Robert Pattinson puts on the Batsuit and cats around with Zoë Kravitz in the latest attempt to reimagine the Caped Crusader.
Past A.O. Scott
PhotographCreditEric Gaillard/Reuters (Hamaguchi); Philip Cheung for The New York Times (Bell)
The Projectionist
Bong Joon Ho and Ryusuke Hamaguchi on Oscar Surprise 'Drive My Car'
The Korean filmmaker and the Japanese director accept long admired each other. The two explicate why Hamaguchi'southward best-picture nominee resonates.
Past Kyle Buchanan
PhotoCreditA24
'Afterward Yang' Review: Practice Androids Dream of Sheep, Babysitting, Being?
Colin Farrell plays a father who tries to repair the family unit's caretaker-android in a science-fiction tale about what it means to be human being.
By Manohla Dargis
PhotoCreditDevin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times
'The Batman' and Matt Reeves: Emerging From the Shadow of Other Caped Crusaders
Amid concurrent versions of the law-breaking-fighter, this director aimed for something personal that would likewise serve a studio's needs. The result is a foreboding vision.
Past Dave Itzkoff
Critic's Notebook
PhotoCreditCuriosa Films
French Female person Directors Continue Hot Streak at Rendez-Vous Festival
The serial returns in-person with an especially strong slate of work by Frenchwomen — fitting, given their run of honors at top festivals.
By Beatrice Loayza
Critic's Pick
PhotoCreditSearchlight Pictures/20th Century Studios
'Fresh' Review: First Date? Try the Veal.
Daisy Edgar-Jones and Sebastian Stan star in a dazzling (and very funny) cannibal romance from Mimi Cavern.
Past Amy Nicholson
PhotoCreditPurple Whale Films
'Nosotros Are a Film Festival First.' A Focus on Children Comes Second.
The New York International Children's Motion picture Festival returns with a diverse, sophisticated slate, including Richard Linklater'south animated take on the 1969 moon landing.
By Laurel Graeber
PhotoCreditAmazon Studios
'Lucy and Desi' Review: Love in the Fourth dimension of Television
This documentary, directed past Amy Poehler and virtually the dynamic duo behind "I Dearest Lucy," favors the proficient times over the difficult ones.
By Natalia Winkelman
Critic's Pick
PhotoCreditDeaf Crocodile/Grasshopper Motion-picture show
'The Unknown Man of Shandigor' Review: A Sci-Fi Legend of the Nuclear Anxiety Age
What if you lot had a formula to sterilize all the world's nuclear weapons? This newly restored 1967 spy spoof suggests you'd be much sought-afterward.
Why academy efforts similar trimming awards from the telecast won't help. People lookout man because it's a testify about elite work, not in spite of it.
By Kyle Buchanan
PhotoCreditMichael Tyrone Delaney for The New York Times
'CODA' Star Troy Kotsur on His Historic, Healing Oscar Nomination
The deaf actor who won a SAG Award endured years of rejection and financial struggle. "I was so used to failure that I didn't realize I would surpass even my own expectations."
By Kyle Buchanan
PhotoCreditRob Youngson/Focus Features
Here's How Each Best-Picture Nominee Could Win an Oscar
"Belfast" and "The Ability of the Dog" will probably face up off for the meridian prize, but each contender has a path to other statuettes. Nosotros explain.
By Kyle Buchanan
PhotoCreditFabio Lovino/MGM
2022 Oscars Nominations: Snubs and Surprises for Lady Gaga and Jared Leto
Kristen Stewart was a surprise best actress nominee after being shut out of other precursor awards. And the academy likes not i but two acting couples.
By Kyle Buchanan
PhotographCreditShannon Stapleton/Reuters
Who Volition Be Nominated for the Oscars? Here Are Our Projections.
The list will be unveiled Feb. 8. Our proficient'south predictions are based on precursor awards and industry scuttlebutt. But in an unusually open year, he'd love to be wrong.
By Kyle Buchanan
Alan Ladd Jr., Hitmaking Film Executive, Dies at 84
When other studios didn't want it, he took on the projection that became "Star Wars." He subsequently guided "Chariots of Fire," "Young Frankenstein" and numerous other movies.
By Neil Genzlinger
Farrah Forke, Who Played a Helicopter Airplane pilot on 'Wings,' Dies at 54
Forke, the namesake of a non-yet-famous family friend named Farrah Fawcett, played Alex Lambert on three seasons of the popular sitcom, a fixture of the NBC schedule in the 1990s.
Past Johnny Diaz
Critic's Option
'Bully Freedom' Review: Unbroken
In this moving menstruation drama, a German gay homo repeatedly declares his independence in a country that criminalizes his desire and his identity.
By Manohla Dargis
'Rock Lesser Riser' Review: A Cosmic View of Hawaii
This experimental documentary takes viewers on a psychedelic bout of Hawaii, exploring the tension between scientific research and Indigenous preservation.
By Concepción de León
'Dear Mr. Brody' Review: Spreading the Wealth Doesn't Become Smoothly
The scion of a margarine empire says to ask him for money. And many, many people asked.
By Lisa Kennedy
'Nightride' Review: Ane Final Job
The movie is indebted to neon-lit criminal offense thrillers gear up behind the wheel of an outlaw'southward automobile, but it fails to deliver the goods.
By Calum Marsh
'Huda'south Salon' Review: The Services Are Not What You'd Expect.
In Hany Abu-Assad'due south pulpy thriller, two Palestinian women are trapped between political enemies that are united in their misogyny.
Past Devika Girish
'Asking for Information technology' Review: A Few Rude Men
An all-female person gang of vigilantes pursue despicable men in this oppressive revenge fantasy.
By Jeannette Catsoulis
'Mother Schmuckers' Review: Dumber and Dumbest
In this atrocious comedy, ii boneheaded brothers search for a lost dog.
By Jeannette Catsoulis
'The Long Walk' Review: A Ghostly Hereafter in Laos
This Laotian drama from Mattie Do presents a world where spirits linger on into a futurity that has been shaped by technology.
0 Response to "Robert Randolph and the Family Band Brighter Days Review"
Post a Comment