John McGahern’s 2003 novel That They May Face The Rising Sun sounds like perfect material for writer-director Pat Collins. The...
JoinedAugust 26th, 2016
Articles170
A totally committed Fassbender and Fincher at the peak of his powers make The Killer a slick, smart and wickedly entertaining ride.
Handsome and gruesome, El Conde takes a satirical look at the life and death(s) of tyrannical dictator Pinochet, but its poor pacing and flippant attitude means it lacks bite.
With The Zone of Interest, director Jonathan Glazer delivers another surprising, arty and artful take on an established genre that is determined to provoke and disturb. It's monumental.
Despite energetic production and performances, Wonka lacks the bite or valueable lessons that make other Roald Dahl adaptations memorable.
With two superb leads and confident, go-for-broke direction from Bradley Cooper, Maestro shows what a biopic done right looks and sounds like.
Yorgos Lanthimos' latest dissection of human desires and dramas is potentially over-produced and over-long, but is more than worth seeing for the best performance of Emma Stone's career to date.
Handsome, meditative and peaceful, That They May Face The Rising Sun is a beautiful alternative to most cinema today, and another masterwork from director Pat Collins.
Frank Capra: Mr. America is a fond but unremarkable tribute to one of Hollywood’s greatest filmmakers, extolling the already-known virtues of his classic films.
While arguably Michael Mann's most conventional film since Ali, Ferrari continues his record of exploring complicated men stylishly and intelligently.