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Frederick Wiseman—
Monrovia, Indiana
;
Titicut Follies
—9/28/2018
I'm trying to make a group of movies that represent as many different aspects of contemporary life as I can.
Kathryn Hahn & Tamara Jenkins—
Private Life
—10/5/2018
[Hahn:] Like childbirth, a movie is like: you kind of forget the pain and would do it again in a second.
A Star is Born (2018)
Unabashed melodrama...the film’s strongest moments are acoustic, not plugged-in...intimate, truth-telling exchanges between lovers who want the best for each other.
Smallfoot (2018)
Bland... something of a thinker, even a subversive one, but it’s dubious that kids will pick up on the provocation between the pratfalls and the pop songs.
Fahrenheit 11/9 (2018)
[A] dire accounting of the corruption of the Republican Party, the sell-out centrism of the Democratic Party, and the victimization of working-class Americans...[and] an urgent call to action.
Pick of the Litter (2018)
Informs and entertains in equal measure...not only proves thoroughly family friendly, but it’s that rare moviegoing option likely to please everyone in any group.
Operation Finale (2018)
A functional spy thriller and, more importantly, an intriguing character study of two men shaped by hatred.
Searching (2018)
Twisty thrills also result in a climactic pileup, a resolution that strains credibility...with a dynamic leading performance by Cho, Chaganty manages an engaging popcorn suspense picture that also speaks to technology enabling and frustrating...
The Wife (2018)
The ultimate secret of the Castlemans’ marriage isn’t entirely convincing in Joan’s every rationale, but Close’s sheer force of acting makes it possible to believe in the character, at minimum in the emotional broad strokes.
Crazy Rich Asians (2018)
By the film’s climax, a $40 million wedding, conspicuous consumerism has been glamorized beyond the point of no return, and the difference between romance and showmanship becomes, at least momentarily, irrelevant.
BlacKkKlansman (2018)
Can be overtly funny in its absurdity. For the most part, however,
BlacKkKlansman
isn’t a comedy at all, but an earnest, vintage Spike Lee joint recounting history and projecting it onto our present.
Eighth Grade (2018)
With Fisher’s endearingly open face projecting every insecurity along the way, Kayla’s journey of baby-steps self-empowerment resonates.
Mission: Impossible—Fallout (2018)
Fallout
proves deliberately dizzying, not just with its oft-vertiginous action, but in its outrageous plotting, its deliriously absurd entanglements of double agents, double crosses, and just plain doubles...
The Equalizer 2 (2018)
Suggests intriguing questions about the moral and ethical imperatives of justice...answers these questions with an Old Testament zeal: evil must be smitten by self-appointed good men.
Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation (2018)
This is the kind of lackluster animated movie at which you’ll lose count of how many times the characters randomly break into dance--and that’s in addition to the...not one but two dance parties incorporated into the plot.
Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018)
A good time at the movies... If the first film felt more carefully laid out, the sequel succeeds in stoking some Pixar-style emotion in its family dynamics...
Bo Burnham—
Eighth Grade
—6/7/2018
I felt...pop culture is insane, and I always felt so gross for participating in it, and so hypocritical for participating in it. So what I’ll be is an angry hypocrite. Because that’s a coherent, at least, worldview.
Sicario: Day of the Soldado (2018)
A straight procedural, consumed by its plot at the expense of thematic nuance. Nevertheless...a darkly compelling reminder of the multifaceted folly of our War on Drugs.
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018)
In what starts to feel like a 'meta' running joke (or admission of creative exhaustion), the characters keep stumbling upon the leftovers of the earlier films...
Incredibles 2 (2018)
Plays it safe...another issue of the
Incredibles
comic book, another big-scale adventure with full-throttle action sequences, a bit of mystery, and career complications testing the structural integrity of this nuclear family of superheroes.
Ocean's Eight (2018)
Ross brings a reasonably sure hand and plenty of eye candy to this slick, glitzy fantasy, which is no more or less than an amiable, star-powered trifle.
Paul Schrader—
First Reformed
,
Auto Focus
—4/6/2018
‘Why are we here? Where are we going? What will become of us?’ And for twenty or thirty thousand years, that’s been a hypothetical question…well, it’s no longer…
First Reformed (2018)
It’s Schrader’s on-point filmmaking--a nouveau spin on the spiritual films, character studies, and transcendental style of cinematic Old Masters like Bergman and Bresson--that functions as what Toller calls 'another form of prayer.'
Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018)
Like estimations of how many parsecs it takes to make the Kessel Run, your mileage may vary when it comes to
Solo: A Star Wars Story
.
Life of the Party (2018)
Since
Life of the Party
shows little interest in investigating the satiric possibilities of the two-decade cultural gap in play, or a weirdly one-sided May-December romance, the movie wafts into disposable irrelevance long before the credits roll
The Rider (2018)
The Rider
acknowledges the tender side of masculinity, of brotherly love and supportive friendship, but also recognizes the damage men can inflict on themselves and others just by trying to be men.
Avengers: Infinity War (2018)
[Spoiler-free review:] Marvel’s superhero movies may not run the risk of being called 'elegant,' but they’re sure as hell sturdy, well-built popcorn flicks that send audiences out unequivocally satisfied.
Jason Isaacs—
The Death of Stalin
,
Star Trek: Discovery
,
Harry Potter
—4/22/2018
You can't sprinkle perfume on a turd...You can't make a bad script into a good story.
Lean on Pete (2017)
The animal holds a mirror up to the human protagonist...how prone youth can be on the cusp of adulthood, how reckless when desperate or threatened, how vulnerably pure of heart.
You Were Never Really Here (2017)
Ramsay’s limber direction and another phenomenal leading performance by Joaquin Phoenix lend the material an aching sensitivity and an arrhythmic but persistent heartbeat.
A Quiet Place (2018)
There’s plenty...that doesn’t hold up to scrutiny and even more that feels conspicuously derivative. But tell that to your pants as you pee them.
Michael Mayer—
The Seagull
—April 29, 2018
For most of my life, I really identified with Constantin...but through the years, I've probably become more of a Trigorin.
Ready Player One (2018)
Conjures plenty of empty spectacle...but doesn’t underpin it with characters that move beyond the generic or, more crucially, the productively sharp satire that just maybe could have saved this ain’t-it-cool story from itself.
The Death of Stalin (2017)
Tales of the venal, the selfish, and the desperate, lurking--when not preening--in the halls of power.
Tomb Raider (2018)
One can see the wheels turning, literally and figuratively...
Armando Iannucci—
The Death of Stalin
—3/12/2018
The comedy's suddenly different. The jokes are more about crazy behavior, paranoia, and hysteria.
A Wrinkle in Time (2018)
Galumphing narrative and flatfooted whimsy...a downright awkward kiddie blockbuster.
Andrew Haigh—
Lean on Pete
,
Looking
,
Weekend
—3/5/2018
I think most of us are trying to find things to not be alone...we all need so much to be loved.
Red Sparrow (2018)
A guy’s fantasy of an empowered woman’s story. She’s smart! She’s capable! She’s sexy! She’s nude! She’s degraded! Wait...
Game Night (2018)
Just manages to sustain its 'is it real or is it a game?' tension through to its climactic twists.
Black Panther (2018)
Boilerplate Marvel, with a sleek, colorful look, cheeky humor, and familiar action beats...But Coogler brings enough to the table for a fresh vision, broadly appealing as well as inspirational in its representation for black audiences and women.
Peter Rabbit (2018)
This Peter is...the Ferris Bueller of rabbits. As such, many will love him, and many will find his zany wisecracks, blatant selfishness, and borderline amorality repulsive.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017)
McDonagh’s admirable shading of ostensible heroes and villains backfires as character inconsistency...Nevertheless,
Three Billboards
wickedly entertains and provokes...
Hostiles (2017)
A contrived but effective parable of the American West, its painful legacy, and small measures of redemption...But our focus frustratingly remains on the white people and Blocker’s struggle to reach empathy...
Phantom Thread (2017)
Work[s] out some timely issues of the runaway male ego, the dubious excuse of great art for grotesque personality, and the shock and awe attendant to the select few who can see through genius and, for better or for worse, cut to the quick.
The Post (2017)
The heroic journalism depicted in
The
Post
could hardly be more timely, it’s true, but Spielberg’s take rarely achieves dramatic traction.
Molly's Game (2017)
Sorkin’s flair for whip-crack dialogue, structural shenanigans, and character chemistry remains a winningly shameless three-ring circus for the screen, and his thoroughly excellent ensemble help to distract from his infamous artifice.
2017 Top 10
All the Money in the World (2017)
Much in it is invented or misrepresented...more easily forgiveable if the film had any subtlety or depth, but this ain’t that kind of party: it’s a wannabe thriller that unnecessarily stretches its running time along with the truth.
Call Me by Your Name (2017)
Guadagnino has coaxed from his cast a film unmatched this year for lifelike rhythms and attention to human behavior.
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