Ryan Lattanzio
Select another critic »For 187 reviews, this critic has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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8% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ryan Lattanzio's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 126 out of 187
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Mixed: 56 out of 187
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Negative: 5 out of 187
187
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Ryan Lattanzio
A bluntly effective instrument of cinematic torture, the Tampa Bay-shot The School Duel is here to embed you in the bullets, shrapnel, and consequences of random violence.- IndieWire
- Posted May 7, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
“Hit Me Hard and Soft” is largely shot like a typical concert movie except for the fact that it’s in 3D — but the 3D works exceptionally well to place you onstage with Eilish, who works without backup dancers and with an intimately scaled band (and, sorry, spoiler alert, an eventual cameo from brother and collaborator Finneas). She wants her concertgoers, her fans, to feel like “it’s me and them,” and this film does effectively capture that from the comfort of a heated AMC seat and in Dolby sound. And it captures Eilish in all her romantic grandeur.- IndieWire
- Posted May 7, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
A wish fulfillment in feature-film-shaped form and little else, “You, Me & Tuscany” isn’t especially memorable or surprising, but there’s a soothing, smoothed-over quality to this film — which was shot on-location in Tuscany, so points for that — that makes it a suitable candidate for your next airplane viewing.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Mascaro’s wry and witty new film will remind savvy audiences of bleak apocalyptic films about humanity’s potential loss of feeling against technologies that crush them.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 3, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Ropp’s darkly funny and ultimately sweet-natured comedy is a promising start for the actor-turned-director. With a little more scope, his next film will be even better.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 24, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Boots Riley deserves applause for his brazen vision. . . He loses grip on the material overall, but as far as genre movies that actually turn out to be political missives go, there are worse entertainments. And with Keke Palmer at the front, you’re always in sure hands.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 12, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
You might wish Heel were a bit funnier, a bit scarier, a bit more twisted, but it’s still pungently creepy in the right ways and anchored by a suite of top-tier actors capable of wringing empathy out of the darkest Freudian corners of a fucked-up family.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 9, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Bride! is full of rage and feeling, striking an anarchic pose against oppression. But who it’s yelling at, who it’s yelling on behalf of, remains out of focus, the mystery of whatever Elsa Lanchester’s Bride might’ve been thinking left unanswered.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 4, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Our Hero, Balthazar isn’t cold by any means, but the result comes off as more ethnographic in tone than the in-your-face bravado of the approach would suggest.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 2, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The film’s quietly disturbing power lies in how Franco packages his U.S.-Mexico border metaphor — with rich philanthropist Jennifer (Jessica Chastain) and her young ballerina lover Fernando (Isaac Hernández, in a striking newcomer performance) standing in for each — into an addictive and destructive love story as sharply wrought as the movie’s grander political concerns.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 24, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Schleinzer constructs a canny bait-and-switch: The film’s visual language, agrarian setting, and seeming emotional distance at the outset promise a harshly unfeeling European arthouse exercise. Until it isn’t. Until Hüller annihilates your heart.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Çatak fashions a film that’s both a gripping marital drama and a rallying cry against artist censorship.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Internationally savvy gay film fans with a taste for the kinky and sad will want to check out this understated but occasionally quite graphic and sexy new work.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 13, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While Crime 101 runs like a remodeled version of earlier, better heist movies from the ’90s or early 2000s (which again are almost always coming from Michael Mann) but with lesser parts, there’s enough gas in the tank and competence at the wheel to merit a spin. At least until Heat 2.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 11, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a solid biography portrait with enough diaristic candor to compel a relisten to her greatest hits, in life and music.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Weight could use a tighter edit throughout, but it’s not without one central force pulling the film across its Europe-shot version of the Oregon Trail, and that would be Hawke.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Wicker threatens to feel largely like a logline writ into something grander (i.e., a short story with a wild idea stretched into a feature), but these actors are irresistibly weird and wonderful, as only they could be.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 29, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Shlesinger’s leading performance has the stuff of a star-making turn, though the film isn’t distinctive enough from its peers and predecessors to match the actor’s obvious onscreen charisma.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Gallerist is one of those movies where the actors are having all the fun, clearly enamored with the chance at working together, while they forget to let the audience in on the entertainment.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Charli’s version of herself, though, is a fascinating creation — self-deprecating, yes, and laughing at herself, but with the clinical distance of a telescope lasered onto a forming star. See this movie with a crowd of Charli’s friends and collaborators, and you’ll too be in on the joke.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 24, 2026
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The central narrative, of the emotional dance between these two men over decades, holds even as the running time, while never boring you, often feels exaggerated for the sake of epicness rather than wholly necessary to this telling.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 13, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Blue Film leaves you feeling a little bit ill, and very uneasy about how you’re supposed to feel. But when most films either wouldn’t dare go here at all, or would tell you how to feel about the material, that’s rare and welcome.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 30, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The film’s anti-patriarchal thesis is a worthy one that feels oddly undeveloped given that it’s the entire point, the actors here merely reading lines from a script as pat as a canned solicitation to swipe right.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Though often lethargic and listless, Is This Thing On? does stir up a vivid portrait of the New York City underground comedy milieu, even when New York City as a character feels more like the afterthought it isn’t supposed to be.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 10, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
[Martel] makes the case that the Chuschas put up a hard-won, long-won, impossible battle that already began centuries before, coming at the material with a visceral filmmaking point of view that never overshadows the material.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 8, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The understated performances and coolly detached, shivery hypnotic vibes of this film won’t be for anyone looking for a story, but The Ice Tower casts a creepy spell that lingers and even deepens in the mind long after it’s over. As only the best spells do.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a dense, unforgiving movie in the classic sense, an adults-only drama that doesn’t placate despite its stylistic overreaches. It’s disappointing that in its final moments, the movie has come so far off its own hinges, so deconstructed its own rivets, that it can’t put them back together again. But everything that’s come before is so rich that you’re ready to forgive it.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 28, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey is miscalculated as a romance and a fantasy, and while I’m loath to blame a craftsman as intelligent as Kogonada entirely for the outcome, he did, after all, agree to direct this lousy script. A big, bold, beautiful bore indeed.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Long Walk doesn’t tell you or ask you anything new if you’re feeling pent up with rage by American leadership these days, but the film’s grim commitment to the bit is a rarity for a studio movie: There’s no holding of your hand on this long walk, nor does it read you a bedtime story and tuck you in at the end.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a movie that would probably be really funny if you were high. The laughs are mostly dry and deadpan, depending on your closeness to and fondness for the material — in other words, very much in line with the mockumentary world of producer Christopher Guest.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The filmmaker creates a tactile universe of nostalgia and regret, heavier on suggestion than explication.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s a flawed but affecting film worth more than being treated as everything but a literal write-off.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Bigelow’s explosively entertaining real-time thriller, told from multiple perspectives at various levels of government from situation room deputies to POTUS (Idris Elba) himself, does not mince on hopelessness. Here is a movie that will ruin your day. You’re welcome.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Johnson’s performance is out-and-out wonderful, a beady-eyed fusion of body and spirit that osmoses Safdie’s sensibility to deliver what can’t be disputed as the most layered work of the actor’s career. A vividly contradictory Blunt, funny and sad especially in articulating Dawn’s conflicted response to Mark’s post-rehab emotional about-face during a tense argument, is equally sensational.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s not a thriller, it’s not really a comedy, and it’s unlikely to start a revolution despite a cruel jolt of a final shot.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Writer/director Jarmusch has called “Father Mother Sister Brother,” which he wrote in three weeks, an “anti-action film,” but if you’re looking closely enough or tuned in to its hangout-movie sensibility, it has more action than most bona fide action movies, even when much of the action here is offscreen, under-the-surface, unsaid.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
If you want your del Toro weirder, Frankenstein might not be your cup. But if you want a period monster movie that’s solid, almost oaken in its sturdiness, you don’t need to knock on wood to assure that del Toro is keeping the innermost essence, the soul of cinema, alive at least.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s an overintellectualized script that reduces its characters to broad stand-ins and mouthpieces for hot topics, bizarrely retrograde, and a few beats behind the times in interrogating both the post-#MeToo context of how assault charges are handled, reacted to, and also in untangling a tricky identity politics inquiry that brushes against race and gender issues.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Imagine if Michael Haneke’s Funny Games were instead about a pair of lone-wolf, conservationist vigilantes trying to save the world instead of two sociopathic twinks wanting to tear it down, and you’ll have some idea of the hyper-contained, rigorously controlled torture chamber that is Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
With a Michael Haneke-esque impassive glaze and a Ruben Östlund-level satire of manners and emotional stuntedness in adults, the film acquires a quiet power as it plays out all possible permutations of a swimming accident that may or may not have ruined the lives of at least two families.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 18, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The grand takeaway is Venter’s astonishing turn. That kid’s got a future, and it began with a filmmaker who knew how to direct her: with patient energy while also encouraging the freedom to play and seek and explore as Bobo does within her little big world.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 14, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Hot Milk dribbles when it should feel crisper, less torpid, but that’s perhaps to match the inner decay of everyone onscreen, and the metastasis of the most interminable vacation ever known.- IndieWire
- Posted May 29, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Romería isn’t without its own unique shape, or visual vitality, or a narrative sense of joie de vivre, but it doesn’t always stand out from the pack even as Simón deserves credit for rendering her autobiography in aesthetically sublime terms.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Mastermind is a study in one man’s selfishness, his compulsion toward crime as a thrill sport, toward daring himself to execute a challenge to shake up his own humdrum day-to-day schtick.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While The History of Sound suffers from some pacing issues and detours that turn up as dead ends, following Lionel’s path as a budding ethnomusicologist collecting songs and sounds to record on cylinders, this is a lovely movie capable of wounding and haunting you.- IndieWire
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Regardless of some of the screenplay hiccups and deus ex machina plopped from the sky, “Left-Handed Girl” still announces Tsou as a confident directorial talent with a rare exuberance.- IndieWire
- Posted May 21, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It also never hurts to be anchored by two actors who are totally game and committed to that vision, and willing to go there, chains, gags, assless chaps and all.- IndieWire
- Posted May 20, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Together, Melliti and Herzi find a rare alchemy between actor and director telling someone else’s story, but one that may turn out to be a bit of each other’s own.- IndieWire
- Posted May 20, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Christian Petzold‘s gossamer latest film, Mirrors No. 3, is as compact as a novella, as ephemeral in its emotion, as delicate in register as one of the Chopin or Ravel pieces that float through it.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
What Lawrence achieves here is extremely impressive, a marquee movie star throwing herself with abandon into a filmmaker’s warped and demandingly miserable vision.- IndieWire
- Posted May 18, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The mythology of Bring Her Back is dizzyingly unclear and patched-together from what feel like studio notes commissioning both over-explication and also less of it, as if ambiguity alone can pass for scares. But the emotions and the performances in the present day are there.- IndieWire
- Posted May 16, 2025
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- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Still, as with any great theater, the performances here are superb, with Holland telegraphing Clay’s years of insecurity into the confines of a one-night-only movie that opens a window onto a Black identity crisis, only to shut it down on us as we peer over the sill.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 17, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
There’s too much movie here, but isn’t that better than none at all? Patterson’s big swings in filmmaking transcend the occasional shakier sum of their parts.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The lurching between genres, whether horror or comedy or heartfelt father-daughter movie, becomes increasingly transparent and frustrating as the movie tries to win our hearts back over with sentimental weepie moments in the film’s last act.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Cave’s work here is weighed down by a tensionless Andrew Sodorski-penned script that lacks intrigue and takes about an hour and a half to get going. Then, the movie is over.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Drop works best in its nimblest moments, but ultimately we should have nothing but gratitude for a movie that has almost zero bloat and tells an effective, original story in 90 minutes, even if this sleek package is made up of some shopworn tropes.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 10, 2025
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- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This film is about the contagious power of storytelling — which includes lying and self-deception — and what a potentially lethal device it can be in the wrong or even right hands.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
With an economy of story elements and set design — where most of the movie takes place in nature’s open expanses — Bentley has crafted a plaintive and affecting film about how every moment holds value.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 29, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Kiss of the Spider Woman is a flashy ode to the fairies and the radicals, the maricóns who’ve repurposed their oppression and media literacy into an outsize, fuck-if-I-care-what-you-think political identity. Yet there’s nothing revolutionary about the movie that contains them.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
How does a transcript of a conversation become a movie? Sachs is searchingly in pursuit of the answer to that question, but what he has captured here is oddly wrenching and moving.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 27, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Here’s a classic story outfitted into something perhaps more bracingly modern — even if its storytelling techniques, female body horror aside, largely are traditional.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 26, 2025
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- Ryan Lattanzio
DuBowski’s activist portrait Sabbath Queen is overwhelmingly ambitious in its time-spanning, as searching and curious as its primary subject. We don’t leave the movie with a firm sense of who Amichai is beyond his religious backdrop, but I think that’s the point: Who he is as a person has become muddled and tangled up with the one he’s supposed to represent.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
You don’t watch Red One so much as stare ahead at the screen. It is a movie that is playing in front of you, I can comfortably give it that much, and for one meant to summon up the Christmas spirit, there’s not a whiff of mirth from the screenplay to the production level.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 5, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
That Zemeckis and cinematographer Don Burgess manage to pack multiple lifetimes of experience into a single space, a fixed camera upon it, and mostly pull it off is quite a feat.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 26, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
New Wave is piercing in its unveiling of the cycle of blame that came out of the Vietnam War.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 25, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
What I wish for this film is that it had trusted the lilting rhythms of its own initial story more confidently rather than a crash into various melodramatic episodes in the finale that only serve to get us to a hurtled-toward cathartic ending.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 17, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
There’s nothing especially mold-breaking here, though an ending moment elicits a gasp even as Apartment 7A ends with a cruel shrug — and perhaps the best thing I can say about that is that now I immediately want to rewatch Rosemary’s Baby. Plus, Garner gives a captivatingly distressed performance as a woman being attacked from all sides, where the only way out is through a window.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 20, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This version of Speak No Evil, despite an effectively creepy performance from James McAvoy, grinds the unsettling contours of the original into gory, “Straw Dogs”-lite, home-invasion comeuppance pulp in a last act that’s exactly the sort of dragged-out predictable material Tafdrup sought to avoid.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Baby Invasion has a clearer focus this time: It’s to make you, the viewer, feel bad, and often wanting to beg to the screen, “Please god let this end,” or perhaps more aptly, “end me.” Here is a filmmaker who, these days, resents his own audience. Here is a movie for no one.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Guadagnino wants not only to expand your consciousness as a moviegoer, but to cut you open and rearrange all the parts of you that see and feel things when you watch a film at all.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Elegant and confounding in equivalent measure, Pedro Almodóvar’s first English-language feature could’ve used a finishing touch from an American script supervisor.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Even if Wolfs is a light affair in the end, it’s a smashing good time, confidently told and unpredictable, with two charismatic leading turns that are nearly even upstaged by Abrams.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
September 5 works most powerfully as a behind-closed-doors, single-room thriller, even as what we see on a wall of monitors is almost too unreal to believe.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Order is one of those: yet another Movie We Need Now, but the director inadvertently makes the case that maybe we don’t.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Without Kidman in a fearless turn and Dickinson there to pivot her to the edge, “Babygirl” wouldn’t work as smashingly as it does. This is a sexy, darkly funny, and bold piece of work. Don’t sleep on it.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Crow is not a waste of talent or resources; worse, it just hangs there on the screen, as undead as Eric himself.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 22, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Hartnett is in on the joke, going against the type he was pigeonholed into by Hollywood as a teen matinee idol who won our hearts and other body parts in “The Virgin Suicides” as too-cool boy-next-door Trip Fontaine, or as a self-induced sexual ascetic in “40 Days and 40 Nights.”- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
If there’s any takeaway from “Rob Peace” for the industry folks in the audience, it’s the leading-man power and charisma of Jay Will, who gives an overwhelmingly heart-open performance that makes you understand why everyone in his midst adored him, and how his life’s richness lent well to a best-selling biography.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 31, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
At the core of it all, Juri’s performance is a marvel of coiled emotion and wide-eyed wonder at the world around her. It’s just that the film around her does a disservice to that performance.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 17, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
National Anthem is high on mood and feeling rather than story. This very horny queer Western is a rush of sensory pleasures, from the reddened, rust-colored rocks of New Mexico as captured by cinematographer Katelin Arizmendi to a killer soundtrack featuring the likes of Angel Olsen, Perfume Genius, Susanne Sundfør, and Spiritualized.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 16, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Zippy at first with the charisma and verve of a Doris Day/Rock Hudson movie, before it way outstretches its welcome across multiple encores and a 132-minute running time, Fly Me to the Moon has the patina of a straight-to-streaming movie tossed into theaters due to a backend deal or to appease filmmakers.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 9, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a rare nonfiction chronicle of an artist that also avoids hagiography — we see Dion at her lowest because that becomes the reminder of who she is at her very best.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 24, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Menuez and Rendón share a terrific chemistry as long-holding-on friends questioning whether they should stay friends at all, and if they should, then why? Comedies like Summer Solstice rarely ask that question with such candor and insight, and with a trans lead actor and character the movie lets simply be themselves despite living in a world rigged against them.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 14, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This Diane Von Furstenberg is plenty engaging, but as a tribute to the woman who reinvented the modern dress, it doesn’t reinvent anything itself.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 6, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Rasoulof crafts an extraordinarily gripping allegory about the corrupting costs of power and the suppression of women under a religious patriarchy that crushes the very people it claims to protect.- IndieWire
- Posted May 25, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s sexy, disturbing, yet cold despite the simmering equatorial heat and hot lava of freely flowing attractions.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The film’s excess of energy almost never burns out, pummeling you with the bacchanal brewing inside its lead.- IndieWire
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Even as Ullmann Tøndel’s two-hour movie grows a bit too winding and weird for its short film-scale conceit, Reinsve grounds the film’s more experimental, almost stagelike leanings in a constant state of heightened emotion that will make you love her even more than in “Worst Person” — and, even better, will make you scared of her.- IndieWire
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Costner is fully in traditionalist mode here, painting a quote-unquote sweeping American saga that feels like an expensive miniseries compressed into feature form.- IndieWire
- Posted May 20, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
There’s almost nothing about “Emilia Pérez” that’s conventional — until the movie unravels into a third-act bit involving a hijacking, guns, and a live human body in a trunk. Which is just a reminder of where Audiard’s head really rests all along.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Schrader adapts the 2021 novel Foregone by Russell Banks into his own specific creation, and one that leaves viewers dizzied and lost by the chopped-up melancholy of it all.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The feature, Parvu’s third, blends suspenseful procedural with family drama but is missing a key point of view: That of the victim, whose assault is a Trojan horse into the film’s more macro interest in how bigotry and conformity entwine, and how emotionally repressed adults deal with teen homosexuality when it hits close to home.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Bird is not Arnold’s best film — how can you top the cross-country raptures of “American Honey” or the final synchronized dance to Nas in “Fish Tank”? But it’s certainly her most ambitious in terms of willingness to stretch her creative reach beyond the social-realist-only confines of some of her early work.- IndieWire
- Posted May 18, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The film’s outsides, all darkness and furtive lighting, seem to pour out of the characters’ insides, where pockets of trauma live in their own self-erected shadows.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 22, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This film is as muted in its approach to character and drama as its color palette, but the result is devastating.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
[A] sturdily enjoyable if emotionally uninsightful heart-tugger that aims straight down the middle of the audience for a mildly reassuring experience mostly made with families in mind.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 13, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Akin’s approach feels so tied to novel-writing — with shifts in perspectives and at least one plot-twisting formal deceit that whiplashes you only to leave you breathless and a bit swoony — and yet the axis around which his universe orbits is entirely cinematic, and universal.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 23, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Renck’s film leaves [Sandler] quite literally lost in space with nowhere to go, and rather than leave us with new perspectives on space travel or marital discord or an awe-eyed curiosity about either, we leave with a shrug.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
In its wryly amusing self-awareness at all turns, the film actively and relentlessly lampoons the very language and gesturing we all affect in trying to broach the political maelstrom of identity politics.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 23, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Freaky Tales is Boden and Fleck’s attempt at applying their studio lessons learned circa “Captain Marvel” to something supposedly more personal, but this film just ends up only repeating that one’s most grating tendencies.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 19, 2024
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This muscular and often brutal depiction is chiseled with authenticity, but it’s too psychologically schematic to make much in the way of an emotional impact.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 22, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
What we’re left with is a rather opaque portrait of the artist as a man, but certainly a vivid one of the man’s art.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 8, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
A heartfelt and hopeful portrait of four of the original AGs that feels more complete and finds each of them on steadier footing — eventually.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 17, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Preciado’s Orlando, My Political Biography is a film of many visual pleasures, and they’re ones Preciado clearly shared in while devising this generous and buoyant inquiry into institution and identity.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 10, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
For true crime fans, Last Stop Larrimah isn’t an urgent must-see, and I am told that the “Lost in Larrimah” podcast from five years ago is an even sharper recounting of the mysterious events. But the unsettling unsolved nature of the tale remains pungent, and so do the Missing posters throughout the community.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 27, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Origin of Evil is ultimately Calamy’s show as a calculating and desperate woman seeking love and acceptance in all the wrong places.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 3, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Chastain and Sarsgaard give a pair of haunting, expert performances as damaged people making sense of their own agony together. Franco gets out of the way of his actors without manipulating them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
You almost wish there was a little more magic, but that’s maybe because some of the truths Silva comes up close to are so skin-crawlingly real that you want to cover them up.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While this film probably needed more time in the storytelling doghouse, Landry Jones’ performance is a lovely watch.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Evil Does Not Exist is a slow-moving film with few epiphanies and no answers to the questions it posits.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Killer is nothing if not committed to its own one-note bit, an existential nihilism that stays the same even as the protagonist, in a mostly silent Michael Fassbender performance, starts to change. It’s as unfeeling as any Fincher thriller, at once predictable in its simplicity but also strangely daring because of it.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
As a study of how the Bernsteins’ near-three-decade marriage endured Lenny’s gayness and genius, Maestro succeeds off the chemistry between Mulligan and Cooper, but the film often looks and feels too fussed-over, almost too precisely manicured, to ever erase its own parameters as a linear biopic.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Poor Things is the best film of Lanthimos’ career and already feels like an instant classic, mordantly funny, whimsical and wacky, unprecious and unpretentious, filled with so much to adore that to try and parse it all here feels like a pitiful response to the film’s ambitions.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Ferrari is more gritty than glossy even at its most tightly coiled, with Mann’s searching camera never quite fixed in one place.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed lacks for drama in its portrayal of the quotidian realities of sexual kink, but Arnow’s voice is distinctive, shrewd, and spiky enough to keep it afloat.- IndieWire
- Posted May 24, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Young Wife can be a chaotic experience, but Poe has the skills to carry us through the noise and toward the future.- IndieWire
- Posted May 2, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s as consistently surprising and deranged a movie as any from his output, even if not for all tastes, which he knows.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 31, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
As sturdily crafted as Knock at the Cabin may be, Shyamalan’s funny games never achieve the profundity they’re reaching for, ending up as a preachy end-times message movie wrapped up in a slick horror package.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Rockwell’s direction is sophisticated and visually imaginative even as the movie could benefit from a tighter edit around its New York cast of characters and the rapidly changing city in the hands of mayors Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 27, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
What sounds, on paper, like a challenging sit is actually a wondrous 97-minute feature, whose director and star are obviously poised for greatness.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 25, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Oldroyd is clearly a master assembler of styles, but he never lets his vision outshine the wonderful central performances at the movie’s core.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
A predictably terrific Sarah Snook goes full-blown feral in the Australian horror movie Run Rabbit Run, but its final-act destination isn’t enough to justify the journey.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
By the final jaw-dislocating cut to black, you’ll have no idea what just thwacked you.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Stars Alexander Skarsgärd and Mia Goth deliver terrifically unhinged performances as a failing novelist and a mysterious tour guide, and Cronenberg has absolutely no shortage of original ideas, but the whole thing feels bloodless, cold and clammy as a speculum.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Southern and Lovelace’s documentary appears to be held together by the same proverbial glue and paper clips that cohered the early sonic boom of this particular indie subset. And that’s largely part of its charm. But the results are often navel-gazey.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 3, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While a straightforward documentary in the classic sense, it’s polished, affecting, professionally edited, and bursting with big personalities.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 2, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
As urgent and necessary as their story is, it also feels too familiar on cinematic terms.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 18, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Kendrick makes the case for why she belongs in more dramatic roles that allow her to shed her normally peppy usually cheery onscreen persona. We know how good she is, and we’d only love to see more.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
My Policeman isn’t not arresting, and that’s thanks to the work of David Dawson and Emma Corrin, and not the film’s top biller, who was never the lead at all.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 12, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Eichner’s gay homage to the great American romcoms of yesterday looks and feels exactly like them, and that’s groundbreaking enough. We’ll take that any day over a movie that tries too hard to pander to gay audiences. This one just hears and sees us.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Coggeshall’s script isn’t especially sharp, as the movie really does hinge around that big twist, but the visual approach and performances from the actors give Orphan: First Kill an edge that should satisfy fans of the original.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 19, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
My Old School seems to believe its surprises are more revelatory than they actually are, and for the sake of avoiding spoiling the whole thing, it’s hard to sum up what the filmmakers were so fascinated by in the first place.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 22, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s a challenging movie, but one so overflowingly empathetic for even its cruelest characters that the emotional beats outweigh the headier structural conceits that make for a narrative often hazy, out of reach, and gorgeously weblike.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 26, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
At an economical 90-minute running time, Fire of Love packs a visual and emotional wallop, with enough close-ups on erupting volcanoes — one, at a point, is called “a bathtub with a hole in it, sowing death all around” — to leave you slack-jawed, terrified, and awe-inspired.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2022
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- Ryan Lattanzio
You can hardly see the scaffold of a documentary film at all. In fact, “Simple” unfolds more like a riveting neorealist drama, with no trace of the woman and her crew behind the camera, no talking heads, no filmmakerly intervention of any kind- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While Beliebers may be titillated by the mundane behind-the-scenes goings-on of the pop brat’s pandemic-era concert on the roof of the Beverly Hilton, there’s little else to invite in new audiences. Still, as a piece of adoring fan service, “Our World” fulfills its function.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Luzzu is beautifully shot, if at times emotionally restrained, in its centering around a man who’s occasionally hard to read. But it boast a true discovery in the casting of Jesmark Scicluna, a real fisherman who plays a version of himself, and here playing a struggling parent trying to eke out a living along the docks.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 14, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While the movie barrels toward some tense face-offs between the townsfolk, and more than a few convulsing moments of possessed (maybe?) hysteria, Zalava never quite takes off as a terrifying genre piece, even if Amiri’s attempt to exorcise his own demons is admirable.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Tale of King Crab is an engrossing, if slight riff on 1970s foreign arthouse classics — though not quite as spellbinding as its forebears, despite a bifurcated structure that makes for two occasionally tantalizing films in one.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 30, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is an odd film of poetic abstractions and ellipses, but consistently fascinating in its unrepentant coyness.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While this nasty film seems headed toward a conclusion where the rich win and the status quo is maintained, that’s abruptly shattered by a violent climax that assures that no one on either side of the divide is left without a bloodstain.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
A murky, vaguely sinister, but ultimately dreary coming-of-age film about a young woman’s blossoming sexuality under the spell of her mother’s old flame.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 13, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a lovely film that will appeal to Bernstein’s most ardent fans, while warmly inviting neophytes into his world.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Unclenching the Fists turns out to be hardly the neorealist dip into misery that some of the film’s more disconnected camerawork from DP Pavel Fomintsev promises.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While occasionally veering into melodrama, Brady’s feature debut is a powerful slice of kitchen-sink gloom, and a blazing portrait of women on fire, unsure of where to go in the wake of rippling tragedy.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Despite the efforts of a bright young cast, this is a hollow and depressing Gen Z romantic comedy. What’s even scarier is that this film comes from Mark Waters, the director of “Mean Girls,” a way savvier teen satire that doesn’t pander to its audience.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 27, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
In not trying to reach too deeply into the well of profundity, Sarnoski has incidentally achieved a pretty profound movie.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 16, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While the raw material for something twisted and operatic exists here, Leblanc is too committed to putting meters of space between herself and the material to fully absorb the viewer. The motivations for that choice, however arty, are uncertain.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 18, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Despite Close’s valiant efforts, everything about Four Good Days feels artificial, like face powder barely caked on over the horrors of a TV movie of the week.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 30, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While Chasing Ghosts is hardly as bold in its stylistic approach as Traylor, that’s by design, as the documentary is keen to get out of the way and let the work speak for itself. This movie should introduce one of the greatest artists you’ve probably never heard of to a bigger audience.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 22, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The way the editing (by Alain Dessauvage and George Hanmer) so gracefully unfolds from present to past suggests a kind of cinematic Proustian madeleine, conjuring how involuntary memories can be jolted again by encounters in the present.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Kier gets the role of his lifetime as a fabulously snarky, acerbic, long-retired hairdresser in Todd Stephens’ Swan Song, a dark comedy that totters to and fro the campy and the melancholic with wincing laughs and real pain.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 19, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Blending Wojnarowicz’s own audio journals with input from a handful of his contemporaries, Chris McKim’s startling and meticulously edited new movie captures the spirit of the artist as he was, bracing and in-your-face.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 19, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Graf makes “Going to the Dogs” an unpredictable visual experience, bracingly experimental for a 68-year-old filmmaker who hasn’t run out of gas.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 16, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a bizarre movie that disappears up its own empty gastrointestinal tract.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 16, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s the kind of movie that seems to suck your soul out while you’re watching it, variably crass and slapstick humor landing with a bloody thud.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 12, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While it certainly offers up a necessary-if-dour vision of patriarchy-dominated life in this particular corner of Europe, by-the-numbers storytelling and a flat, visual style occasionally lead to dramatic intertia. Still, Gashi is powerfully, effectively steely as a woman who must take matters into her own hands, even when they are tied by society.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 3, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The film shimmers with beauty and sadness despite its length, and the Japanese director’s background as both a photographer and a documentary filmmaker brings a gossamer naturalism to this realistic tale about a young woman’s regrets over abandoning her child years after the fact.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 28, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Atlantis is a political howl from the soul about a decaying Europe. But its cold, violent exterior turns out to be a bleak disguise for what is an unexpectedly sweet love story at its molten core.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While the meandering sensibility of Acasa, My Home makes it a tough sit at times, the spell it casts through its all-access dive into subterranean life brought to the surface forms a compelling addition to one of international cinema’s deepest, and ever-growing, pockets.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 15, 2021
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The actors ably carry the script, as if aware they’re pawns in a genre exercise.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 19, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The actors’ gifts are all heightened by Msangi’s delicate touch in this empathetic portrait of immigrant life in America that is, refreshingly, less interested in big drama than in a family quietly building itself back up when it may be too late.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 15, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The pop icon’s stardom is so etched in concrete at this point that he could tell his fans just about anything and they would never stop listening. So it’s a pity that the documentary vehicle that surrounds him isn’t more forthcoming about the man beneath the wife beaters and airtight skinny jeans who sends so many swooning, but surely must, at times, feel lonely late at night like the rest of us.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 18, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
This is a gentle and joyous film not to be slept on, even as its low-key aura lulls you into a soothed state of mind.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 11, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Madre turns out to be the least twisted, and most empathetic, entry in the damaged mother movie canon in some time.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 3, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While the narrative hardly goes into the fully unhinged direction it teases, it’s pleasantly askew and always marching to its own strange and, slightly off, beat.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 28, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Chiseled as a haiku, director Wayne Wang’s Coming Home Again opens a window onto dying days in all their ugliness, but also onto their possibility of redemption for a mother and son.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The script is half-baked and rushed, too much of a collage of other, better movies, and too coy to embrace its trashiness or ever go beyond PG-13 levels of horror.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 13, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
There’s enough go-for-broke and whiplash-inducing shifts in tone on display to suggest this filmmaking duo has a future, even when their characters don’t seem to have a past.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 9, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The result is a sophisticated, tart-tongued revival, and a gayed-up “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” that surmounts the challenges faced by stage-to-screen adaptations, specifically the utter confinement to a single space.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 25, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While the film, both written and directed by Lacôte, is grounded in oral traditions that may seem exotic to certain viewers, the movie is really about the universal power of storytelling regardless of tongue — and how it can be used as a way to survive.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
There is no reason to care about anyone in Antonio Campos’ The Devil All the Time, a sweaty, bloated mess of a movie that flushes a knockout ensemble down the drain.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The Broken Hearts Gallery will fit snugly on the shelf for tweens and teens as a source of comfort and maybe even empowerment, an ode to rebuilding, when the dissolution of a relationship leaves you feeling like a husk of yourself.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 4, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The 24th means well, and while it, sadly, mostly elicits a shrug, what the film lacks in pizzaz it more than makes up for in educational value, for better or worse.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 22, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While Margiela’s visions likely deserve a more radical treatment onscreen, Holzemer’s film offers perhaps the most complete insight yet into one of fashion’s most elusive geniuses.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 18, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Despite the claustrophobic entrapment in a violent and hyper-masculine world, The Shadow of Violence is an ultimately moving morality tale announcing a confident new voice in international cinema. Not to mention a powerful vehicle for its two leads, Jarvis and Barry Keoghan.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 1, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The origins of the room in question are never explained, which is half the intrigue, but mostly the frustration. The core conceit is enough to make The Room a not entirely wasted ride. Still, enter with care. It’s a mixed bag, but upon exit, it somehow runs through the mind.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 23, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
While the film is hardly as transgressive as its subject, it manages to be unexpectedly moving, and a nostalgic time capsule of an art-world rebel whose unorthodox methods and decidedly politically incorrect vision couldn’t exist today.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 23, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Relic exists firmly in the realm of allegory, and if you’re looking for answers to the film’s spooky ambiguities and uncanny set pieces, you won’t find them. James is more concerned with creating an atmospheric rumination on intergenerational trauma, death, and dying that also happens to be a striking horror movie.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 9, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
It’s a clever exercise in no-frills science fiction that should please fans of the genre, but it’s more than just a sci-fi exercise thanks to a script that prioritizes, and cares about, its characters.- IndieWire
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
The movie’s topple into melodramatic excess is fitting for a film set in the 1960s, a time dominated by melodramas. And also like the cinema of the 1960s, there’s a grit and urgency to To the Stars, of something bigger and darker coming along with the changing times.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 24, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Though hardly subtle in its metaphoric intent, this story of a rural cult of all women, segregated into “sisters” and “wives,” led by a single powerful man makes for an unnervingly effective thriller dripping with atmosphere and foreshadowing.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 4, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
In these trying times, you generally can’t go too wrong with Almost Love, a film where, for the most part, everyone is nice to each other and just trying to be a good person. But the third act becomes a pile-up of soap-operatic incidents that try too hard to advance plot arcs . . . that are less interesting than the spiky, perky characters at their center.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 2, 2020
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- Ryan Lattanzio
Godard’s revolutionary crime drama about a guy, a girl, and a gun comes off more like a pet project or even a student film here, part of both the charms and frustrations of Nouvelle Vague.- IndieWire
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