Screen Gems | Coming this week on TV and at the movies
SMALL SCREEN
Larry Flynt: The Right to be Left Alone (9 p.m. Thursday, IFC) -- Smut peddler or First Amendment paladin, helpful political gadfly or just plain jerk, Hustler publisher Larry Flynt has inspired a lot of rancorous opinions over the years. This documentary isn't going to settle anything, especially your blood pressure, but it's an interesting chronicle of 30 years of free-speech fireworks.
Baghdad High (9 p.m. Monday, HBO) -- HBO gave four Iraqi teenagers video cameras and asked them to document their senior year of high school. Lots of what came back could have been taped at any American high school: chatter about Britney Spears, hairstyles and hot jeans. Lots of it, we should pray, never will: planning the route home to avoid roadside bombs, wondering if the electricity will ever come back on, debating whether to flee the city for their lives.
Inside the Koran (9 p.m. Tuesday, National Geographic Channel) -- If the Koran is about mercy and tolerance, as many Muslims argue, how can it be used to justify suicide bombings and Internet decapitations, as other Muslims claim? The answer, according to this documentary on the history and theology of Islam: ``The Koran is like a big store, a supermarket. In this book, you are able to pick different answers. You are able to make peace, according to the Koran. You are able to declare war.''
China Inside Out: Bob Woodruff Reports (10 p.m. Wednesday, ABC) -- As the world prepares for the Beijing Olympics, a special edition of Primetime devotes a full hour to how China is using its new wealth to leverage itself into a global political power. ABC reporter Bob Woodruff -- who got his start in journalism working as a translator during the Tiananmen Square uprising -- visits Brazil, Angola and Cambodia to forge alliances based on shared economic interests. Oh, and don't forget the United States, where the Chinese are funding nearly $1 trillion in debt.
True Confessions of a Hollywood Starlet (9 p.m. Saturday, Lifetime) -- R&B singer JoJo plays a Lohanesque teenybopper star who, after a stint in rehab, goes incognito to try to resume a normal life in Hellhole, Ind. Well, maybe it's Fort Wayne, but you get the idea. Geometry. Gym. Friends who've never slept with Charlie Sheen. It's, like, worse than Baghdad High.
-- GLENN GARVIN
BIG SCREENPineapple Express (R) -- The buzz is good (no pun intended) on this action-oriented stoner comedy about a pot dealer (James Franco) and his best customer (Seth Rogen) who run afoul of a drug lord (Gary Cole) and the cop (Rosie Perez) on his payroll. David Gordon Green (George Washington) directs and Judd Apatow (Knocked Up) produces.
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 (PG) -- The bond between four high-school friends (Blake Lively, Alexis Bledel, Amber Tamblyn and America Ferrera) who share a magical pair of jeans carries on through their college years.
American Teen (PG-13) -- Filmmaker Nannette Burnstein spent a year recording the lives of five high-school seniors in a small Indiana town. Like The Breakfast Club, only it's real.
Hell Ride (R) -- The motorcycle gang flick meets the spaghetti western in this tale of a gang of bikers (Larry Bishop, Michael Madsen, Vinnie Jones and Eric Balfour) out to avenge the murder of one of their own. Dennis Hopper and David Carradine co-star, giving this gang some street cred.
-- RENE RODRIGUEZ
Join the discussion
Note: If this is your first time using our NEW commenting system, you will have to LOG OUT and then LOG BACK IN.
The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.
More Rene Rodriguez
Rene Rodriguez
rrodriguez@miamiherald.com
Rene Rodriguez has been The Herald's movie critic since 1995. He studied film criticism and filmmaking at the University of Miami. Before being named movie critic, he was an arts writer for The Herald and also worked on the city desk.
More
Rene Rodriguez
Videos
















My Yahoo
@Nyx.CommentBody@