Month: April 2015

[Tribeca Review] Jackrabbit

Dystopian sci-fi is trendy. Anyone who has any knowledge of today's pop culture could tell you that and it's no surprise Hollywood has jumped on its collective ...

[Tribeca Review] Come Down Molly

While Molly (Eleonore Hendricks) was never quite the manic pixie dream girl trope, she was certainly held in high regard by the men of her past. Recalling her w...

[Tribeca Review] Bleeding Heart

Suffering from performances, direction and writing that each lack nuance, Bleeding Heart takes subject matter deserving of mature, thoughtful treatment and dist...

[Tribeca Review] Democrats

Offering immediate access to historical sausage-making, Camilla Nielsson's Democrats is an intimate look at the process of drafting a new constitution for Zimba...

[Review] Unfriended

The best horror stories often obscure their real subject with the nightmare elements that roam their surface, hiding the focus beneath a veneer of the frighteni...

[Review] The Dead Lands

Set in pre-Colonial times in New Zealand, Toa Fraser’s The Dead Lands follows tribal conflict between two factions that is both illuminating and frustratingly c...

[Review] Monsters: Dark Continent

Before Gareth Edwards brought Godzilla back to life, he made his directorial debut with the 2010 indie hit Monsters. The revisionist monster movie – for which E...