a Plot, and Almost Does