Three Thousand Years of Longing: Film Review

Three Thousand Years Of Longing offers a visually appealing mosaic of fantasy tales and quickly gets comfortable in its absurdity.
Servants Review: Blurring the line of church & state

Servants is an unforgettably chilling art thriller with some of the most striking images in recent cinema history.
Living (2022) Film Review

Bill Nighy is superb in Living, a Kurosawa adaptation that manages to be both enjoyable and heart-wrenching, and reminds us that it’s never too late to start living.
TÁR Film Review: The Downfall of a Narcissist

Cate Blanchett excels as a master manipulator in TÁR, Todd Field’s haunting character study about a narcissist.
Three Nights A Week Film Review: Love, in All Its Forms

Florent Gouëlou’s Three Nights A Week is a poignant story of acceptance, love, freedom, and the contradictions that define us.
Kaepernick & America Review: The Power of a Kneel

Kaepernick & America greatly captures the events before and after Kaepernick’s kneel and, more importantly, what they mean for the bigger picture of America.
Who Invited Them Film Review: Gleefuly Sinister

Shudder’s Who Invited Them is a gleefully sinister horror comedy that outshines its narrative predictability with an engaging script and cast.
Luzzu Review: Grounded Neorealist Drama

A traditional fisherman’s trade in Malta is threatened by commercialism and trawlers in Luzzu, Alex Camilleri’s perfectly constructed neorealist drama.
Boy (Taika Waititi) Film Review

Before the dizzying heights of Marvel, Taika Waititi’s Boy showcased the filmmaker at his best, with a tender coming-of-age story about the nature of family.
Vengeance Review: B.J. Novak Takes America to Task

Vengeance is far more than its marketing would lead you to believe, as this murder mystery comedy doubles as an astute observation of modern American society.