Featuring horror legend Christopher Lee and plenty of Gothic atmosphere, this tale of witchcraft in a New England town is a spooky though backward-looking treat.
Read MoreThe Fog is a compelling mood piece, with atmospheric scares and great low-budget special effects.
Read MoreMillennium Actress is a beautiful examination of the relationships between actors and the movies they make, and viewers and the movies they watch.
Read MoreJohn Sturges’ Western plays like a minor variation of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948).
Read MoreTwenty years later, David Gordon Green’s debut feature George Washington remains a beautiful cinematic memory.
Read MoreHumphrey Bogart’s final film is a bruising noir and a chance to watch the titan of Old Hollywood spar with Rod Steiger, another acting icon.
Read MoreSidney Lumet’s 1971 heist thriller starring Sean Connery is diverting genre fun that’s made more interesting through its experimental formal presentation.
Read MoreBefore they made Wild Wild Country, Maclain and Chapman Way directed this winning documentary about the Portland Mavericks, an independent baseball team run by TV actor (and father of Kurt) Bing Russell.
Read MoreJoe’s 2015 feature captures the karmic drift between the waking and dreaming worlds.
Read MoreLike an Expanded Universe novel, Solo opens up the Star Wars world in imaginative, if inessential, ways.
Read MoreThe Star Wars anthology film Rogue One brings a focus to sacrifice, heroism, and the cost of war, with a rousing and entertaining exploration of the backstory to A New Hope.
Read MoreWith his final film in the Star Wars saga, George Lucas creates a shocking, beautiful tragedy.
Read MoreA full appreciation of Attack of the Clones requires the upheaval of some established viewpoints on the film.
Read MoreTwenty years after it launched the Prequel Trilogy, The Phantom Menace remains a pivotal film in both the Star Wars saga and the transformation of global film culture.
Read MoreChristine finds John Carpenter working at the height of his formal powers, transforming a ridiculous concept into a thrilling film.
Read MoreReturn of the Jedi is both a technological marvel and one of cinema’s most powerful redemption narratives.
Read MoreKindergarten Cop is sentimental, but also a strong encapsulation of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s strengths as a performer.
Read MoreWhile it is often dismissed as a prime example of bad, American action films, Michael Bay’s Armageddon is actually carefully constructed, developing its film style in service of a powerful work of American propaganda.
Read MoreAnton looks back at the original telling and the two myths of Hollywood it presents.
Read MoreThe last review in our Cronenberg Retrospective considers his bizarre Gothic Hollywood satire.
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