With his latest, Jude continues following intuition and putting ideas into immediate action.
The biggest surprises in the book come in the Metropolitan dossier.
The story’s center isn’t strong enough for the rest of its disparate parts to hold.
The film only superficially conveys the importance of the historical insights it contains.
The raw, frustrating, occasionally revealing footage of Monk makes the film worthwhile.
Greenaway discusses his ideas about cinema and the limitations of text-based filmmaking.
The novel reads as a final, all-encompassing summary of Irving’s concerns and obsessions.
This unconventional biography casts its subject as the protagonist of his time, a mirror for the rapidly changing country in which he lived.
Radu Jude discusses his approach to archival material and what it’s like to make a film under pandemic-related restrictions.
The intensity of Subdivision’s narrative purpose stands in marked contrast to Let Me Think.
Nors weaves striking imagery throughout her stories, leaving us to intuitively make sense of how everything fits together.
Katharina Volckmer’s debut is a warning shot fired across the bow of the modern novel.
On the page, the main character’s musical aspirations never feel as alive as her interpersonal relationships.
What animates Sayles’s fiction is curiosity about different kinds of people and their experiences.