A fascinating specimen of modern-day American power lust, a tragic moral lesson our financial players have yet to learn.
Picture Me carries the annoying amateurish texture of most poorly shot student films.
Our Beloved Month of August takes on a singular rhythm from the very beginning.
The film lunges into the fragmented abyss of a murderous lost soul attempting to craft his own personalized religious awakening.
Ajami continues the tedious trend of films that purposefully muddle interlocking stories to prove simplistic notions about hotbed issues.
The Long Good Friday is both a classic British gangster film and a potent political commentary about Western urbanization.
This disc is an apt celebration of the film’s sensational vision of unrequited love and colorful saturation of classic Greek mythology.
The Duel gets a beautifully rendered DVD image but a terribly lacking disc devoid of extras.
Sweetgrass lives and breathes the cowboy existence.
The Art of the Steal concisely critiques the modern “rules” of the art game.
The film only scratches the surface of a man immersed in social and moral guilt during one of the most turbulent times in American history.
A Town Called Panic finds unexpected beauty and friendship in the chaos of contradiction.
It Came from Kuchar unfortunately doesn’t delve very deep into the Kuchar brothers as complex human beings.
This is an intriguing film that mixes dark tones and hopeful emotions so effortlessly that it’s hard to tell them apart.
Stolen takes an interesting premise and turns it into an unforgivably predictable and flimsy genre hybrid.