The Grand Jury Prize winner for documentary at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, Eugene Jarecki's look at American drug policy—The House I Live In—began with a d...
I didn't know who Chris Crocker was until last year. That tells you how frivolously I use the Internet and keep up with current affairs. I was not watching CNN ...
Few stories endure as much rehashing as Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Besides straight adaptations, it’s been spun into every kind of film from a musical (Wes...
Asad – South Africa/USA – 18 minutes
Young Asad (Harun Mohammed) is an energetic boy with an insane knowledge of the ocean and tides that make him a perfect ...
The next daring chapter in the career of documentary filmmaker extraordinaire Jehane Noujaim led her to Egpyt, during the country’s tumultuous revolution that l...
Rather than create some sort of exposé about the goings on inside nursing homes and the common belief it is inhumane, cowardly, and disrespectful to place your ...
Two recording studios in two very different towns. One in Alabama, surrounded by thick ponds and dirt roads. The other surrounded by Hollywood, deep in the vall...
And so it is that our first indication of the year to come in cinema has officially ended. After providing complete coverage of Sundance Film Festival 2013, w...
Against all odds, Francesca Gregorini's Emanuel and the Truth About Fishes swims in a bevy of indie film clichés and emerges mostly unscathed, building a quite ...
With his two films premiering at Sundance Film Festival, both shot in Chile with director Sebastián Silva, it's clear that Michael Cera is intending to step int...