Aren reflects on the passing of Isao Takahata and discusses his immense contributions to animation.
Read MoreShivers proves Cronenberg capable of conjuring conventionally-appealing entertainment that still has the capacity to shock with its imagery and dazzle with its ideas.
Read MoreAnders revisits the fandom-splitting film and considers its treatment of the Star Wars myth. Is it actually Rian Johnson's reverent tribute to Lucas's series?
Read MoreSplendid parts, but mostly conventional, with one egregious miscalculation.
Read MoreAnders discovers and digs into William Peter Blatty's exploration of faith, despair, and madness.
Read MoreIt Comes at Night is often beautiful and atmospheric and interesting, but it is not scary and it is not exciting.
Read MoreSecret Weapons is a failed experiment, but like most failed experiments, the recipe for future success is present in its dysfunction.
Read MoreDisgusting, ungainly, and offensive to every shred of decency a person may have. But also extremely funny.
Read MoreEx Machina was a promising debut and a superior work of science-fiction, but Annihilation is on a whole other level.
Read MoreIf you were charmed by the adventures of Kiki and Chihiro and Mei and Satsuki in the films of Studio Ghibli, the adventure of Mary and the cat Tib will delight you.
Read MoreCrimes of the Future is a clear progression of the experimental filmmaking of Stereo and a stepping-stone towards the sexual body horror of Shivers.
Read MoreFaces Places is a moving film and worth celebrating, if only for the fact that at almost-90, Agnès Varda hasn't slowed down.
Read MoreAnders and Aren offer up their predictions and preferences for winners at the 90th Annual Academy Awards.
Read MoreIt never breaks free of the confines of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but Black Panther is exciting and dramatically-rich in ways few MCU films are.
Read MoreStereo is dramatically boring, but it's an essential prototype of the sort of clinical, art-horror that Cronenberg would become known for.
Read MoreTrain to Busan thrills with confined railcar suspense, large-scale disaster action, and effective social commentary.
Read MoreThis is a bizarre film, but one that confronts reality in often-fascinating ways.
Read MoreThe 3 Brothers begin their retrospective on Canada's greatest living filmmaker, David Cronenberg.
Read MoreWith grace and unflinching honesty, The Breadwinner powerfully contemplates the power of stories and the meaning of hardship in the world.
Read MoreThe Cloverfield Paradox has no meaningful reason to exist beyond providing tenuous connections to the two other films in the franchise.
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