In their feature films, directors Josh and Ben Safdie have always walked a fine line between fact and fiction. Not quite documentaries and not quite traditional narratives, their work takes on an air of alarming spontaneity, threatening to jump off the screen at you. ...
One of the most effective -- and simply best -- scores of the year thus far is for the Safdies' Good Time, from Oneohtrix Point Never (aka Daniel Lopatin). ...
At a Film Comment Presents preview screening of the Safdie Brothers’ newest film Good Time at the Film Society of Lincoln Center, co-directors Josh and Benn...
More often than not a late-summer release is for the leftovers of the season, but this year, the slate is looking mighty promising. Alongside new films from...
When Claire Denis announced her new film Let the Sunshine In and premiered it at Cannes just last month, some thought it signaled a further delay for her am...
Good Time, the new film from the Safdie Brothers, may not have taken home the Palme d'Or at the recent Cannes Film Festival, but it did win the Soundtrack A...
It’s probably safe to say that, up until now, no lucid person had compared a Safdie brothers film to the work of Michael Mann. Indeed, it may still be a stretch...
Claire Denis may not be the first Francophone auteur expected to turn in a romantic comedy, and her latest will disappoint those expecting Nancy Meyers a Paris....
A24 is still riding high after their big Best Picture win for Moonlight, and the distribution company shows no signs of slowing down. They just released The...