Recalling the serials that populated the time period it encapsulates, Joe Johnston's Captain America: The First Avenger, the last in a long summer of superh...
Writer/director Min-suk Kim's Haunters is a South Korean flick currently featured at the New York Asian Film Festival. The original Korean title of the film,...
Warning: This review contains spoilers.
As a summer movie, the final installment in this 10-years running is a blast. The action is near nonstop, distinct,...
South Korean director Seung-wan Ryoo's The Unjust is an entertaining, unwieldy crime thriller, throwing flawed cops, power-hungry prosecutors and vicious mo...
In a summer overstuffed (and fluffed) with superhero sagas and crude comedies, I was eager to take in this simpler tale of a silly old bear. Tapping into th...
Academy Award-winning documentarian Errol Morris is known for fearlessly tackling controversy in his films, from Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuch...
Paradoxes abound in Battlefield Heroes, a South Korean film showing at the New York Asian Film Festival. Even the title itself, an English slap-on as Americ...
This year’s New York Asian Film Festival was graced with the North American premiere of a film almost three decades in the making. The critically acclaimed...
What is the point of giving Zookeeper a rating? There really is none. The people who want to see it will see it, the kids who its aimed for will eat up the...
A Boy and His Samurai (Chonmage Purin/ちょんまげぷりん) follows a tried-and-true comedic formula: take someone from the past, stick them in the future, and laugh al...