Film
As an exploration of the corrosiveness of collective guilt, 1945 benefits from its leanness. |
An academic working out his personal issues in a movie? Worrying, but not necessarily fatal. |
A large portion of the credit for Andrew Haigh’s affecting and memorable Lean on Pete goes to its young star, Charlie Plummer. |
I have never seen a film by Stanley Tucci that I haven’t loved. |
Entertaining Alan Alda in a scene from Alison Chernick’s Itzhak, her documentary about Itzhak Perlman, the eminent violinist jokingly offers a... |
Two new films look back at World War I, in styles and perspectives that couldn’t be more different. |
Feel free to interpret Wes Anderson’s new stop-motion animated movie as a cautionary fable about contemporary threats to justice and freedom. |
A friendly albino gorilla, a not-so-friendly wolf, and a ferocious alligator transform into giant monsters, and only The Rock can save the day. |