Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville reinforce the very circumstances they outwardly condemn.
The doc is beholden to the same plethora of taboos, half-truths, and outright lies traded en masse by mainstream conservatism for the last seven years.
Gondry’s squiggling animations—loaded with puns and cutesy-poo jokes—don’t really square with the subject.
A magnificently quizzical diagram of two ceaselessly inquiring minds in perfect tandem, like a raw X-ray of atomized creativity.
I Am is an essayistic hodgepodge of repetitious declarations of mankind’s interconnectedness.
Even for those likely to be sympathetic to his point of view, Norman Finkelstein can be a difficult figure to embrace.
Lake of Fire provides gruesome, incontrovertible images to complement the film’s deliberations about morality.
Hijacking Catastrophe is a wake-up call.