The series offers a surprisingly novel take on its source material, even if the pieces don’t fit together as neatly as they should.
Throughout, Cage flexes his singular acting muscles in increasingly hilarious directions.
The film is at once a journey of self-actualization and a testament to female solidarity.
The film affectingly captures the uniquely American ennui provoked by the lost utopia of youth.
Dash Shaw’s deceptively simple animation regularly descends into phantasmagoria that delivers on his story’s strange premise.
The film’s open-ended narrative tends to be undermined by the simplicity of its thematic signifiers.
Tyrel viscerally cuts to the everyday heart of living in a fraught cultural mixing pot.
Aaron Sorkin deep dives into self-parody from the opening moments of his directorial debut, Molly’s Game.
Self-absorption is director Bravo’s focus, though it’s a topic that’s less examined than indulged.
Still one of the most fun sugar rushes of the year, the film arrives on home video with a shimmering, chromatic video transfer.
The episode’s emotional epicenter is Bobby Briggs, now white-haired and working as a deputy for the department.
Person to Person is a vehicle for an exploration of New York City and a handful of its interesting inhabitants.
The film is an unbroken chain of one-liners, sight gags, and pop-culture references, and the hit-to-miss ratio is high.
This animated film isn’t willing to completely face the bleakness of its allegory of faith versus skepticism.
The film conjures a menacing perspective on how the titular occupation hulls out empathy and cultivates an unsettling strain of cynicism.
Michael Cera discusses his newfound experience as a stage actor and Brooklynite.
There were Eisenbergs, Gyllenhaals, and doppelganger-centered film adaptations galore at Toronto.
There’s so much baggage involved in the kind of dilettantish games Jamie and Crystal are playing that it’s a shame that the film never fully engages with these enticing issues.
Crystal Fairy is no Fear and Loathing in the Atacama.
The film’s new DVD release will hopefully prove how long its legs are.