film reviews
The ’70s Seen: Getting High on Movie-Musical Iconography with Ken Russell’s The Boy Friend
With Russell's 1971 musical newly out on Blu-ray, Steve Lippman makes a case for the film being an underappreciated classic.
24 Plus 24: Legacy Still Equals 24
Sidewalk Stories' legendary writer-director-star Charles Lane takes stock of the reboot of one of his favorite recent TV shows.
Bruce LaBruce’s Academy of the Underrated: The Day of the Locust
The Canadian auteur reconsiders John Schlesinger's expansive take on Nathanael West's classic novella about '30s Hollywood.
David J’s (Bauhaus, Love and Rockets) Impressionistic Take on Sun Kil Moon’s Sprawling New Record
Plus a recollection of hanging with Mark Kozelek on the day Kurt Cobain died.
Watch Get Out and Be Scared by Something Other Than the News
Stephen Winter distracts himself from the horror of political goings on by indulging in the first film by a major new voice in American cinema.
The Decline of the Western and the Continuing Resonance of The Ballad of Little Jo
Jim Hemphill on Maggie Greenwald's 1993 revisionist Western, a film that brilliantly and insightfully plays with the tropes of the genre.
Why I Have Already Seen This New Cat Documentary 16 Times and Counting
Randy Russell on Kedi, the delightful new documentary about street cats in Istanbul which he has been watching on heavy rotation.
Bruce LaBruce’s Academy of the Underrated: Debbie Reynolds in The Rat Race and Goodbye Charlie
The Canadian provocateur (and champion of unfairly neglected movies) focuses on two from the late actress in which she plays against type.
Ty Segall Went the Full T. Rex with His New Self-Titled Record
Luke Haines (the Auteurs, Black Box Recorder) thinks Ty had a little Marc in his heart.
Second Screen: Why Six is Giving Award Season Movies a Run for Their Money
Jim Hemphill on how the History Channel's surprising new series – and especially Kimberly Peirce's episode – shows cinema how it's done.
Underrated/Overlooked: Terence Nance on Aquarius
Channeling Claudia Rankine, Talkhouse Film's poet laureate Terence Nance looks at the present moment through one of the finest films of 2016.
Queen of Katwe Is a Movie You Should Be Supporting. Why Are People Not Seeing It?
Terence Nance on Mira Nair's Disney movie about a young Ugandan chess prodigy, a film that's as uplifting as it promises to be.











