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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.

A War, Tobias Lindholm

Alex Heeney / February 13, 2016

Compassion may be the enemy in A War

Tobias Lindholm continues to explore how trauma affects networks of people in this complex character study of a Danish officer whose compassion may be his undoing.

Fish Tank

Gillie Collins / February 8, 2016

Landscape and limbo in Fish Tank

In Fish Tank, physical boundaries stand for social boundaries — the constraints imposed by gender and class and the walls we build for self-protection

Hail, Caesar

Alex Heeney / February 6, 2016

Hail, Caesar: The Coen Brothers’ Golden Age

The Coen Brothers’ Hail, Caesar is a glorious, hilarious tribute to the Golden Age of Hollywood. With its very own Esther Williams (Scarlett Johansson), Carmen Miranda (Veronica Osorio), and Gene Kelly (Channing Tatum), it’s got all the stock characters and genres of classic cinema. Even Roger Deakins’ 35mm cinematography mimics old movies, framing the action head-on as if filming a stage.

Alex Heeney / February 5, 2016

Rams: Sheep farming is deadly serious business

Grimur Hakonarson’s Rams is part dark comedy, part family drama about two elderly brothers who haven’t spoken in years. The gorgeous Icelandic landscape provides the backdrop to this story about sheep farming and family reconciliation.

Sonita, 2016 San Francisco Film Festival

Alex Heeney / January 28, 2016

Sonita and Sand Storm at Sundance: when the patriarchy looks like your mother

Both films explore how empowered women function within a patriarchal society. They pose the question, can you defeat the patriarchy simply by exercising agency?

Alex Heeney / January 25, 2016

NUTS! and foreveryone.net: The visionary and the charlatan

The Sundance documentaries foreveryone.net and NUTS! each chronicle the scientific achievements and self-mythologizing of two very different men.

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