For his tenth feature film (eleventh if you count his student featurette, Xiaoshan Going Home), Jia Zhang-ke has made what is perhaps his most ambitious project yet.
Read MoreToday, we got the opportunity to speak to Hannia Yeverino about her film Punks, which played this year at the Houston Latino Film Festival.
Read MoreLike a well-mixed but not particularly innovative cocktail you might order at a chain restaurant in the suburbs, this movie goes down easy but doesn't linger long in the memory.
Read MoreIn Mistress Dispeller, Elizabeth Lo’s (罗宝) second documentary feature, the camera feels almost absent, disappeared in the way of a narrative film. It’s a documentary shot like a romantic drama, specifically evoking the dreamy, languid camera most associated with slow cinema.
Read MoreBring Her Back, directed by Danny and Michael Philippou and written by Bill Hinzman and Danny, finetunes the jumpscares and creeping atmosphere of their debut Talk to Me while offering a storyline that’s both more cogent and emotionally intuitive than its predecessor.
Read MoreIn practice, Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland’s Warfare is an intense, uncomfortable watch.
Read MoreNeighborhood Watch is a fine detective film, thanks primarily to Quaid and Morgan’s fine work on their own and together.
Read MoreIt must be said—The Legend of Ochi is like a Soviet version of Spielberg’s E.T. replicated through the hypnotic lens of '80s fantasy cinema.
Read MoreOver seven years and multiple visits, Singh filmed the documentary And, Towards Happy Alleys, which screened in April as part of Austin’s 2025 Indie Meme Festival. It’s electric.
Read MoreWhile The Glassworker doesn’t quite stick its landing, it’s thoughtful, thorny, and willing to ride ambiguities and uncertainties.
Read MoreCristina Costantini’s Sally is a welcome highlight among the documentaries of SXSW ‘25.
Read MoreThough director Max Hey is focused and dialed in from the moment the documentary begins, Now! More! Yes! ultimately meanders around with its subject without inspiring much interest.
Read MoreDirector/writer Rungano Nyoni’s On Becoming a Guinea Fowl—her second feature film after 2017’s I Am Not a Witch—is one of the best films of 2025 so far.
Read MoreWhile few of Fulci’s classic films appear to take place in the “real” world, Conquest (1983) is the director’s lone foray into the pure fantasy genre.
Read MoreFrom the get-go, Godzilla vs Megalon misleads and surprises the audience. Outside of the final twenty minutes and the first two minutes, Godzilla is not in the movie. Rather, we follow a story of kaiju and sci-fi intrigue as two parents and their kid try to stop spies from the underground world of Seatopia from stealing Jet Jaguar, a humanoid robot.
Read MorePeter Strickland’s Duke of Burgundy examines the give and take of love through the prism of kink, and how even in the context of a sapphic dom-sub relationship, power dynamics can ever shift between two people.
Read MoreWiseman’s directorial method is never clearer than with Aspen (1991) and Model (1981), the final two installments in AFS’ “Frederick Wiseman: Eight Systems” series.
Read MoreAn Angel at My Table grapples with, and sometimes struggles against, historic and contemporary portrayals of illness and disability, in order to craft a beautiful, moving tale about an extraordinary woman.
Read MoreIn Idiotka, her feature debut as a director, Nastasya Popov delivers one hell of a calling card.
Read MoreTruth be told, this reviewer didn’t care for The Accountant 2.
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