Archives: Movie Reviews
Movie Reviews.
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Recent Posts
See More >>-
11/15-11/17 – RED ONE Moves Santa to the Top
Posted on: Nov. 17, 2024
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Movies Back In Mattituck: Beloved Cinema Reopens With First-Run Films
Posted on: Nov. 14, 2024
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After Trump Win, Hollywood Prepares for Megamergers – and Volatility
Posted on: Nov. 08, 2024
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Disney’s Earnings Outlook Rises as Streaming Unit Posts Gains
Posted on: Nov. 14, 2024
More Than Ever
Moving performances from Vicky Krieps and the regrettably late Gaspard Ulliel carry this stark, heartening look at a couple contending with looming death.
Read More >>The Five Devils
The second feature as a director from in-demand screenwriter Léa Mysius tries to be about five different films at once, and ends up being one right mess.
Read More >>The Pack
An intriguing setting and cast cannot compensate for lackluster performances and a story that progresses at a slow crawl.
Read More >>Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble in Mind
Ethan Coen’s first solo directing project is a retro-rock documentary with a whole lotta shaking going on, but not much else.
Read More >>Crimes of the Future
Legendary cult director David Cronenberg’s first film in eight years is an ambitious but unconvincing return to familiar body-horror themes.
Read More >>Decision to Leave
Korean cult director Park Chan-wook takes us on the rollicking ride of a deconstructed murder investigation, complicated by obsessive love and betrayal.
Read More >>Under the Fig Trees
A gently appealing choral work from Tunisia with a strong understanding of rhythm and balance that marks a strong first feature for documentary-trained Erige Sehiri.
Read More >>Moonage Daydream
Brett Morgen’s overstuffed hot mess of a documentary celebrates David Bowie’s legacy as a live performer, deep thinker and living work of art.
Read More >>Tori and Lokita
The latest from the Belgian Dardenne brothers is yet another one of their dramas of stripped-back social realism, this time about two immigrant minors who try to pass as siblings.
Read More >>Father & Soldier
Mathieu Vadepied’s affecting portrait of paternal love hinges on intensely involving performances by Omar Sy and Alassane Diong, as an African father who goes to war to protect his conscript son.
Read More >>