Cristina 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.
Read MoreWhat happens when the subject of your documentary wants nothing to do with you? Obviously, you use their own technology to create an AI version of them, and interview it in hopes of finding your answers.
Read MoreThe following films are all concerned with forces that exist beyond the scope of their narratives.
Read MoreBlack Bag, Steven Soderbergh’s 36th feature, sees the director return to the thrills and sex appeal of his ‘90s output.
Read MoreIn Glorious Summer, co-directors Helena Ganjalyan and Bartosz Szpak craft an ethereal vehicle to examine the pitfalls of blissful ignorance.
Read MoreASCO: Without Permission centers the revolutionary art collective and its cultural impact.
Read MoreThe Rivals of Amziah King is one of the most strangely-paced films and thematically-incohesive films I’ve ever seen. That’s both to its benefit and its greatest flaw.
Read MoreThe Python Hunt expertly delivers on its promises of humor and human interest.
Read MoreWhere some stories of addiction slip into melodrama and misery, Surviving Earth shows the reality of sobriety as a choice that’s made every single day.
Read MoreWith due respect paid, O’Dessa is awful.
Read MoreLifeHack is a good heist film, a good coming-of-age film, and a skillful deployment of screenlife as a storytelling technique.
Read More