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Box-Office: Critically Panned ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s 2’ Earns $7.5M in Previews — $50M Opening Expected
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Sight and Sound’s Top 50 of 2025 Critics Poll Led by ‘One Battle,’ ‘Sinners,’ ‘The Mastermind’ and ‘Sirât’
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Netflix Walks Back Promise, Says Warner Bros. Theatrical Windows Will “Evolve” to Be Shorter and More “Consumer Friendly”
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BREAKING: Netflix Is Buying Warner Bros. and HBO Max
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Matt Reeves Defends Paul Dano After Quentin Tarantino Calls Him “The Limpest Dick in the World”
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Aug 19, 2019
3-Hour ‘Midsommar' Director's Cut Screened in NYC
Aug 19, 2019

This year’s 12th edition of the Scary Movies festival at Film at Lincoln Center premiered Ari Aster’s extended version of “Midsommar” this past Saturday.

Aug 19, 2019

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‘Lucy in the Sky’ Aims for the Stars But Can’t Even Achieve Liftoff [Review]

October 2, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Noah Hawley’s “Lucy in the Sky” turned out to be one of the big critical. disappointments at the Toronto International. Hawley (FX’s “Fargo”) is no doubt a man of visionary talents who has earned the right to make his feature directing debut ‘Lucy,’ but by golly, his film falls completely flat.

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In REVIEWS

‘The Laundromat' is Delightfully Amusing, But Minor Soderbergh [Review]

September 26, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

The infamous Panama Papers are tackled by wizard director Steven Soderbergh in “The Laundromat,” a sprawling, multi-layered account of what exactly was exposed. Frequent Soderbergh collaborator Scott Z. Burns adapts Pulitzer Prize–winning investigative journalist Jake Bernstein's Secrecy World with the help of stalwart acting from Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Jeffrey Wright, and Antonio Banderas.

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In REVIEWS
Comment

‘Hustlers’ is a Stylized, Well-Intentioned But Silly Female Version of ‘Goodfellas' [Review]

September 23, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

“Hurt people hurt people….the whole world is a strip club…sleep is where and when it happens.”

Lorene Scafaria‘s “Hustlers” rides and dies by the morally dubious motto above.

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In REVIEWS

‘Where’s My Roy Cohn?': Doc Tackles One of the 20th Century’s Most Feared and Despised Men [Review]

September 19, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Matt Tyrnauer’s “Where’s My Roy Cohn” is an absorbing doc on one of the most brooding figures of 20th century America.

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In REVIEWS Tags Roy Cohn, movie, documentary, trump, review
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‘Diego Maradona’: Cannes Doc Focuses on Controversial Athlete [Capsule]

September 18, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

The hotly-anticipated documentary “Diego Maradona” will be arriving on HBO this fall. Director Asif Kapadia’s chronicle of the life and times of the controversial soccer/football athlete was seen by yours truly at the Cannes Film Festival this past May, although it was sadly not reviewed.

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In REVIEWS Tags Review, diego maradona, documentary, asif kapadia
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‘Corporate Animals’: Demi Moore’s Unfunny Performance Hinders This Wild Cannibal Office Horror-Comedy [Review]

September 17, 2019 Jordan Ruimy
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Many attempt to mix the outwardly-delicious peanut butter and chocolate tone of comedy and horror, and there are many good ones—“Shaun of the Dead” “Cabin In The Woods,” “Get Out,” the “Evil Dead” films, etc.— but it’s actually a deceptively tricky genre hybrid to get right. For all the classics, much like horror, there’s a lot of cheap, garish junk that gets churned out each year that hurts the overall quality score.

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In REVIEWS Tags Sundance, Corporate Animals
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‘Ad Astra’ is Director James Gray's Challenging Space Opera [Review]

September 17, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

James Gray’s films have a classicist approach that one can easily categorize them as conventional, but don’t be fooled by what you’re seeing, as it is incredibly hard to pull off what Gray did in “Lost City of Z” and, especially, “Two Lovers” (his two best movies). The near mythical themes of those films have given him an auteur-ial stamp, a distinguishable trait for a director that seems to be obsessed with old-school Hollywood storytelling and the romanticism that comes with it.

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In REVIEWS

‘Marriage Story': Noah Baumbach's Most Personal and Ambitious Movie [Review]

September 12, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Movies about divorce between parents have been around for ages, the same old cliches and tropes that come with the territory used over and over again. And yet, the most acclaimed movie of the festival season is just that.

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In REVIEWS, TIFF

‘Official Secrets’: Keira Knightley Can’t Save Gavin Hood’s Political Whistleblower Thriller [Review]

August 27, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

[Originally written at the Sundance Film Festival in January. “Official Secrets” is being released in theaters this Friday]

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In REVIEWS Tags Official Secrets, Sundance
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‘Good Boys' is a Surprisingly Safe and Pedantic Movie About Potty-Mouthed Gen-Z [Review]

August 26, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

I have been in Montreal for the better part of the summer and, for one reason or another, “Good Boys” was not screened for the press here. So, after, surprisingly, topping the box-office for two straight weekends, I figured that I probably needed to watch this R-rated movie about potty-mouthed tweens.

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In REVIEWS Tags reviews
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‘Brittany Runs A Marathon' Review: Jillian Bell Shines, Even When the Script Fumbles

August 22, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

When it does focus on its main character, plus-sized 27-year-old woman Brittany (Jillian Bell) the movie is nothing short of a pleasure to behold. Much of the film’s initial success is carefully stitched together by its debut writer-director Paul Downs Colaizzo’s and Bell’s star-making performance, as a millennial deciding to take charge of her life and lose the fat.

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In REVIEWS
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‘Untitled Amazing Johnathan Documentary’ Is A Riveting, Twisted Examination Of Non-Fiction Filmmaking [Review]

August 17, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

[This is a re-post of my review from the 2019 Sundance Film Festival. “The Amazing Johnathan Documentary” is now on Hulu]

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In REVIEWS
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‘Where'd You Go, Bernadette' is an Honorable Misstep for Richard Linklater

August 14, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

The embargo has lifted for the latest Linklater and, well, it doesn’t look too good. A 50 on Metacritic and a 22% on Rotten Tomatoes.

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In REVIEWS
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‘Blinded by the Light' Review: Springsteen-Themed Musical Is Sappy but Crowd-Pleasing Filmmaking

August 14, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Bruce Springsteen is a God amongst Gods in my world. I worship at the altar of “The Boss.” So, of course, I had a clear-cut bias going into Gurinder Chadha’s “ Blinded By the Light,” and, yes, shockingly, I absolutely adored every minute of its un-shamefully sappy 2 hours.

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In REVIEWS
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‘Cold Case Hammarskjöld’ Review: CIA, AIDS, and South Africa Clash in the Most Shocking Doc You Will See This Year

August 12, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Mads Brügger’s “Cold Case Hammarskjöld” follows the story of United Nations secretary-general Dag Hammarskjöld and the mystery behind his death following a mysterious plane crash in 1961.

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In REVIEWS
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‘After the Wedding' Fails Miserably at Depicting Hierarchical Class Divide in America [Review]

August 9, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Bart Freundlich’s ”After The Wedding” is a Sundance-premiered family saga that also happens to be a remake of Susanne Bier’s Oscar-nominated Danish film.

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In REVIEWS
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‘Luce': Julius Onah’s Powerfully Constructed Psychodrama Of Race & Social Politics Is Brilliantly Tense [Review]

August 1, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Directed and co-written by Julias Onah, “Luce” was the best movie I saw at Sundance 2019. It’s a psychodrama starring Naomi Watts, Octavia Spencer, Kevin Harrison Jr., and Tim Roth.

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In REVIEWS
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‘The Nightingale' Is A Self-Indulgent Mess [IFFBoston/Review]

July 31, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

“The Nightingale,” director Jennifer Kent’s sophomore effort, following “The Babadook,” desperately wants to be delve into the white man’s history of violence, particularly towards women.

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In REVIEWS Tags The Nightingale, shocking, rape, Jennifer Kent
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‘Love, Antosha' is An Immensely Personal Doc Tribute to Anton Yelchin [Review]

July 30, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Anton Yelchin was only blossoming as a young actor when he tragically died of a freak accident back in June of 2016. As a performer, it’s so easy talking about his talents, because he was unequivocally brilliant and intensely into his art. It has to be said, but his career was mostly filled with supporting turns, and some lead roles, but he always found a way to steal the show. The last time we saw Yelchin on-screen, he stole scenes from the highly talented Anya Taylor-Jones and Olivia Cooke in “Thoroughbreds,” a pitch-black crime drama in which his drug-dealing smack-talker turned out to be the moral compass of the film. That was the beauty of Anton, he always loved to choose bizarre characters and fully flesh them out to make them feel humane.

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In NEWS, REVIEWS Tags Love Antosha, Anton Yelchin, Documentary, Jennifer Lawrence
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Quentin Tarantino's ‘Once Upon A Time in Hollywood' Is the Riskiest and Most Original Studio Movie of 2019

July 23, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

My Cannes review of Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon A Time in Hollywood” can be read in correlation with the film’s release this coming Friday July 24th. Suffice to say, it’s one of the best movies of the year. Tarantino’s near-plotless love letter to his own childhood, the film has a few scenes that ramble on for too long (this is Tarantino after all), but goddammit if it isn’t the riskiest and most original big-studio movie we will likely see this year. Leonardo Dicaprio and, especially, Brad Pitt are just dynamite here. The film, over 160 minutes in length, features 4 or 5 of the very best sequences of Tarantino’s career.

In REVIEWS
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