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Essays

Mad World, Wong Chun

Alex Heeney / April 13, 2017

Review: Mad World tackles stigmas about mental illness in Hong Kong

Wong Chun’s Mad World depicts the harrowing consequences of stigmas about mental illness but fails to engage with the reality of mental illness in favour of an uplifting family narrative where love is just as good as medication. Mad World is screening at the 60th San Francisco International Film Festival.

Alex Heeney / April 13, 2017

Review: Tommy’s Honour is a showcase for the prodigiously talented Jack Lowden

In Tommy’s Honour, Jack Lowden finally gets the leading role he deserves as the eponymous Tommy Morris, the greatest golfer of the 19th century.

Close-Knit

Elena Lazic / April 11, 2017

Review: Close-Knit marks an important milestone for Japanese LGBTQ cinema

Naoko Ogigami’s Close-Knit is a charming, if disappointingly conservative, family drama about a girl who finds herself being raised by a transgender woman.

All These Sleepless Nights, Michał Marczak, Sleepless Nights

Noemi Berkowitz / April 3, 2017

All These Sleepless Nights is a mesmerizing look at youth culture in post-communist Poland

All These Sleepless Nights explores loneliness and liberation in a Poland finally free after decades of occupation and war.

Summer Hours

Aaron Hammond / March 31, 2017

Ghosts, grief, and objects left behind in Assayas’ Summer Hours and Personal Shopper

Olivier Assayas’ films Summer Hours and Personal Shopper are united by their portrayal of the recently bereaved confronting what the dead did, or did not, leave behind.

Personal Shopper text messages, Personal Shopper eroticism, Personal Shopper horror

Mike Thorn / March 30, 2017

‘No desire if it’s not forbidden’: Dread, eroticism, and text messaging in Personal Shopper

By using text messaging as a source of terror that morphs into eroticism, Personal Shopper acknowledges and subverts horror traditions.

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