Archives: Movie Reviews
Movie Reviews.
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Recent Posts
See More >>-
12/13-12/15: MOANA 2 and WICKED Lead the Way for the 3rd Weekend and the 4th Quarter
Posted on: Dec. 15, 2024
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Four Themed Movie Days Coming in 2025 for Rebranded National Cinema Day
Posted on: Dec. 10, 2024
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Motion Picture Studios Back in Full for CinemaCon 2025
Posted on: Dec. 12, 2024
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Warner Discovery to Restructure, Setting Up Potential ‘Strategic Opportunities’
Posted on: Dec. 12, 2024
In Our Day
The latest feature from South Korean auteur Hong Sangsoo, a rather slender drama, closed the Directors’ Fortnight.
Read More >>Perfect Days
In this low-key but charming Cannes competition contender, German art-house veteran Wim Wenders delivers a poetic paean to Zen and the art of toilet maintenance.
Read More >>Last Summer
Catherine Breillat’s first film in ten years is a more romantic update of the Danish film ‘Queen of Hearts.’
Read More >>Inside the Yellow Cocoon
Pham Tien An’s first feature follows a young man’s slow spiritual journey with long takes, magical imagery and rarely seen glimpses into Vietnamese society.
Read More >>Pictures of Ghosts
Kleber Mendonça Filho’s poetic docu-essay is a passkey to his previous films as well as a personal reflection on his relationship with Recife and cinephilia, but this terrifically edited meditation is also a more universal ode to the way memories become ghosts that inhabit the physical spaces of our lives.
Read More >>Terrestrial Verses
A fresh and angry look at Iran today approaches the country’s malaise in a series of black comedy skits that pit ordinary citizens against a wide range of bureaucratic authorities.
Read More >>The Pot au Feu
The pièce de résistance of unabashed culinary cinema, Tran Anh Hung’s ‘The Pot au Feu’ serves up a French country idyll in romantic 19th century sauce for audiences whose tastes run to the fine wines and 12-course meals.
Read More >>Power Alley
Brazilian newcomer director Lillah Halla makes a film full of zest and empathy about a talented volleyball player that resonates in today´s pro-choice panorama.
Read More >>No Love Lost
Erwan Le Duc conjures a stylish and swoony look at the quick flame of first love and the lingering, unresolved pain of heartbreak.
Read More >>The Buriti Flower
Portuguese-Brazilian directors João Salaviza and Renée Nader Messora return to Cannes with a complex, highly-charged chronicle of how different generations of a Brazilian indigenous community fight back against intruders on their ancestral lands.
Read More >>