Film Reviews
They’re Here will struggle to connect to its audience, too often feeling as though it is attempting to only reach others whose experiences matches its own.
Ultimately, though the package may feel familiar, The Devil’s Bath still has cogent ideas to share.
Brats is a reminder old wounds can calcify and scab over turning into the foundation for something all the more beautiful.
Mars Express finds the right words and plucks the precise emotional heartstrings to make such a film more meaningful.
From Tribeca Film Festival 2024, Soham Gadre takes a look at CHAMPIONS OF THE GOLDEN VALLEY, BAM BAM: THE SISTER NANCY STORY & THE WEEKEND!
The overall effect is an icky jumble, at once anesthetizing and agitating, languorous and frenetic, a cinematic case of acid reflux.
Children in War contributes a clear-eyed, disciplined, and eloquently forceful rejection of every lie and excuse ever conjured for the justification of war.
Reading Rainbow cultivated an environment that was safe for kids and equally empowering — it engendered curiosity.
Wildcat becomes a lens through which to see beauty and empathize with one of our great American writers – and what a gift it is.
A powerful and poetic debut feature, Banel & Adama signifies Sy as an exciting young artist to watch in world cinema.
Liu Jian’s Art College 1994 rejects these clichés and instincts, instead seeing youth in the face of art for what it is: blowing a lot of hot air.
From Cannes Film Festival Wilson Kwong reviews Payal Kapadia’s Grand Prix winning All We Imagine as Light and Rúnar Rúnarsson’s When the Light Breaks.
From Cannes Film Festival, Wilson Kwong reviews
Magnus von Horn’s The Girl with the Needle and Agathe Riedinger’s Wild Diamond.
Jonathan Millet’s Ghost Trail and Guan Hu’s Black Dog both tackle serious subject matter with subdued restraint.
It’s truly difficult to qualify the beast of an experience that is Megalopolis, and because of that, there’s an undefinable elegance.