You may want to see this dark, sweet and humorous film from Finnish genre director Teemu Nikki, in contrast to the views of its DiCaprio-phobic
Category: Reviews
Ending Disease review – a powerful case for the miracle cure
In focusing on the stories of recovery this documentary, following patients participating in stem cell research trials in the US, allows the optimism to outshine
Men Who Sing review : adorable Welsh geezers tug at the heartstrings
There aren’t many things you can count on in this world. But just as we know the sun always rises in the east, tides rise
Dead & Beautiful review : slick vampire drama gets its fangs into the super-rich
Black Mirror meets Succession in this arthouse-y psychological vampire drama, the story of five super-rich millennials – the bored, entitled offspring of global billionaires –
Disappearance at Lake Elrod review : powerful performance in missing-girl movie
With this small-town gothic murder mystery director and co-writer Lauren Fash overdoes it with the missing-kid tropes: a grieving mom fighting for the truth; police
‘Inexorable’ Review: A Nanny From Hell in a Nest of Old Money
A usurper melodrama by any other name is still a usurper melodrama, and Fabrice du Welz’s latest doesn’t really try to cloak its genre conventions:
‘Comala’ Review: When Daddy Is a Bad Guy With a Gun
A thread of toxic male lying, cheating, stealing, abandoning and violence connects the scattered pieces director Gian Cassini assembles into the family quilt of “Comala.”
Maria Chapdelaine Review: A Leisurely Portrait of Early 20th-Century Rural Quebec Life
Among authors who didn’t live to witness their own success, Louis Hemon is a particularly unfortunate case — his novel “Maria Chapdelaine” was published in
‘Amira’ Review: A Clumsily Cranked-Up Collision Between Paternity, Patriarchy and Palestinian Identity
Since 2012, more than 100 children have been conceived using the smuggled-out sperm of incarcerated Palestinians — or so it is claimed by the end
The Craft: Legacy Review
When her mother Helen (Michelle Monaghan) decides to move in with her self-help guru boyfriend (David Duchovny), loner teenager Lily (Cailee Spaeny) has her life