Sin City (2005) is a neo-noir anthology movie based on Frank Miller’s popular comic book series of the same. Directed by Robert Rodriguez and Miller himself, the movie is divided into six parts, each ...
Long before Zack Snyder got the idea to do a near panel-for-panel recreation of a Frank Miller comic book, Robert Rodriguez beat him there by two years with Sin City and made a more mesmerizing and ...
Lurid run the streets of "Sin City," as aggressively faithful a rendering of a comic book aesthetic as has been put on the bigscreen with live actors. Robert Rodriguez's guild-bolting collaboration ...
“Sin City” proved an irresistible temptation for audiences as the highly stylized comic-book adaptation led the weekend box office with a $28.1 million debut. Opening in second place was Queen Latifah ...
When Sin City was first announced, I was skeptical. It didn't matter that Frank Miller would be deeply involved in the project, he was also deeply involved in Robocop 2. I figured a movie version of ...
The dark and violent comic Sin City is now a movie. Director Robert Rodriguez says that even on the page, artist Frank Miller's stories had a cinematic quality. To learn more, NPR asked director Kevin ...
THE first time I went to Las Vegas was probably around 1995. I had been both lured by, and assigned to cover, the “Jackson Family Reunion Concert” – a reunion, it turned out, as fake as any other Las ...
Like the high-charged, ruthless universe portrayed in the film, the Westwood premiere of Miramax’s “Sin City” was frenetic, with show-stopping arrivals and media jockeying for a few paltry seconds ...
Faithfulness, a virtue in personal relationships, is overrated when it comes to movie adaptations of comic books. (Let the foaming from fanboys begin.) The devotee who is betrothed to the pages of a ...
Based on three of Frank Miller's Sin City graphic novels, Robert Rodriguez has co-directed the film with Miller himself to create the most loyal comic adaptation ever seen on screen. The film opens ...
Aesthetically exciting and sick as hell, “Sin City” is so disreputable that it practically turns itself inside-out into a spectacle of virginal innocence: Blunt, devoid of metaphor and ...