short circuits
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VIDEO
This silent is golden A delectable homage to the silent movies of the 1920s, Michel Hazanavicius' romantic comedy "The Artist" plays like a sweet, airy confection. That "The Artist" is itself a silent movie -- in black-and-white, no less -- shouldn't deter viewers from giving it a whirl.
"The Artist" opens in 1927, when the dapper film star George Valentin (Jean Dujardin) rules Hollywoodland. When George crosses paths with an eager newcomer named Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo), he's cast in the role of mentor; but when talking pictures become the order of the day, she quickly begins an ascent up stardom's ladder, while George's fortunes begin their inevitable slide. Even the most arresting visual stunts would amount to little more than pastiche were it not for Dujardin and Bejo, who infuse their characters with palpable longing and regret.
The DVD and Blu-ray (Sony, $31-$36) include making-of featurettes, a Q&A with the filmmakers and cast and a blooper reel.
WASHINGTON POST
Colin Covert's take: "The Artist," a gleefully inventive, gloriously entertaining black-and-white silent, proves that less is more. It's a rocket to the moon fueled by unadulterated joy and pure imagination.
Also out Tuesday:
Movies: "Bullhead," "The Decoy Bride," "Mirror Mirror," "Sector 7," "A Thousand Words," "21 Jump Street," "Wrath of the Titans."