It's impossible not to see the actress's personal struggles through the lens of her character It’s true: Lindsay Lohan ain’t what she used to be. But then, suggests The Canyons, neither is the movie ...
Adam Chitwood is a former Managing Editor at Collider, where he covered film and television with a focus on interviews, features, and industry analysis. Those looking forward to the train wreck that ...
Paul Schrader and Bret Easton Ellis' low-budget erotic thriller was excoriated in 2013, but the time has come to acknowledge its qualities as an anthropological study and poison pen letter to ...
“The Canyons,” Paul Schrader‘s pulp film starring Lindsay Lohan and adult film actor James Deen, has turned a profit. How much? Its producer isn’t sure, and he wants to find out. Braxton Pope sent an ...
Watching director Paul Schrader's psychosexual drama "The Canyons" isn't unlike watching a slow-motion train wreck. And, no, that's not a reference to the participation of Lindsay Lohan, the current ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. In The Canyons, Lindsay Lohan plays ...
The restrained but potentially explosive exchange of glances in the opening sequence of Paul Schrader’s new film, “The Canyons,” marks the movie with the sure hand of directorial mastery. The art of ...
The Paul Schrader/Bret Easton Ellis film opens in New York on Friday but may find a bigger audience as it also launches on video-on-demand platforms, where, says IFC's Jonathan Sehring, it's "must-see ...
The best moment of “The Canyons” arrives before any of its actors show up. While opening credits zap on to the screen, images of decayed movie theaters flit by, establishing a sense of dread for ...