The third Lone Star International Film Festival kicks off this weekend, and festivalgoers will be seeking something to match the awards buzz of 2007's Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, the crowd-pleasing tendency of last year's Sunshine Cleaning, or the cool factor of last year's Let the Right One In.
The best chance at any of that looks to be Serious Moonlight, from a script that Adrienne Shelly finished writing before her murder. Her Waitress co-star, Cheryl Hines, took charge of trying to get the script filmed and, at the suggestion of a studio executive, wound up directing it herself, her first such experience. The movie stars Meg Ryan as a New York lawyer who duct-tapes her husband (Timothy Hutton) to a toilet when he tries to leave her for a younger woman. Justin Long and Kristen Bell co-star, so that's quite a bit of star power.
The festival won't be lacking that quality elsewhere, either. You can see Luke Wilson as an embattled professor in Tenure, Woody Harrelson as an Army officer tasked with informing families of their loved ones who have been killed in Iraq in The Messenger, and Ed Harris as a father trying to reconcile with his pro baseball-playing twin sons in Touching Home. Fans of "mumblecore" will be interested in Ry Russo-Young's You Won't Miss Me, though early reviews peg this drama as quite a bit angrier than the movies made by Russo-Young's colleagues. Esteemed Irish playwright Conor McPherson pitches in a film called The Eclipse, though we'd like to see him turn a few creative twists on the movie's standard "horror novelist starts to experience horror in his real life" plot. The shorts and documentaries should throw us a few surprises, too.
The Lone Star International Film Festival runs Wed-Sun at various locations, FW. Individual tickets are $7-10. Passes are $70-350. Call 817-924-6000.



Chow, Baby has long wanted to do an
occasional series
called "Lunch with the Stars," in which we would find out if people who dine with famous people also get faw...
Since
KXT/91.7-FM
's inaugural broadcast last week, local musos seem to have rediscovered the wonders of the ol' wireless telegraphy box. "Hey, 2009! The 1940s ca...
The radiant and gently heartbreaking
An Education
opens in Grapevine this Friday and is still playing at the Modern this weekend. It richly deserves to be seen, i...
We at
Fort Worth Weekly
are nothing if not topical. We have noticed that Times Are Tough. And so, like every other retailer on this planet, we have figured out ho...