It’s rare that a new American film feels genuinely alive with possibility from beginning to end. So many of the logistical, economic, and technological decisio...
Amid the litany of horrors the biting little film Bad Tales presents, there might be a pinnacle: reading out your middle-school report card to a dining table o...
At long last, the Cannes Film Festival returns this July. While it remains to be seen just how many journalists outside France will actually be able to attend,...
After exploring the lives of Orson Welles, Fred Rogers, and the world's greatest backup singers, Oscar-winning director Morgan Neville's next documentary is ce...
After earning some of the most acclaim in his career for the semi-autobiographical tale Pain & Glory, Spanish master Pedro Almodóvar adapted to the pandemi...
One of our most-anticipated animations of the year comes from Mamoru Hosoda, the acclaimed auteur behind The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, Wolf Children, The Bo...
One of the most intriguing developments in the world of indie film the past few months has been the formation of DECAL, a distribution company that marks a joi...
With the summer movie season underway, Cannes now on the horizon, and Tribeca kicking off this month, the film industry turns its gears again after an unpreced...
After first gaining prominence in Germany as a teen actor, Paula Beer rose to international arthouse stardom with her leading role in Francois Ozon’s Frantz in...
Created as a PSA to raise awareness about elder abuse, George A. Romero’s 1973 film The Amusement Park, long considered lost and recently restored by Romero’s ...