“CODA,” which stands for Child of Deaf Adults, features the kind of star-making-performance that can lift just about any mediocre script. Something tells me you’ll be hearing the name of Emilia Jones many times in the years to come.
Read more‘One For the Road': Bland and Overtly Stylish Thai Road Trip [Sundance]
Thai filmmaker Nattawut “Baz” Poonpiriya’s glossy “One for the Road” (C) was produced by Wong Kar-wai, but don’t let that fool you into thinking you’re in for top-tier cinema, no, the resulting film is a bland romantic melodrama that so desperately wants to be loved.
Read more‘In the Same Breath': Infuriating Doc Tackles China's COVID-19 Coverup [Sundance]
Nanfu Wang follow-up to her 'One Child Nation' is an HBO documentary titled ”In the Same Breath” (B), it deals with the Chinese Communist Party coverup of COVID-19 during the early stages of the outbreak. The first half of Wang's film, its stronger section, recaps the chaos that gripped Wuhan at the start of the outbreak in early 2020. The second half focuses more on the arrival of the virus in the U.S., and reaction from government, media, and the CDC to make us believe the virus was nothing more than a bad flu. Wang even inserts a clip of Anthony Fauci, early on during the pandemic’s infancy, stating that it was nothing more than a flu and that masks were not necessary. That hasn’t aged well and someone will have to eventually ask the NIAID director about it.
Read more‘Flee': Animated Immigrant Story Strikes Familiar Notes [Sundance]
Rotoscope-like animation is used to mask the identity of a gay man who escaped Afghanistan in Jonas Poher Rasmussen‘s “Flee” (B-). Rasmussen gives his John Doe the name of Amin Nawabi, he’s an Afghan refugee, his animated face isn’t his real face, but the story he tells is very real, or so we’re told. It all amounts to a film that heavily borrows from Ari Folman’s landmark animation-doc hybrid “Waltz With Bashir.” The remnants of that film’s influences are all over “Flee,” which, despite a slowly developed start does manage to become more interesting and more formidably drawn out in its final section.
Read moreSundance 2021 Set For Virtual Launch Tonight
A virtual edition of the Sundance Film Festival is being launched tonight with the screening of Sian Heder’s “CODA.” An unprecedented and historic moment for the prestigious, near-four-decade-old independent film showcase. You’ll get all the coverage you need here as I’ll be posting reviews and capsules multiple times a day for the next seven days.
Read more‘Preparations To Be Together For An Unknown Period Of Time' [Review]
What is the point of Preparations To Be Together For An Unknown Period Of Time (yes, that’s the title), the second feature from director Lili Horvát? That’s the question I kept asking myself as I was swept through the rabbit hole that is at the center of this curiously empty film. Horvát served as a casting director on Kornel Mundruczó’s White God, so she knows a thing or two about the technical aspects of filmmaking and ‘Preparations’ is indeed a technical accomplishment, filled with swirling camera movements and expertly refined editing.
Read moreCannes Film Festival Delays Until July
‘The Little Things': Pedestrian ‘Seven' Copycat Plays Like a '90s Throwback [Review]
Here is a self-serious serial killer thriller that fees like it was made in the ‘90s. The fact that the first draft for writer-director John Lee Hancock’s “The Little Things” was written in 1993, only reinforces how the resulting film feels old, cliched and damn-near redundant.
Read moreThe 50 Best Netflix Original Movies
Since moving from a DVD service to a streamer in 2007, Netflix has released a countless number of original movies, from Oscar nominees and popcorn action flicks, to some that even the streaming giant would like to forget (“6 Underground”). We’ve managed to whittle down their huge back catalogue to a round of 25, so let’s go…
Read moreNational Board of Review Names ‘Da 5 Bloods’ Best Film of 2020
The National Board of Review (NBR) is often the first group to announce its picks for the best films and performances of the year, but these are not normal times and awards season 2021 is a unique beast. At this point, we’re headed towards one of the more unpredictable Oscar races for Best Picture. Every major critics group has chosen a different Best Film winner; New York went for “First Cow,” Los Angeles went for “Small Axe,” Boston went for “Nomadland,” and now, NBR has decided that Spike Lee’s “Da 5 Bloods” was the best film of the past year.
Read moreCannes Boss Says July Date No Longer a Rumor; Two Days May Be Added Due to the Amount of Quality Films
It is no surprise that Cannes director Thierry Fremaux is now saying that Cannes will most probably be aiming for a July unveiling of the prestigious film festival. It had long been suspected that the fest, which has been happening in May for decades, was going to move its 2021 edition to later in the summer, although Screen Daily is reporting that a possible August date has been totally scrapped. That same write-up purports to the possibility of a hybrid digital/in-person festival this year — something I never thought Cannes would do, alas, I guess they're facing the reality that a traditional festival is very unlikely to happen this summer.
Read moreAFI's Top 10 Films of 2020
The American Film Institute’s annual unveiling of their top 10 movies and TV shows of the year is as bland as you might expect.. The two juries — which are a mix of critics, academics, and film professionals — were given the task of selecting the best American cinema had to offer the past year. The choices are safe, pedestrian and incalculably mainstream.
Read moreDoes Anyone Actually Want to See This?
I know the readers of this site well-enough. They have properly refined film tastes; sniff-testers who can tell between crass entertainment and well-made escapism. They know exactly what Godzilla Vs. Kong” is all about. It’s a mass-marketed product to appease to the doldrums. Simple as that.
Read more‘The White Tiger': A Slumdog's Rise to Gangsterdom [Review]
"The White Tiger," is the engrossing screen adaptation of Aravind Adiga's bestselling novel about the rich and poor in modern India. If you haven’t heard much about it, that’s because Netflix has decided to dump this essential film into their maze-like catalogue, without an ounce of Oscar promotion. For shame. Unlike some of the pretenders about to be unleashed before the Oscar deadline lifts next week, and those include “Judas and the Black Messiah,” “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” and “Malcolm and Marie”, director Ramin Bahrani’s adaptation of Adiga’s source material is staggering stuff and worthy of Academy consideration.
Read moreThe 10 Best Performances of 2020
Here are my annual picks for the best performances of 2020. There was a lot to choose from, but this is the cream of the crop as far as I’m concerned. Notice, no Frances McDormand in “Nomadland,” she would have probably cracked the top 20. I’m not as big of a fan of that performance and movie as many of my colleagues in film journalism are.
Read moreA24’s ‘Saint Maud’ is the Next Great Horror Movie
“Saint Maud” is coming. Rose Glass’ film will surely join the ranks of modern-day horror classics such as “Hereditary,” “The Invisible Man,” “Get Out,” “The Witch,” and “It Follows.”
Read more‘Reagan': First Look at Dennis Quaid as Ronald Reagan in Biopic
If Dennis Quaid is in your movie these days that’s probably because you don’t mind his strongly conservative-minded politics, and I don’t mind that, but the industry does, that’s why he’s all but been blacklisted the last decade or so. You see, although I am liberal, in the whole-hearted sense, of that term, I don’t agree that the likes of Quaid, Jon Voight, Vince Vaughn, Mel Gibson, Gary Sinise, Kurt Rusell, Andy Garcia, James Woods, and Jim Caviezel should be blackballed by the industry because of their political views — but that’s what’s, more or less, happened to all during the Trump-era. Call it McCarthyism 2.0
Read more‘No Time to Die' Delayed ... Again.
You hear that? It’s the sound of the movie industry crumbling into oblivion. It was almost inevitable that we wouldn’t be getting any big title theatrical releases during the winter and tonight it was all, but confirmed with the announcement that “No Time to Die,” the 25th James Bond installment, has now been further delayed from original April 2021 date to October 7th, 2021. It was originally slated to open worldwide in April 2020, then pushed to two different November 2020 dates, and most recently was set to hit theaters on April 2, 2021.
Read moreChristopher Nolan Won't Be Directing Another Movie for Warner Bros Because of HBO Max Deal
Nobody is shocked by this. We all saw it coming. After the news that WarnerMedia decided to shift the entire 2021 Warner Bros. film slate to HBO Max, it was almost a given that cinematic purist Christopher Nolan, Warner Bros’ most cherished and important filmmaker, would be walking away from the studio.
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