First They Came for My College is an incredibly emotional documentary, even if it struggles to connect that emotion to the bigger picture.
Read MoreUltimately, Kontinental ‘25 feels like a Radu Jude film for people who can’t stomach the idea of a Radu Jude film.
Read MoreLove Hotel ends up not necessarily answering the question of what these two people want or need from each other, but it does leave a familiar bittersweetness in its wake.
Read MorePatricia Gillespie’s documentary aims to expose the insidious nature of unchecked mental illness at its most extreme, and for the most part she succeeds. #SKYKING is a tough watch but it is a rewarding one.
Read MoreFrom its name on down, Polone’s Psycho Killer has a certain braindead charm that earns its mercifully brief 92 minutes.
Read MorePassing Through represents a dynamic example of black artists creatively reacting to times of civil unrest, and inspiring other filmmakers to continue telling such stories in later periods.
Read MoreBefore we even meet the central couple, the film frames sex not as a conquest for pleasure or love, but as a means to start a philosophy lecture on the human drive.
Read MoreI left the theater that evening yearning for modern filmmaking to take a note from something like Pink Cut – a film brave enough to marry whimsy and eroticism perfectly.
Read MoreForbidden Fruits feels like an almost great teen movie.
Read MoreWhile Scott and Deadwyler are magnetic performers, The Saviors becomes too focused on its own plot to let the viewer engage with it as a pure character piece, but the plot is so obviously foreshadowing a twist that the film feels slow in execution.
Read MoreReady or Not 2: Here I Come aims to be bigger and bolder, but a suite of new characters can’t save the movie from a dumbed-down script.
Read MoreWith a neo-noir tone, a sleek L.A. setting and a cop versus criminal plot, Layton’s Crime 101 takes a page from Michael Mann’s oeuvre but struggles to pull off a heist movie with any real style.
Read MoreThis movie was the end of an era, and it deserves your time. We didn’t know how good we had it.
Read MoreIn Dead Bang, Don Johnson’s Jerry Beck isn’t a wisecracking action hero like John McClane; he’s exhausted, bureaucratically constrained, and emotionally numb. The movie keeps reminding you that this is a job, not an adventure. He’s got bigger fish to fry, it seems.
Read MoreDespite the difficult exterior, the film strives to look lovingly at New York City, knowing under the rough edges there’s a place full of beauty and unique magic, a victim itself of fraught leadership.
Read MoreMarty Supreme is a triumph because it serves as a pure extension of Josh Safdie's vision.
Read MoreTwo packed weeks, very little sleep, and more films than our brains could probably process. Here is everything we caught at Sundance Film Festival.
Read MoreThe arguments around both films are noticeably similar: do the films fully embrace the politics they portray? How radical can big-budget films released by major studios ever really be?
Read MoreDirector Sam Green’s latest film, named after the Guinness World Record designation, follows several of the title holders of this ephemeral honor.
Read MoreAny merits of The Bride!, of which there are many, slam into a brick wall in the face of its biggest problem: undermining surreal storytelling with hyper-literal storytelling.
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