It's all a matter of perspective. If you've never known a privileged existence, what difference to your world would an apocalypse truly introduce? There's alwa...
So-Young (Choi Seung-yoon) didn't want to leave South Korea. She had no choice. The father of her newborn son committed suicide and, as an orphan who was never...
Judging from the pre-release information surrounding Steven Spielberg’s The Fabelmans, it was clear the endeavor could attain the label of the master director’...
There was really only one way for Rian Johnson to proceed with Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery. The sequel to his 2019 whodunnit smash that introduced the es...
So we finally arrive at the epic baconification of World War II. With enough Tarantino-esque chapter headings that you won’t for a second forget its place in t...
Early word is out and early word is good: The Fabelmans seems to have reconciled Spielberg's flair for spectacle and wonder with the mundanity of his upbringin...
It didn't take long after watching Jub Clerc's Sweet As to see the comparison point my mind went to first (The Breakfast Club) was hardly an original thought. ...
New Zealand's Tūhoe people have faced more than a century of aggression for daring to keep their culture alive. As relayed at the start of Tearepa Kahi's thril...
It starts in the 1800s. That's when the first residential schools were opened across Canada as a means of "beating the Indian" out of Indigenous children. The ...
Director Basil Khalil and co-writer Daniel Ka-Chun Chan waste no time setting the tone for their Middle Eastern comedy A Gaza Weekend. Conceived over a decade ...