The general perception of Paul W.S. Anderson's bombastic, symmetrical-composition-heavy cinema has changed enough in the four years since the last Resident ...
If you care for the films of Pedro Almodóvar -- and I'm sure that's many of you -- his newest picture, Julieta, will likely leave you satisfied. As we said ...
With Things to Come, the great Mia Hansen-Løve is earning some of her best reviews in years, and, along with Paul Verhoeven's Elle, it represents a banner y...
Most will begin talking about Toni Erdmann by noting that it is indeed very funny -- not in some "obscure, European" way, but with plenty of lowbrow jokes a...
Jean-Luc Godard. Robert Bresson. Éric Rohmer. Jacques Demy. Agnès Varda. Alain Resnais. Jacques Tati. François Truffaut. Louis Malle. Jean-Pierre Melville. ...
When it comes to most closing night films at festivals, it's usually a case of scheduling a left-over after most critics have cleared out and remaining audi...
While there are certain limits to which No Direction Home: Bob Dylan is "a Martin Scorsese film," given the lack of input he had with creating of the materi...
It'll be hard for me to read, hear, type, or say the title of Pablo Larraín's new film without hearing '60s-era Scott Walker and a charging backing band, bu...
Suddenly one of the most prolific pairings working in cinema, Peter Berg and Mark Wahlberg have teamed again -- as director and star, respectively -- for Pa...
After a few brief teasers, the full-length trailer for Robert Zemeckis' romantic thriller Allied has now arrived. Led by Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard, the...