Aspics and Cocktails: FEUD ‘Pilot’ (Recap)
“What could be a simple dramatization of events is given the potential to deviate from reality; to acknowledge that truth through gossip is rarely what it seems to be.”
“What could be a simple dramatization of events is given the potential to deviate from reality; to acknowledge that truth through gossip is rarely what it seems to be.”
“What ‘Catfight’ lacks in sanity, it makes up for in the sheer exuberance of Sandra Oh and Anne Heche.”
“‘Strong Island’ is a vulnerable, affecting documentary that illustrates what systemic racism looks like on a personal level.”
“The editing is where the story of Casting JonBenet is truly built.”
“‘Rat Film’ doesn’t spell out its conclusions, instead allowing the viewer to come to their own upon seeing the images and stories it presents.”
“Rohmer cares more about posing questions than providing the comfort of a conclusion.”
Marshall Shaffer Reflects on a Full Month of FilmStruck
“‘Contempt’ is a daunting and formally labyrinthine work, calling its own fallibility to question even as it submits completely to the romance of cinema.”
“As a ‘purely experimental film,’ ‘Voyage of Time’ is ultimately an extreme, sensory experience.”
“If ever a soul was captured on camera, this is it.”
“Park demonstrates how the complicated relationship between role-play, desire, secrecy, power and revenge prove ripe for darkly comic (and perverse) fodder.”
Alejandra Rosenberg Interviews Richard Peña
“The songs on ‘Prisoner’ seem shackled to the chains of (unrequited) love.”
“‘Toni Erdmann’ understands what’s at stake: not the private destiny of an individual, but her ongoing relationship to her era.”
“Movies aren’t neutral vessels that we can stuff with our cultural baggage.”
“If Ozu has taught us anything, it’s that life doesn’t get any easier. But life does go on.”
“Kozelek is present, combative and always original. He forces you to listen to his music on its own terms.”
“‘2016 Atomized’ is an apt title for an album full of songs that are obsessed with nuclear and romantic annihilation, each track a finely distilled blast of musical essence from The Raveonettes’ particularly heady bouquet.”
“Pema Tseden’s all-Tibetan film is a confrontation of old and new, of solitude and togetherness, of dreams and reality.”
Mike Thorn and A.M. Novak discuss the ‘Halloween’ franchise.