Archives: Movie Reviews
Movie Reviews.
Archives
- November 2024 16
- October 2024 22
- September 2024 28
- 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 31
- January 2021 58
- December 2020 15
- November 2020 22
- October 2020 1
Recent Posts
See More >>-
11/15-11/17 – RED ONE Moves Santa to the Top
Posted on: Nov. 17, 2024
-
Movies Back In Mattituck: Beloved Cinema Reopens With First-Run Films
Posted on: Nov. 14, 2024
-
After Trump Win, Hollywood Prepares for Megamergers – and Volatility
Posted on: Nov. 08, 2024
-
Disney’s Earnings Outlook Rises as Streaming Unit Posts Gains
Posted on: Nov. 14, 2024
Tomorrow Is A Long Time
Taiwanese arthouse A-lister Leon Dai and new actor Edward Tan front Singaporean filmmaker Jow Zhi Wei’s visually enchanting, structurally disciplined first feature.
Read More >>Kissing the Ground You Walked On
Inspired by the sentiments of Anton Chekhov’s ‘The Seagull’ and mirroring the aesthetics of Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s ‘Drive My Car’, Macau filmmaker Hong Heng-fai’s first feature offers sensual and sultry drama about love, art and human existence.
Read More >>The Last Seagull
Noted Bulgarian director Tonislav Hristov turns his camera on an aging beachside charmer whose years as a gigolo for women tourists are nearing their end just as the pandemic and the war in Ukraine make him rethink his future.
Read More >>Mighty Afrin: in the Time of Floods
The border between documentary and fiction is troublingly blurred in this exquisitely composed immersive story of a young girl living in the flooded plains of the Brahmaputra River who goes to Dhaka in search of her father.
Read More >>Everybody Wants to be Loved
Katharina Woll handles her delightful debut feature film with the grace and sensitivity of a much more experienced filmmaker, with a hand from lead actress Anne Ratte-Polle.
Read More >>It’s In Us All
A random tragedy exposes the dark heart of a rural Irish community in this absorbing debut feature from actor-director Antonia Campbell-Hughes.
Read More >>Performer
An otherwise solid examination of a young man’s masculinity directed by newcomer Oliver Grüttner isn’t quite sure if it seeks to praise or condemn.
Read More >>Sideral
Brazil’s first manned rocket launch provides a catalyst for transformation and a leftfield opportunity for escape in Carlos Segundo’s bittersweet and dryly absurdist short.
Read More >>God is a Beetle
Felix Herrmann’s hybrid film is an occasionally dry but frank examination of faith, feminism, and ambition in the modern world.
Read More >>Mother
German director Carolin Schmitz takes a journey from here to maternity in this fresh but slight docu-drama hybrid.
Read More >>