Ryan Potter

Ryan has written three screenplays, one of which did well in the Austin Film Festival Screenplay Competition. He’s been writing fiction professionally since 2004. His short stories have appeared in a variety of publications, and Flux published his debut young adult novel, EXIT STRATEGY, in 2010. THE CLEANER, his debut adult novel, was published as an Amazon Kindle exclusive in 2012 and tells the humorous story of a Michigan competitive eater’s rise from lifelong slacker to hometown hero. His first short story collection, WELCOME TO DETROIT: TEN YEARS –TEN STORIES (2002-2012), is also available as a Kindle exclusive through Amazon.

Movie Review: Argo

Continuing with the dual director-actor role that brought him success with The Town (2010), Ben Affleck has hit another home run with Argo, a drama-thriller that recounts the daring CIA-backed rescue of six Americans who managed to escape the U.S. Embassy in Tehran as Iranian militants loyal to the Ayatollah Khomeini stormed the embassy on November 4, 1979, and ended up holding 52 Americans hostag...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Looper

Don’t go into Looper expecting to see a thinking person’s time travel movie. If so, you’ll be disappointed. But if you like your science fiction packed with suspense and action, then you’ll love Looper. Featuring excellent performances by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Pierce Gagnon, and especially Bruce Willis and Emily Blunt. Writer/director Rian Johnson delivers an intelligent, m...[Read More]

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Movie Review: The Dictator

Taking a filthy rich chauvinistic North African dictator, stripping away his identity in a pair of botched assassination attempts, and finding him roaming the streets of New York City as a “normal guy” might sound like the ingredients for an intriguing action thriller, but it’s actually the plot of The Dictator, a new comedy starring Sacha Baron Cohen that features scenes of sheer comic genius alo...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Boy

It’s 1984 in a beautiful but impoverished small town on New Zealand’s east coast, where an 11-year-old who everybody calls Boy gets an unexpected visit from his long-absent father. Featuring two fine performances from unknown Maori child actors, Boy, writer/director and co-star Taika Waititi’s coming-of-age story of a Michael Jackson-obsessed tween struggling to understand his slacker dad sh...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Salmon Fishing in the Yemen

Don’t let the title fool you. Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is not a documentary about globetrotting Western fishermen casting their rods in various Middle Eastern oases. Rather, it’s an entertaining romantic comedy/drama directed by Lasse Hallstrom featuring excellent performances from Ewan McGregor and Emily Blunt. Dr. Alfred “Fred” Jones (McGregor) is an uptight and nerdy British fisheries expert...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Jeff, Who Lives at Home

Jeff is 30 and lives in his mother’s basement. He’s unemployed, smokes too much weed, and hasn’t had a girlfriend since high school (surprised?). He’s a slacker in every sense of the word, but according to Jeff he simply hasn’t found his destiny yet. I’m guessing many slackers use the same excuse to justify their laziness, but I doubt any slacker alive is as obsessed with the M. Night Shyamalan mo...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Albert Nobbs

Albert Nobbs is a strangely wonderful little movie about a strange little man named Albert Nobbs (Glenn Close), who isn’t a man at all but a woman disguised as a man to live a better life in 19th-century Ireland. Nominated for three Oscars (Best Actress – Close, Best Supporting Actress – Janet McTeer, and Best Achievement in Makeup), the film explores interesting questions about gender. Despite a ...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Contraband

You know the storyline all too well. A retired criminal must commit one last big crime before he can get out of the game for good. Countless authors and filmmakers have used this handy plot device, some more effectively than others. The bad news for Contraband, Mark Wahlberg’s latest film, is that writer Aaron Guzikowski and director Baltasar Kormákur have pumped too many tiresome clichés into thi...[Read More]

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Movie Review: The Devil Inside

You know a horror film about exorcism is in trouble when the audience laughs during exorcism scenes intended to terrify you. But failure to scare is just one of many problems with The Devil Inside, an incredibly bad movie that will earn disgusting amounts of money due to savvy marketing, including a catchy but misleading trailer and a “surprise” ending that ranks among the worst and most unsatisfy...[Read More]

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Interview with Carl Colby, director of The Man Nobody Knew

Award-winning filmmaker Carl Colby’s latest documentary, The Man Nobody Knew: In Search of My Father, CIA Spymaster William Colby, is a personal quest to understand who his father really was. I interviewed Carl via telephone on Wednesday, December 7, 2011. He was gracious with his time and spoke openly and candidly about the film and his father. What follows is an edited version of our conversatio...[Read More]

Movie Review: The Man Nobody Knew

Spying is dirty but necessary work, and legendary American spymaster William Colby was arguably the best in the business during the Cold War. Although his professional career culminated with a tumultuous stint as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency from 1973-76, Colby made a name for himself thirty-plus years earlier as a decorated World War II soldier who led espionage activities behind e...[Read More]

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Movie Review: The Descendants

You need to know this from the start – there are no negatives when it comes to The Descendants. The movie is a nearly perfect package. Yes, this is George Clooney’s greatest role (more on that later), but the other key pieces – supporting actors, writing, directing, cinematography, and music – all fit together like a customized glove to make writer/director Alexander Payne’s drama/comedy about a w...[Read More]

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