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Rapt is, if anything, a timely film. It’s been over three years since it was released in France (it came out in theatres stateside last year) but it feels...
The new horror film Sinister over anything else, asks the serious question of how much supernatural scary shit would one would put up with before relocating their family to...
The first thing I did when I finished William Friedkin’s Killer Joe was take a shower. The film is up to its neck in grunge, sweat, dirt and blood....
When a movie takes place directly before, during, or after World War II in Germany, there is little doubt the overall feel of the film is going to be...
High schoolers are at the most vulnerable and volatile stage in life, teetering on the precipice of adulthood. Full of insecurity, they cling to each other to form cliques...
As a child, when staying at a motel or sleepovers with friends with premium cable, watching HBO always felt sneaky. You never knew what un-edited adult gem you’d come...
The last installment of the Paradise trilogy is Ulrich Seidl’s Paradise: Hope, a coming-of-age film about a teenage girl who develops a crush on a doctor at a camp...
Renowned filmmaker Michel Gondry has an animated (I say that both figuratively and literally) conversation with the famous linguist, philosopher, and political activist Noam Chomsky. Is the Man Who...
My Brother the Devil, director Sally El Hosaini’s first feature length film, takes us deep into the heart of London’s housing projects. We follow the story of two brothers,...
In 1982, Godfrey Reggio altered the cinematic landscape with Koyaanisqatsi, an immaculate, haunting film composed of documentary footage of life on earth that pondered the fraught relationship between man, modernity,...
It Felt Like Love is an indie coming-of-age story about a young girl’s sexual exploration from first-time filmmaker and writer Eliza Hittman. With the help of an incredibly talented...
One of Romania’s most prominent actors, Luminita Gheorghiu bolsters her already glowing track record with Child’s Pose, a somber, hopeless mother’s tale painted in shades of grey. Directed by...
If you were asked to do something unthinkable and told that one act would benefit a great number of people, would you do it? If it was for the “greater good”...
Paradise goes up in flames in The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden, a stranger-than-fiction murder mystery in documentary form. There’s something fascinatingly bizarre about the events surrounding the unexplained...
It's hard to watch Snowpiercer without thinking about the last several months of controversy surrounding it. The film, an international production by Korean director Bong Joon-Ho (Memories of Murder,...
A few years ago, Jesse Eisenberg was regarded by many (especially in the mainstream) as a less famous alternative to Michael Cera, the other squeaky-voiced, wimpy white kid taking over...
This slow, but intriguing film first made its debut at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. The increase in indie sci-fi films (read about a few of our favorites) has provoked...
Like the two previous Sundance hits, Whiplash goes through familiar emotional motions which prevent it from being the kind of sensation the Sundance buzz might make you think it...
Following the success of Once, director John Carney was afforded a bigger budget and bigger stars to help him in making Begin Again, his follow-up to the eminently popular music-romance...
Woody Allen returns to his touristic tendencies in Magic in the Moonlight a film set in the gorgeous natural surroundings of the south of France circa 1928. This is a decidedly light...
It’s hard “shocked” when information about a celebrity’s past is revealed. Nowadays information about someone gets dredged up by the TMZs of the world and distributed ad nauseam across...
Newlywed life is fraught with difficulty as adjusting to life with someone else can make for plenty of stressful situations. At the least, the honeymoon phase can usually be depended...
Finds a way to wring something new and refreshing out of such familiar content.
Bill Murray should play every grumpy old man character from now on.
The now infamous story of Edward Snowden's leaking of confidential NSA papers is covered from its beginning moments.
London's National Gallery gets the documentary treatment.
Paul Thomas Anderson's latest isn't his best, but is highly enjoyable by anyone able to let go and let it wash over them.
'Amira and Sam' is a charming romantic comedy fueled by its cross-cultural quirks.
The self-discovery of a teenage girl is both honest and ordinary in the indie film 'Girlhood'.
Heart disease and the controversy around its treatment are given the spotlight in this compelling indie documentary.
An effervescent, airy sequel that shares a comfortable co-existence with its predecessor.
A 'Fargo' fanatic searches for the film's lost treasure in rural Minnesota in 'Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter'.
A tragic death triggers an internal crisis for a teenage boy in Bas Devos' gorgeous, evocative debut feature.
Adolescence in the rural South sets the stage for 'Stop the Pounding Heart'.
A pair of performances that win you over scene-by-scene drive this nostalgic city romance.
In this compelling love story-turned-mystery, an online romance goes viral when an Arab blogger goes missing, and the Twittersphere takes on the case.
Chuck Norris vs. Communism is a history lesson, decorated in nostalgia, telling the story of people who were more like us than we ever realized.
Lively is the beating heart of this San Francisco-set romance fantasy.
Among the Believers highlights the saddening, cyclical nature of the issues surrounding religious extremism.
A compelling, star-studded documentary on the life of filmmaker Sam Fuller.