• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Seventh Row

A place to think deeply about movies

  • Archives
    • Browse Articles
    • Review Index
    • Interview Index
  • Podcast
    • Seventh Row Podcast
    • Abortion on Film
    • Creative Nonfiction Podcast
    • Women at Cannes
    • Sundance 2023
    • The Joachim Trier Audio Commentaries
    • 21st Folio
    • Seventh Row on other podcasts
  • Ebooks
    • Mike Leigh
    • Call Me by Your Name
    • Céline Sciamma
    • Kelly Reichardt
    • Joanna Hogg
    • Andrew Haigh
    • Lynne Ramsay
    • Joachim Trier
    • Subjectives realities (Nonfiction film)
    • Documentary Masters
    • Fiction Directors
  • Shop
  • Join Reel Ruminators

Search Results for: falls around her

Whiplash

Alex Heeney / October 17, 2014

Review: Teller and Simmons soar in compelling but disappointing Whiplash

…invalidate any high ground he might have occupied. Yet Chazelle can’t quite decide whether Fletcher is an unconventional but excellent teacher or a washed up musician taking out his frustrations…

Alex Heeney / May 29, 2014

Review of The Grand Seduction: The scheme may be grand but the comedy isn’t

…of Ticklehead, Newfoundland, they’re collecting their welfare cheques: the fishing industry has long since dried up and other job prospects here are non-existent. People have started to move to the…

Alex Heeney / April 1, 2015

Terrific production of ‘Stupid F##king Bird’ proves SF Playhouse has arrived

A rare tender moment between mother (Carrie Paff*) and son (Adam Magill). Photo by Jessica Palopoli. With its wonderful and often hilarious new production, “Stupid F##king Bird,” Aaron Posner’s modernization…

/ February 18, 2017

2017 Sundance Issue ebook

…Prime An interview with directors Neasa Ní Chianáian and David Rane of School Life An interview with Amanda Kernell about her feature debut, Sami Blood An interview with director Francis…

Hou Hsiao-Hsien, Assassin

Alex Heeney / August 17, 2015

TIFF15 Review: The Assassin is gorgeous but tiresome

…waiting for the trained assassin to finally make her kill, and in the process, we spend a lot of time with people sitting still in rooms, drinking tea. Mind you,…

Daguerrotype, Kiyoshi Kurosawa

Mary Angela Rowe / September 15, 2016

TIFF16 Review: Killed into art? Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Daguerrotype

…youth plucked from a pile of applicants because he has no photographic experience whatsoever — and thus, presumably, won’t “contaminate” Stéphane’s historically accurate process. Marie longs to leave her father’s…

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 202
  • Page 203
  • Page 204
  • Page 205
  • Page 206
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 227
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Support Seventh Row

  • Film Adventurer Membership
  • Cinephile Membership
  • Ebooks
  • Donate
  • Merchandise
  • Institutional Subscriptions
  • Workshops & Masterclasses
  • Shop

Connect with Us

  • Podcast
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Browse

  • Interview Index by Job Title
  • Interview Index by Last Name
  • Seventh Row Podcast
  • Directors We Love
  • Films We Love

Join our newsletter

  • Join our free newsletter
  • Get the premium newsletter (become a member)

Featured Ebooks on Directors

  • Joachim Trier
  • Joanna Hogg
  • Céline Sciamma
  • Kelly Reichardt
  • Lynne Ramsay
  • Mike Leigh
  • Andrew Haigh

© 2025 · Seventh Row

  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contribute
  • Contact
  • My Account