Tribeca '24: The Shallow Tale of a Writer Who Decided to Write About a Serial Killer: "Yes, Sir, I Can Boogie."

Despite its titular (and occasionally apt) shallowness, Tolga Karaçelik’s entry at Tribeca is a great ride that manages to find moments of poignancy.

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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.”

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The Global Eccentricity of Tsui Hark and Wicked City

Embracing global cinema has the ability to cross cultural and cinematic barriers: how the filmmaker uses action and visual storytelling as a universal language, how the filmmaker connects their personal story to broader themes, and how the filmmaker embraces the absurdity of the world around us. In Tsui Hark’s Wicked City (1992), we have one of global cinema’s finest and oddest examples. 

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