Archives: Movie Reviews
Movie Reviews.
Archives
- December 2024 17
- November 2024 22
- 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 >>-
12/20-12/22: SONIC and MUFASA Top a Bountiful Pre-Holiday Weekend
Posted on: Dec. 22, 2024
-
12/13-12/15: MOANA 2 and WICKED Lead the Way for the 3rd Weekend and the 4th Quarter
Posted on: Dec. 15, 2024
-
Four Themed Movie Days Coming in 2025 for Rebranded National Cinema Day
Posted on: Dec. 10, 2024
-
Motion Picture Studios Back in Full for CinemaCon 2025
Posted on: Dec. 12, 2024
Endangered
Documentarists Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady are urgent but never sensationalistic in reporting on the dangers faced by the press in places where there is no official armed conflict.
Read More >>How is Katia?
A Ukrainian paramedic wrestles with personal tragedy and public injustice in Christina Tynkevych’s powerful, prize-winning fiction-feature debut.
Read More >>Iman
A Greek-Cypriot family fall apart against a backdrop of tragedy, terrorism and racial tension in this glossy thriller from Corinna Avraamidou and Kyriacos Tofarides.
Read More >>The Taste of Apples is Red
Ehab Tarabieh’s debut fiction feature is a brooding thriller about long-buried family secrets returning to haunt a close-knit Druze village in the Golan Heights.
Read More >>Stuntwomen
A fascinating and troubling behind-the-scenes look into the work of female stuntwomen, who must frequently portray victims at the hands of violent men.
Read More >>Manifesto
A profoundly disturbing found-footage assemblage portraying a young Russian live-streaming generation brainwashed by militarised education and normalised violence.
Read More >>Free Money
Lauren DeFilippo and Sam Soko examine a newfangled Western method of aid to Africa and return with predictable answers in this largely agreeable fare.
Read More >>Paradise
In stunning images, Alexander Abaturov’s debut shows global warming heroes in far-flung northeastern Siberia, abandoned by the Russian government.
Read More >>Much Ado About Dying
Simon Chambers’ family-filming-family masterpiece is a tender and often funny chronicle of a dying man who secretes his brilliant charisma every moment the camera finds him awake.
Read More >>Colette and Justin
Alain Kassanda connects Congolese history to family history in this revealing debut documentary.
Read More >>