Benoît Bringer’s The Rise of Wagner investigates the history of the Wagner Group and its war crimes committed in Syria, Ukraine, and African Central Republic.
Read MoreMartín Benchimol’s The Castle is an eclectic and dryly humorous examination of life in a decaying manor in the Argentine countryside.
Read MoreKathleen Jayme and Asia Youngman’s I’m Just Here for the Riot examines the social consequences of the 2011 Vancouver Stanley Cup Finals riot.
Read MoreThe Longest Goodbye examines the psychological toll of space travel through the work of NASA’s Dr. Al Holland.
Read MoreKay Lena Ndiaye’s documentary on the CFA franc is handsomely mounted, but lacks specificity and a clear thesis.
Read MoreZhang Jialing’s Total Trust is a claustrophobic, challenging portrait of life under the totalizing Chinese surveillance apparatus.
Read MoreAnanta Thitanat’s slow cinema documentary on the dismantling of the Scala theatre in Bangkok plays like a non-fiction version of Tsai Ming-liang’s Goodbye, Dragon Inn.
Read MoreSteve J. Adams and Sean Horlor’s Satan Wants You presents the origin story of the Satanic Panic as a slick true crime thriller.
Read MoreGeorges Hannan’s Undertaker for Life! attempts to lift the veil on the world of morticians, but refuses to engage with the visceral discomfort of death.
Read MoreJohn Wick: Chapter 4 is as much endurance test as action epic, but it still delivers the excellent action choreography we expect of the series.
Read MoreClint Eastwood’s Sudden Impact, the fourth Dirty Harry picture, combines the rape-revenge film with the reactionary cop picture to fascinating results.
Read MoreChander Levack’s I Like Movies is a coming-of-age film that relies on the specificity of its character and setting to compensate for its conventional narrative.
Read MoreDavy Chou’s Return to Seoul is an intimate examination of a troubled young woman.
Read MoreMichael B. Jordan’s Creed III is another examination of what makes a man in a cinematic culture that’s hardly interested in the question.
Read MoreBrandon Cronenberg’s Infinity Pool is a transgressive work of body horror that provides a moral critique of the elite through its shocking content.
Read MoreThe Gerard Butler-starring Plane is a no-frills action thriller that leans into convention to satisfying results.
Read MoreDwayne Johnson’s DCEU superhero film is a pale imitation of a Zack Snyder film, and proof of why the DCEU is being rebooted.
Read MoreKyle Edward Ball’s low-budget experimental horror film is a dissociative nightmare.
Read MoreDamien Chazelle’s epic tragicomedy, Babylon, is yet another investigation of the personal cost of art and a wildly ambitious, if uneven, ode to silent cinema.
Read MoreHirokazu Kore-eda transforms what sounds like a dour thriller into a heartfelt examination of forgiveness and what constitutes a family.
Read More