Columbus reminds me of Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson mixed with sprigs of Linklater’s Before trilogy and Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation.
Columbus reminds me of Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson mixed with sprigs of Linklater’s Before trilogy and Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation.
Not having seen Ocean’s Eleven or its sequels, I don’t have much of a basis to make comparisons here. I know this is a heist film and a comedy, and that’s as much as I have to judge.
All These Sleepless Nights is a weird hybrid of documentary and artifice, dealing with real Polish youth and their restlessness
This isn’t 2017’s best LGBTQ film. But in its own way, it provides a striking counterpoint to the stories that seem more hopeful in nature.
Cate Blanchett plays over a dozen characters, takes on half as many accents, gets to wear some great (and not so great) wigs.
Your Name is really fun to watch, and takes more risks than I would have expected it to. I may not be blown away, but I am still very impressed.
If this had been less predictable, I think it would’ve gotten more attention than it has. That doesn’t mean it’s worth forgetting. Far from.
Does anyone nowadays care how Louis XIV died? I certainly didn’t. Nevertheless, Albert Serra imagines the event as though it were a slowly deflating balloon in a burnished Baroque painting.
Everything is… not so awesome this time around, I’m afraid.
A number of people whose opinion I value didn’t much care for Battle of the Sexes. I decided to give it a go all the same, in case there was something in it they weren’t seeing. I’m sad to say that they were right.
Taika Waititi’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople is so precious. I don’t mean that negatively—it’s just a really cute film that you want to give a warm hug to.
Whoever came up with this premise deserves a raise and more chances to pitch ideas, because I found this film refreshingly original. A breath of fresh air with some gassy odours mixed in, so to speak.
Kate Plays Christine is all about the ethical concerns of this kind of memorialising. It wonders aloud why Christine Chubbuck mattered if not for the way she died, and the answers are hard to come by.
This is not just a documentary about a boy with autism. It’s also a film about seeing the world through film, and that’s something we can all attest to.
This is one of those films that’s quirky for the sake of being quirky, with a family of survivalists subsisting in a forest and living something of a utopian lifestyle where questions are always answered, debates encouraged, classic literature consumed, and campfire music-making a mainstay.