Thrilling though it may be, Denis Villeneuve’s second adaptation of Frank Herbert’s novels presents war as a distressing yet inevitable reality.
Read MoreJonathan Glazer’s historical drama is a groundswell indictment of genocidal complacency. But should it win an Oscar?
Read MoreThe exquisite latest work from writer-director Andrew Haigh embodies the best in what queer commercial filmmaking might offer.
Read MoreBradley Cooper’s biopic of Leonard Bernstein is a coup of a performance that ultimately acquiesces to its subject’s overblown ego.
Read MoreNeither Hayao Miyazaki’s animation nor William Oldroyd’s psychological drama is very good, though both arise out of compelling scenarios.
Read MoreKristoffer Bogli’s dark comedy appears to be a commentary on the fickle nature of modern celebrity, but also betrays a lurking paranoia towards cancel culture.
Read MoreThe global music superstar directs a documentary that centers on her live performances, but also unveils a handful of personal quirks.
Read MoreDirectors Sofia Coppola and Todd Haynes have both crafted unsettling dramas about audience complicity in famed cases of statutory rape.
Read MoreWriter-director Justine Triet’s psychological mystery is a meditation on our cultural predilection for interpreting women’s agency as deviant or offensive.
Read MoreFor all its concern towards the people of the Osage, Martin Scorsese’s new historical drama is primarily interested in watching its subjects die.
Read MoreKenneth Branagh’s latest Agatha Christie adaptation is a richly satisfying murder mystery with emotional weight.
Read MoreHalle Bailey makes her acting debut with the conviction of Julie Andrews in this engaging live-action remake of Disney’s animated classic.
Read MoreAndrea Pallaoro directs the magnetic Trace Lysette in a ravishing family drama that is both stylish and homey, if occasionally gratuitous.
Read MoreThe latest from visionary filmmaker Ari Aster draws a parallel between familial abuse and the hysterical effects induced from living in a world shaped by corporate monopolies.
Read MoreIn this marathon of mediocrity, I reflect on four new releases — from a biopic of the classical composer Joseph Bologne, to a dark comedy about Dracula’s codependent sidekick.
Read MoreA.V. Rockwell's feature debut is a refreshing, romantic yet unsentimental story about one woman’s fight to raise her son in turn-of-the-millennium Harlem.
Read MoreWriter-director Davy Chou’s portrait of a Korea-born Frenchwoman’s fitful struggle to place herself elides any true impression of angst, discomfort, or urgency.
Read MoreAn Irish drama about a reserved young girl who spends a summer with distant relatives, The Quiet Girl is directed by Colm Bairéad with intimate specificity.
Read MoreIn this third spin-off to the Rocky franchise, Michael B. Jordan takes the reins and guides his predecessors’ macho creation toward quieter, more sensitive dimensions of manhood.
Read MoreThis gory comedy from director Elizabeth Banks is inspired by an incident in 1985 when a black bear accidentally devoured millions of dollars’ worth of the misplaced drug.
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