Film
Jennifer Kent’s The Nightingale is a Chilling Revenge Epic
The Nightingale, Jennifer Kent's follow-up to 'The Babadook' expands her style and vision and disturbs far more than traditional horror.
The Nightingale, Jennifer Kent's follow-up to 'The Babadook' expands her style and vision and disturbs far more than traditional horror.
Sundance 2019: The Mountain Rick Alverson is a filmmaker who delights in unsettling his audience. His films tend to feature...
Sundance 2019: The Last Black Man in San Francisco The first thing one notices about Joe Talbot’s The Last Black...
Sundance 2019: Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool Sometimes documentaries are designed for viewers who already have a certain familiarity...
Sundance 2019: The Disappearance of My Mother For a brief time in the 1960s, Benedetta Barzini was one of the...
Sundance: Brittany Runs a Marathon It’s about time Jillian Bell led her own film. The comedian and actress has added...
Sundance 2019: Native Son Review In Richard Wright’s 1940 novel Native Son, he ponders the ways in which society strips...
The Souvenir Review I went into Joanna Hogg’s The Souvenir completely blind, not knowing a thing about it, including who...
Sundance 2019: Honey Boy It’s clear from the opening moments of Honey Boy that its subject, Shia LaBeouf, lives with...
A single mother living in the Irish countryside with her son begins to suspect he may not be her son...