Are you looking for recommendations about the best and worst in current film releases? Our movie reviews try to get past brief opinions and dig into why a given movie works, and what it has to offer.
Alien: Romulus is a solid franchise tribute plagued by weird optics
Though Fede Álvarez’s new Alien film is gorgeous, its questionable optics leave much to be desired.
A24’s MaXXXine flips the script to give you something fresh to scream about
The latest installment of Ti West’s X franchise is a glamorously cutthroat send-up of Ronald Reagan-era excess and moral panic.
HBO’s MoviePass doc is a snapshot of how C-suites kill companies
Director Muta’Ali’s MoviePass, MovieCrash is a thorough but circuitous breakdown of how executives’ obsession with exponential growth all but destroyed the company.
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Mars Express is a smart and stylish addition to the sci-fi noir canon
The debut feature from director Jérémie Périn has hints of Ghost in the Shell and Blade Runner but manages to carve out its own distinct vibe.
Monkey Man is a studied execution of the brutal revenge thriller
Dev Patel’s directorial debut surges with enough energy to make its action work, but it stumbles as it veers into social commentary.
Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire overdoes it all
Director Adam Wingard’s Godzilla vs. Kong sequel is big on bombastic spectacle and new lore but woefully lacking in terms of story and substance.
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A24’s Problemista is a surreal fairy tale about finding the people who truly see you
A24’s phenomenal new surrealist comedy feels like a story that only writer / director Julio Torres could pull off.
Here’s JP Brammer on Madame Web’s appeal:
Madame Web is about PepsiCo Inc. There are multiple instances of unabashed product placement for Pepsi. Madame Web is not shy about reminding the audience about the crisp, refreshing taste of Pepsi.
It’s also about carjacking. The cars she hits people with do not belong to her.
I cannot emphasize enough how trash this movie is. As someone whose last movie before the pandemic was Cats, I urge you to check it out.
[holapapi.substack.com]
Madame Web is a love letter to the golden age of bad comic book movies
Sony’s Madame Web isn’t especially great or terrible, but it’s surprisingly committed to transporting you back to 2003 — a golden age for comic book movies that were aggressively mid or worse.
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Hayao Miyazaki’s The Boy and the Heron is a beautiful relic — and the end of an era
The latest Studio Ghibli film is out in North American theaters after premiering in Japan earlier in the year.
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Godzilla Minus One is a brilliant reckoning for the king of monster allegories
Toho’s latest Godzilla film from writer / director Takashi Yamazaki takes the kaiju king back to its roots to tell a sobering story about reckoning with the present.
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Killers of the Flower Moon is a devastating snapshot of America’s truth laid bare
Scorsese’s latest demands — not asks — us to witness the horrors the US has wrought upon the Osage Nation and understand some of what it means for Indigenous people to survive in this country today.
I quite liked (but had some issues with) Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone of Interest. But critic (and very good Letterboxd follow) Kristen Yoonsoo Kim is a hater. Her take:
Why must I watch the inner lives of Nazis? I was hoping Glazer would answer that question but this film does not go into any enlightening or thought-provoking territory beyond, like, “here it is, the banality of evil! Also here are some random ‘experimental’ shots in between.”
(Also, does embedding Letterboxd posts work in our CMS? Let’s find out!)
Update: It does!
[letterboxd]
Janet Planet, the film directorial debut from the widely celebrated playwright Annie Baker, premiered at NYFF yesterday. Set in Western Massachusetts in the early ‘90s, we see Janet (Julianne Nicholson) through the eyes of her 11-year-old daughter Lacy (Zoe Ziegler) watching her mother navigate several relationships. It’s funny, richly layered, and avoidant of tropes. (I also relish any movie where a child actor does not come across as too precocious!)
Baker’s stage experience shows in the dialogue and the precision of its rhythms; everywhere else, though, Janet Planet feels very well versed in the language of the screen.
I wish there was a trailer I could share! A24 has picked it up, and though tonally it’s different from Lady Bird, Aftersun, or Past Lives, there’s a shared quiet intimacy in all these films. Which is to say: if you liked any of those, you will probably love Janet Planet.
The chilling distance of The Zone of Interest
Jonathan Glazer’s austere Holocaust film offers a cold and unrelenting glimpse into the life of Auschwitz’s commandant