Terrence Malick has crafted his most political and religious work yet.
Read MoreOne Day in the Life of Noah Piugattuk is a rewarding film and a microcosm of Inuit-settler relations.
Read MoreMakoto Shinkai’s follow-up to Your Name is a similarly high-concept exercise in empathy.
Read MoreThe Platform is both an allegory for class warfare and a seriously entertaining science-fiction horror film.
Read MoreSound of Metal has one of the most astounding sound designs in recent memory.
Read MoreA gruesome, funny B-movie to end the summer movie season.
Read MoreA remarkable documentary that gets at the inherent tensions of a globalized economy.
Read MoreThe Great Hack is an addictive primer on the Cambridge Analytica scandal, but it avoids delving into the muddier waters of its subject matter.
Read MoreJohn Lee Hancock’s revisionist take on Bonnie and Clyde leans into Western conventions while flirting with a deeper take on the mythology of American violence.
Read MoreKindergarten Cop is sentimental, but also a strong encapsulation of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s strengths as a performer.
Read MoreThe 2019 photorealistic remake of the 1994 classic is pointless nostalgia.
Read MoreAri Aster’s follow-up to Hereditary is formally impressive, but also indulgent and narratively myopic.
Read MoreAn embarrassingly lazy film on almost every level.
Read MoreRocketman reinvigorates the musical biopic through its full-on musical approach.
Read MoreAll Is True could’ve been a disastrous work of biographical criticism, but instead, it’s a quiet drama that understands Shakespeare’s appeal.
Read MoreGodzilla: King of the Monsters has plenty of action to satisfy kaiju fanboys, but the storytelling lacks nuance and interesting human characters.
Read MoreAfter 13 years, Deadwood finally gets some bittersweet closure.
Read MoreJohn Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum still has exceptional action sequences, but the franchise is starting to suffer diminished returns.
Read MoreIt’s naked franchise extension, but with enough humour and strong world-building to justify its existence.
Read MoreThe final film in The Matrix Trilogy is a subversion of conclusions and a fascinating pivot away from a linear, western worldview.
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