Archives: Movie Reviews
Movie Reviews.
Archives
- September 2024 18
- August 2024 23
- July 2024 22
- June 2024 28
- May 2024 22
- April 2024 23
- March 2024 25
- February 2024 21
- January 2024 23
- December 2023 28
- November 2023 21
- October 2023 21
- September 2023 24
- August 2023 21
- July 2023 33
- June 2023 25
- May 2023 22
- April 2023 26
- March 2023 17
- February 2023 17
- January 2023 23
- December 2022 30
- November 2022 29
- October 2022 36
- September 2022 29
- August 2022 29
- July 2022 40
- June 2022 30
- May 2022 36
- April 2022 30
- March 2022 28
- February 2022 29
- January 2022 38
- December 2021 32
- November 2021 31
- October 2021 47
- September 2021 38
- August 2021 49
- July 2021 35
- June 2021 28
- May 2021 43
- April 2021 31
- March 2021 41
- February 2021 32
- January 2021 58
- December 2020 15
- November 2020 22
- October 2020 1
Recent Posts
See More >>-
9/13-9/15: BEETLEJUICE BEETLEJUICE Repeats
Posted on: Sep. 15, 2024
-
Warner Bros. Discovery Signs New Distribution Deal with Charter
Posted on: Sep. 12, 2024
-
Satellite TV Is in Trouble. DIRECTV’s Dispute With Disney Shows Why
Posted on: Sep. 12, 2024
-
Utah’s Angel Studios, formerly VidAngel, Plans to Go Public in $1.6B SPAC Deal
Posted on: Sep. 11, 2024
Son of Ramses
The compelling Karim Leklou carries this second feature from artist and filmmaker Clément Cogitore, whose pitch is more promising than its full-length execution.
Read More >>Godland
Magisterial in the manner of 19th century epic novels and visually influenced by that era’s photography, Hlynur Pálmason’s third feature is a stunning, psychologically rich tale set against Iceland’s awe-inspiring landscapes.
Read More >>Stars at Noon
CANNES GRAND PRIX – JOINTLY AWARDED, REVIEWED MAY 26 Set in Central America, Claire Denis’ second English-language film is more straightforward than most of her works but is unmistakably hers in the way she suspends her complex characters in the sweaty grasp of a tropical setting.
Read More >>Mariupolis 2
Lithuanian filmmaker Mantas Kvedaravi?ius was killed by Russian soldiers after shooting footage for this gritty and unnerving documentary about life in the besieged, bombed-out Ukrainian city of Mariupol.
Read More >>Don Juan
Director Serge Bozon offers up a dour, quirky Don Juan (played by Tahar Rahim) for the age of #MeToo.
Read More >>Harka
Documentary director Lotfy Nathan’s prize-winning dramatic debut is a powerful if slightly heavy-handed take on injustice and protest in the Arab world.
Read More >>Sick Of Myself
With a deft hand for black comedy, Norwegian director Kristoffer Borgli takes his examination of modern narcissism to its body-horror extreme.
Read More >>The Worst Ones
Lise Akoka and Romane Gueret’s film is a solid debut indebted to the impressive performances of its child actors.
Read More >>The Dam
Lebanese artist-filmmaker Ali Cherri delivers a visually mesmerising and quietly political first feature, set among Sudanese bricklayers working on the biggest hydroelectrical dam in Africa.
Read More >>Continental Drift (to the South)
Swiss director Lionel Baier directs a comedy-drama about a mother, her son and the European Union’s refugee crisis that’s unexpected, to say the least.
Read More >>