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Film Reviews

Here you will find every film review we've written. These include: festival films, new releases, and older films.

No Home Movie

Alex Heeney / March 29, 2016

Chantal Akerman’s final film No Home Movie is a heartbreaking personal essay

Chantal Akerman’s moving cinematic essay is a tribute to her mother, a holocaust survivor, and a subtle exploration of Jewish “suitcase-ready” culture.

Standing Tall

Alex Heeney / March 27, 2016

Standing Tall is a gritty coming-of-ager told through rose-coloured glasses

Emmanuelle Bercot’s sophomore film is the story of Malony (Rod Paradot), a teenager prone to crime, and the justice system which only wants the best for him.

Born to Be Blue, Miles Ahead

Alex Heeney / March 25, 2016

Jazz trumpeters reminisce in unconventional biopics Miles Ahead and Born to Be Blue

After a 28 year dry spell, the jazz biopic returns, with films about trumpet legends Chet Baker (Born to Be Blue) and Miles Davis (Miles Ahead).

Mountains May Depart

Alex Heeney / March 22, 2016

Mountains May Depart charts the consequences of youthful decisions

Told in three distinct parts over the course of 30 years, it begins as a simple love triangle and expands, along with its aspect ratio, into a story that reverberates through future generations: the country and the film’s protagonist change.

Kiki, Strike a Pose

Elena Lazic / March 21, 2016

Vogueing at Berlinale: Kiki and Strike a Pose

Despite being a rather niche subject, two films about vogueing competed in the Panorama Documentary section at this year’s Berlin Film Festival.

Arabian Nights, Miguel Gomes

Brandon Nowalk / March 10, 2016

Arabian Nights is an intoxicating, maddening mosaic of recession-era Portugal

Arabian Nights is the blind men’s elephant: miniseries and short story cycle, documentary and fantasy, proletarian and prohibitive. It’s an enormous six-hour movie split into three volumes, made up mostly of separate smaller stories.

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