As deadly as it is deadpan, The Art of Self-Defense is a wild ride.
As deadly as it is deadpan, The Art of Self-Defense is a wild ride.
Marielle Heller’s ode to kindness, a touching tribute to our better nature.
The Assistant is a quiet, discreet film that speaks heavy truths not with bold exclamations but with clear-eyed serenity. It is worth listening to, and pondering the things we take for granted even in our daily work.
An uncomfortable exposé, written by Shia LaBeouf, about his own absue and resulting trauma.
Driven by a career-best performance from Hugh Jackman, Bad Education is delightful and quick-witted.
The story of a man who learns that to tame a horse, the first thing you have to control is yourself.
From these five acts, Jane Fonda emerges as an impressive, if humanly flawed, figure, a fighter who has overcome trauma and continues to protest when it would be easy and comfortable not to.
Evocative and moody, The Wild Goose Lake finds beauty in resigned desperation.
Everyone involved in making Private Life is smart and funny, and while they offer no easy solutions or ready-made epiphanies, they build two strong protagonists from the ground up, and then take a sledgehammer and break them down with passion.
Bull takes a slice-of-life, almost documentary-like approach to its characters and their hardships, which works for and against the story.