The Knickerbocker Hospital’s putative mission to help New York City’s neediest gets its most interesting stress test yet in “They Capture the Heat.”
“Where’s the Dignity?” doesn’t lack for drama or tension; it’s just much better stacked than its predecessors.
The Knick remains one hell of a panoramic contraption, and Clive Owen’s starring turn as Dr. John Thackery is one of the show’s major draws.
The lurking anti-subtlety of The Knick’s pilot picks right back up in “Mr. Paris Shoes.”
A decidedly 21st-century tension drives The Knick: the murky interstice between recorded and unrecorded history.
The film elevates the story of Jackie Robinson to that of cornball legend rather than just honoring his uplifting, heroic saga by telling it straight.
1600 Penn quickly announces itself as a slapsticky, family-driven alternative to HBO’s restlessly scathing Veep.
Annie Howell and Lisa Robinson’s Small, Beautifully Moving Parts is one of those movies.
At the core of 96 Minutes is Dre, the film’s only source of real, relatable emotion, thanks in large part to a compelling performance by Evan Ross.
Sugar ultimately runs headlong away from the clichés that mar formula sports-related narrative films.