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
My Emptiness and I
This fictionalized portrait of a trans woman’s emotional journey towards selfhood tries to cover too many bases in the psychological process, but Raphaëlle Perez’s sympathetic performance and the film’s overall sensitivity make up for some of its flaws.
Read More >>Nazarbazi
An utterly captivating found footage collage that pieces together a sensuous history of intimacy in Iranian post-revolution cinema where depictions of physical contact are prohibited.
Read More >>Singing in the Wilderness
A bittersweet chronicle of the Miao farmers who form a Christian choir in the remote mountains in China, and who are recruited to perform nationally while gradually losing their lands, autonomy and identity.
Read More >>The Making of Crime Scenes
Hsu Che-yu’s examination of a political assassination combines digital and physical reconstruction techniques to understand the life of a mobster, assassin, and film producer.
Read More >>I Get Knocked Down
Retired pop star and former anarchist Dunstan Bruce tries to rekindle his youthful punk rage in this charmingly offbeat music documentary.
Read More >>Constant
Sasha Litvintseva and Beny Wagner’s new essay film is a heady examination of the history, impacts, and social equality of standardised measurement.
Read More >>Parallel Mothers
Almodóvar’s latest offers an exciting if not entirely smooth mix of new and familiar elements, including his muse Penélope Cruz.
Read More >>Promises
Isabelle Huppert spearheads this solid political drama that raises some interesting questions.
Read More >>The Hand of God
Paolo Sorrentino reflects on his Neapolitan youth in an autobiographical film whose first half is replete with signature baroque touches but then loses its way.
Read More >>The Card Counter
One of Paul Schrader’s most complex and profound reflections on personal traumatic memory bleeds into the American tragedy of Abu Ghraib in an anguishing drama starring Oscar Isaac, Tye Sheridan and Tiffany Haddish.
Read More >>