Review: Dumbo
Director Tim Burton's efforts in recent years have been hit and miss, sometimes reaching the wonderfully heartfelt and quirky heights of...
Review: Widows
Leave it to Steve McQueen, the director of such weighty fare as Hunger, Shame and the Oscar-winning 12 Years a Slave, to take a genre...
Review: Roman J. Israel, Esq.
In the beginning of Roman J. Israel, Esq., the sophomore effort from screenwriter Dan Gilroy, the titular character is a Los Angeles...
Review: The Killing of a Sacred Deer
The Killing of a Sacred Deer, Yorgos Lanthimos' follow-up to his brilliant pitch-black romantic fable The Lobster, begins with a...
Review: The Beguiled
To beguile is to deceive or divert and The Beguiled, directed by Sofia Coppola from Thomas C. Pullman's 1966 novel and Don Siegel's 1971...
Review: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
A young wizard arrives in a city toting a humble leather suitcase with an unreliable lid from which many a magical creature escapes....
Review: The Lobster
An unusual fable about love as a misguided remedy to solitude, The Lobster is an outstanding master class in pitch-black absurdity....
Review: Miss Julie
Liv Ullmann's adaptation of August Strindberg's 1888 play, Miss Julie, is replete with painterly compositions, none more striking than...