This is “content” at its most nakedly bankrupt.
The film knows that when the stakes are sky high, the emotions need to be firmly grounded.
The film suggests Rules of the Game cross-bred with a Spielberg creature feature.
‘An Unfinished Film’ Review: Lou Ye’s Docufiction Portrait of More Than Just a Nation in Limbo
The film doesn’t employ stylized fiction as a conduit to real life, as Lou aims dead on for it.
The film truthfully hints at the sharp whirs behind the smooth façade of everyday life.
Novocaine takes action-movie invulnerability to brutal comic extremes.
Nyoni and Susan discuss how they collaborated to develop the inscrutable character of Shula.
James Griffiths’s film plays both its drama and comedy in decidedly minor keys.
‘Black Bag’ Review: Steven Soderbergh’s Spy Thriller Is a Cool Cucumber, but Is That Enough?
Black Bag is the kind of old-fashioned caper that Soderbergh can make in his sleep.
‘Bob Trevino Likes It’ Review: A Touching, If Gentle to a Fault, Dramedy of Mutual Healing
This is an immensely likeable film, thanks largely to the chemistry between its two leads.
Lund discusses how Wiseman, the legacy of baseball movies, and criticism influenced Eephus.
‘McVeigh’ Review: A Suffocatingly Atmospheric, If Muted to a Fault, Portrait of a Terrorist
McVeigh’s ominous atmosphere is omnipresent, clinging to Timothy like a dog to a bone.
The film provides Anderson with a sturdy canvas for his unique brand of gaudy, campy cool.
Robert Pattinson clearly relishes leaning into bug-eyed lunacy as much as he does pathos.
This list is part sheepish capitulation to the role the Oscars have played in our lives.
‘Long Day’s Journey Into Night’ Review: A Haunting Foursome in a Web of Buried Secrets
In a work as emotionally devastating as this, the performances are everything.
The film is a meditation on love and desire, death and memory, silence and expression.