You can’t watch Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans without wondering how such a gloriously deranged cop flick came to be. Full Article at Atlanta Creative Loafing
It’s a mad Cage-un smackdown. Full Article at Boston Herald
What's the expression, "In for a penny, in for a pound"? Rating: R for drug use, language, violence and sexuality. How about in for a nickel bag? Or a few ounces? Full Article at AZ Central.com
German director Werner Herzog’s films have often dealt with controversial motifs and topics, making them very popular on the “indy” film circuit. Full Article at Pop Syndicate
Hurricane Katrina has inspired several documentaries, but few dramas have been directly linked to the disaster that wrecked New Orleans. Full Article at The Seattle Times
In Werner Herzog's "Encounters at the End of the World," there's a sequence that contains perhaps the essential Herzog image. Full Article at Philadelphia Daily News
Of the dozen or so truly great Shakespeare plays – that is to say, those plays considered among the best things ever written on the planet, in any language – is probably the least coherent. But until now, we’ve never known why. Full Article at D.C. Theater Scene
Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant is not Abel Ferrara’s. Where Harvey Keitel’s anonymous monster wallowed in Catholic guilt and debilitating corruptions of mind and body, Nic Cage’... Full Article at PopMatters
Previews began Nov. 17 at Sidney Harman Hall for a run that will continue to Dec. 20. Full Article at Playbill
This review only needs to consist of six words: Werner Herzog. Nicolas Cage. Bad Lieutenant. Full Article at Slate