Posts in Reviews
The Crow’s crow can’t bring you back, but it can point you towards the way through

For a movie about supernatural revenge against a cadre of scumbags, The Crow is remarkably sweet-hearted. Combine that sweetness with Lee’s work, solid action, and an impeccable feel, look, and sound, and there’s a reason that Proyas and crew’s picture remains well-loved. Would that it was just one of many pictures in Lee’s filmography rather than a memorial.

Read More
Hit Man: An Existentialist Approach to Living

Hit Man is Richard Linklater’s latest movie about the double life of a college professor who wants to live the philosophy he teaches. The story follows Gary (Glen Powell), who moonlights with an undercover law enforcement team that extracts confessions from homicide solicitors. He doesn’t pose as a hitman, though. He’s one of the techs in the van that does whatever a tech-in-a-van does.

Read More
Tribeca '24: Witches

Elizabeth Sankey weaves an intricate tale of female persecution and its relation to postpartum depression, soaked with the tears of her own harrowing experience in a psychiatric hospital after her own breakdown. The documentary works as an expose of her institutionalization intercut with iconic witches throughout film and television history and the confessions of other suffering mothers.

Read More
Tribeca '24: Slave Play. Not a Movie. A Play. Also a Deconstruction of Performance. A Meta Cinematic Exercise. A Portrait of the Artist. A Guttural Scream.

A movie is a catharsis, a chance for Jeremy O. Harris to say, “This is what you were supposed to learn. Hear it from me. I am the authority on my work.”

Read More