For 5,179 reviews, this publication has graded:
-
59% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
38% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.4 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 69
| Highest review score: | The Only Living Pickpocket in New York | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Pixels |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 3,579 out of 5179
-
Mixed: 1,334 out of 5179
-
Negative: 266 out of 5179
5179
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
The Phoenician Scheme is the busiest of Anderson’s films, and also — at least on first viewing — the least rewarding.- IndieWire
- Posted May 18, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
The film shows a refreshing interest in his current existence, rather than becoming a by-the-book retread of his pre-pope life.- IndieWire
- Posted May 13, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
More than anything, however, this compellingly sketched slice of life offers rare and abiding insight as to how interwoven the Israeli and Palestine communities are in Lod and the other “mixed” cities around the country, how unequally justice is shared between them, and why such imbalanced conditions for survival will always make the world less safe for people on both sides of such bifurcated societies.- IndieWire
- Posted May 2, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
“How does he do it?,” someone asks. Music by John Williams doesn’t have the slightest idea. This long and indulgent doc is content to let us bask in the mystery of it all, if only because it understands that people will be asking that same question for centuries to come.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Emma Stefansky
Biosphere is tons of fun as a character study, but its ideas will leave you gazing out of its geodesic windows, wishing there was something more out there.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 6, 2023
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Stone's uneven direction veers from near-amateurish genre antics to an enjoyable awareness of those same standards.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 3, 2012
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
The Day the Earth Blew Up isn’t arguing for the past at the expense of the future, it’s simply trying to put a modern spin on a classic formula in a way that makes you wonder why we ever left it behind.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 13, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Christian Zilko
The film deserves credit for its nuanced exploration of sexual trauma, showing us characters who are both burdened by it yet seem to adjust their coping mechanisms by the minute.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
It takes far too long for Galveston to emerge from the novocaine of its various clichés and allow us to feel the tender flesh that bleeds across every scene of this seedy road noir, but — in fairness to director Mélanie Laurent — some filmmakers are never able to break the leathered skin of a Nic Pizzolatto story.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
Bolstered by a creative storytelling set-up, Ruben and his very game co-star Aya Cash skewr horror tropes as well as cultural obsessions ranging from TV talent shows to the Bechdel Test. The result is a winking horror comedy with a lot on its mind — perhaps too much.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 1, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
At times, the movie excels at portraying the dread of children forced to confront a world indifferent to their concerns. But no matter how many times Pennywise leaps out from unexpected places, it’s impossible to shake the feeling that we’ve been here many times before.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Ella Kemp
Death rarely fades from view in Borgli’s increasingly bleak comedy, which does somewhat of a disservice to the narrative trajectory — not because it flirts with oblivion but because its path is so stratospheric and dogged in the direction it’s going that it can be pretty hard to hold on for your life and not get left behind.- IndieWire
- Posted May 28, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Waterloo makes for a clear and terrific setpiece that’s almost on par with the digital spectacle that Scott creates from the cold death of Austerlitz, but by that point Napoleon’s outsized ambitions have been long subsumed by a film so lost in its epic sweep that it’s become the butt of its own, frequently scathing joke.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 14, 2023
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Steve Greene
While Amanda Lipitz’s film doesn’t quite reinvent the narrative, Step tells a story that highlights the intertwining values of hope and education, and never loses sight of the idea that much more lies ahead.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 3, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Sophie Monks Kaufman
Despite a hectic list of characters and their grievances, the plot is not tightly constructed and scans, for stretches, like a hang-out movie.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Some movies try to entertain you; this one holds your attention like a bite that you can’t stop yourself from scratching even though you know it’s only going to make things worse. It’s hostile and off-putting to the extreme, but also too aggravating to ignore or stop watching.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 29, 2021
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Robin Bissell’s The Best of Enemies may not be some kind of game-changing corrective to all the retrograde films about race in America (we’re talking about an uplifting historical biopic directed by the executive producer of “Seabiscuit”), but this sturdy drama has the good sense to recognize that allyship is only valuable when it’s hard. When it’s a sacrifice. When it forces white people to put some of their own skin in the game.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 4, 2019
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 8, 2021
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Valuable for its access yet limited by its lack of perspective, Desert One puts a human face on one of the late 20th century’s worst debacles while framing the whole thing in the passive voice, resulting in a film that boasts the immediacy of a testament but the resonance of a textbook.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 22, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Viewers are spared by the tender mercies of biodoc tropes, as “Fauci” puts a pin in the action to wind back the clock and walk us through how its subject came to develop such an adamantium shell.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Satisfying as this documentary might be in the greater story of Lopez’s personal growth, it barely hangs together on its own.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 27, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
And, yes, it is also often quite funny. Most of that humor comes care of Sandler, who slips back into Happy with something like grizzled ease, and seems to have not lost a trick on what makes the character both so funny (his rage, his imagination, his fashion sense) and so easy to care about (his rage, his imagination, his fashion sense).- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 25, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Katie Rife
Marielle Heller’s version of the story — Yoder is listed as a co-writer — could have taken the magical realist element out entirely, and the film would have played exactly the same. The body horror is downplayed to the point of being functionally nonexistent.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
By the time Boys from County Hell works its way to its final face-offs, the film’s good humor and care for its characters is just as appealing as the gore. Vampire hounds might balk, but Boys from County Hell has it right: This is a story about people, not monsters.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 22, 2021
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
It is very silly and often strange, but it’s also sweet and funny, and damn it all if you don’t start to really care about this odd little family.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 20, 2023
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Christian Zilko
For all of its cliched youthful exuberance, the film finds its footing in the third act when it offers a bittersweet look into the tradeoffs of fame and how their conflicts with personal obligations can derail even the most promising artists.- IndieWire
- Posted May 3, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Anne Hathaway's faux British accent might be the first obvious conceit in One Day, but not its most cumbersome. That distinction belongs to the eponymous structure, a claustrophobic device that follows a pair of best friends over the course of a 22-year period, but only on many versions of July 15th.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 17, 2011
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Can actors save a mediocre movie? In London River, they come close. Blethyn's frantic, sad naivete creates a fascinating contrast to Kouyaté's understated performance.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
What The Competition considers a deliciously exciting rite of passage, viewers might interpret as a kind of cultural rot. The truth likely falls somewhere in between, as Simone’s documentary is too gripping to be dismissed, and too queasy to be accepted.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2019
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
- Critic Score
The new version of “Pet Sematary” is both darkly humorous and quite chilling, modernizing some of the cheesier emotional beats of that earlier adaptation. ... It’s in the third act that Kolsch and Widmyer’s ambitions get the best of them.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 16, 2019
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Too late, At Any Price displays the presence of a skilled filmmaker capable of using ambiguous pauses and representational imagery to convey the issues of greed and other covert desires. Until then, it's a slovenly affair only distinguished by its name cast.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 3, 2013
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Christian Zilko
Rather than mock their small-time dealings or direct them to chase brighter lights, “Song Sung Blue” treats Mike and Claire’s pursuit of tribute band glory as a sufficient driving force for a meaningful life. This isn’t a story about how you’re never too old to chase your wildest dreams and play in the big leagues; it’s about how there shouldn’t be any shame in realizing that you are.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 27, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Josh Slater-Williams
Giving the final days of Christ a contemporary, allegorical spin, The Book of Clarence is more concerned with entertainment value than delivering a sermon. The results are tonally erratic, but absolutely interesting, at the very least.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Just as this series focuses on survival instincts, it seems that Scott has found a way to exercise his own, keeping the “Alien” series relevant by resurrecting the same old scares.- IndieWire
- Posted May 6, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
The movie amounts to a tame, forgettable doodle, as if designed to imitate the scruffy Duplass movies that Naima worships; for Shawcat, however, it’s a promising step in a new direction that suggests a far more confident artist than the one she plays onscreen.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 26, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Not exactly the first movie that’s ever dared to suggest that it’s what’s on the inside that counts, I Feel Pretty at least has the decency to be honest about how far that wisdom can take you.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 18, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Thin and politically disengaged as this diverting Euro-thriller can be, it never forgets how even the most desperate of people can be left to suffer in plain sight — nothing but figures in a landscape.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 4, 2021
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
The Unknown Girl combines its naturalistic direction with a strong lead performance and topicality, although these ingredients are hobbled by their familiarity.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2016
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
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
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Sophie Monks Kaufman
Although it succeeds on its own terms in bringing to light the pathetic and exploitative behavior of plantation owners during the final era of Dutch colonialism, it succumbs to the same listlessness as Josefien, lying in bed, covered in mosquito bites, waiting for a climax denied.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 10, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Vikram Murthi
At least superficially, Hello, Love, Again offers something for everyone: stirring romance, politically-tinged drama, and shots of Calgary that resemble a regional tourist board’s wet dream. In execution, however, the film exhibits something of a split personality by awkwardly moving between cutesy soap operatic romance and an unsparing, oft-devastating portrait of the myriad hurdles facing foreign workers.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Christian Zilko
Hamm’s adaptation of the material is competent enough, offering all the striking shots of the Swiss Alps and extra-laden battle scenes that any historical epic connoisseur could ask for. Bang checks all the boxes as a leading man, emitting the rugged sexiness and unflinching bravery required of a historical figure who transcended his own lifespan and achieved true immortality.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Even when the the music swells and people talk through their problems to reach unremarkable conclusions, there’s an undercurrent of emotional authenticity.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 6, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
- Critic Score
The film is an agreeable document of cultural processing that should especially appeal to the niche crowd at its center — it's more or less mandatory viewing for L.A. foodies.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 9, 2015
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
For a giallo riff so light on gore, Knife + Heart is still a bloody mess.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
Dramas pile up, some obvious, some not, and Penguin Bloom meanders a bit before coming in to land. The path there might be predictable, but there is still something beautiful when it really takes flight.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
It’s charming — and it’s different, and it’s worth saving.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 15, 2023
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
It’s the questions that Fenton can’t answer — maybe even the questions he doesn’t mean to ask — that make It’s Not Yet Dark such an illuminating experience.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 1, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
This is a nice movie: the kind that’s lit brighter than a dentist’s office, scored by the lead singer of Sigur Rós (along with Alex Somers), and aimed towards a heart-stirring conclusion about empathy, isolation, and the power that we all have to affect each other’s lives. It’s about the hard areas of being human, but it only displays a passing interest in exploring them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Josh Slater-Williams
There is still much to enjoy and admire here if you can stay on the film’s wavelength without getting frustrated.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Splitting the difference between “Terms of Endearment” and David Cronenberg’s “Crash” in a way that’s often sweet and surreal (but never sinister), Wittock essentially takes an ultra-familiar premise and coats it with the candied shell of something you’ve never seen before. It’s enchanting stuff, at least until that colorful layer of hard sugar melts away and you’re left to chew on the beige core inside.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 26, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
The new movie basically jams the archetypes of a John Hughes teen comedy into a minimalist haunted scenario. While that’s not enough to suppress the underlying gimmickry of the storytelling, Annabelle Comes Home at least manages to charm and frighten its way through the purest distillation of the “Conjuring” formula to date.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 24, 2019
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
It's a sad, thoughtful depiction of midwestern eccentrics regretting the past and growing bored of the present, ideas that Payne regards with gentle humor and pathos but also something of a shrug.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2013
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Even at this point in his career, Wang is skilled enough to find a strong emotional through-line amidst a mess of tattered threads.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
- Critic Score
The more it generates spectacle, the more you notice how the screenplay fails to keep in step.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 23, 2026
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Decent enough as a night out but destined to be used as a fundraising tool, the film is galvanized by its push towards a perverse kind of representation; the idea isn’t to make people with cystic fibrosis feel seen, but rather to erase them altogether. And the highest compliment one can pay to Five Feet Apart is that it has the power to play a small, valuable role in that effort.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Adapted from a popular memoir by the late doctor’s son, Trueba’s film overcomes its ham-fisted clumsiness because it goes a step beyond hagiography. It’s a story filtered through the eyes of a grieving son in complete awe of his father, one told with enough warmth and detail that it could be easy to forget its memories don’t belong to the filmmaker himself.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 17, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
If the faintly amusing final product is pretty thin gruel when compared to the rest of its filmmaker’s output, the project’s high-concept construction is clever enough to sustain the meandering story it tells.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 17, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Marrying the sensitivity of “Spirited Away” to the lushness of “The Legend of Korra” and the narrative coherence of a lucid dream, Big Fish & Begonia is the very rarest of Chinese exports: An animated film that was made for adults.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Renoir — with its faint traces of sentiment, and complete absence of sentimentality — delicately articulates the girl’s inner child in a way that allows us to feel it expand across the season.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Did You Wonder Who Fired the Gun? is at its sharpest and most necessary when Wilkerson interrogates his personal connection to the past, extrapolating his reticence to explore his own family’s violent history into a national epidemic of people who are similarly reluctant to do the same.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 1, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
- Critic Score
God Help the Girl doesn’t quite succeed in convincing the viewer to toss conventional character development out the window, it still has its moments.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
At times, [Deutch's] performance is perhaps even too strong for the film that’s cobbled together around it, as the actress so convincingly indicates at Erica’s vibrant and complex inner life that she embarrasses the script’s feeble attempts to diagnose and solve her character.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 28, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
For all of its low-key revisionism and post-modern flourish (most explicit during a kung-fu style training montage set to Leonard Cohen and a funny “Gladiator” reference that lands at a pivotal moment), Foulkes’ confident and kooky feature debut is less interested in subverting its source material than in continuing the puppet show’s long tradition of keeping with the times.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
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
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
There’s certainly representational value in the way it brings a conventionally rousing narrative to such unorthodox material. At the same time, it leaves you wondering how much better the whole thing would have held together if it simply let the riders speak for themselves.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
- Critic Score
Dope provokes a discussion about the dichotomy between societal expectations of the race-defined self, as well as the democratic American right to be who you want to be — but it's an unfocused and tangential one, limited by the trappings of comedy and the flash of the hip-hop aesthetic.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 28, 2015
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Palmer isn’t exactly high art, but it’s no small feat for something so predictable to avoid feeling dishonest.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 25, 2021
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
By the time this highly evocative work of low-budget sci-fi arrives at its eye-opening final scene, the clearest takeaway is that our only hope for survival has been coded into us since the beginning of time.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 29, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Samantha Bergeson
A Tourist’s Guide to Love is a road map for how to love adventure abroad, with dashes of Vietnamese trivia and spiritual facts along the way.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 21, 2023
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
It’s smaller, quieter, and it feels true. Not soapy, not silly, not like something ripped out of an airport book buy. That’s the first step.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 11, 2026
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
If The Founder comes up short of providing a satisfactory dramatization of its main storyline, at least it peels back the veil with sufficient intrigue. Yet it still leaves the sour impression that Kroc got the last laugh. Even in this less-than-flattering portrait, he remains its brightest star.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 7, 2016
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
The madeline-like specificity of this memory-driven story is its greatest strength, even if it relies on a rusty structure of nested flashbacks in order to reach the past.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 15, 2019
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia’s The Platform is not a subtle film. But these are unsubtle times, with unsubtle problems, and the most alarming thing about this grimly affecting Spanish allegory — which literalizes capitalism’s dehumanizing verticality with twice the gross-out terror of “Parasite,” and almost half of that masterpiece’s furious grace — is that it sometimes doesn’t seem like an allegory at all.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 20, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Marisa Mirabal
An arresting and visually stunning achievement, Medusa Deluxe breaks the framework on storytelling and sheds the skin of a subculture in the process.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 29, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Christian Blauvelt
If Silent Night ultimately aces its peculiar tone, it struggles with having anything to say.- IndieWire
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Opie
For a franchise that’s so frenzied and kinetic in general, “Infinity Castle” effectively sets the tone for what’s to come, promising diehard fans the spectacle they’ve been craving which newcomers will also find enjoyable, if somewhat confusing at times.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Lucy doesn't hold together, but with its flashy innovation, Besson's trying to freshen the formula. It's the kind of freewheeling mess of a movie you wish studios would try out more often.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 22, 2014
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Butt Boy dares you to give it a shot, and operates on the assumption that most people will write it off from the start. It’s hard to believe this movie even exists, but equally worth recognizing that it’s not entirely full of shit.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 14, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Over time, Holland's approach pushes beyond despair and turns into a pure exercise in grim atmosphere, shifting from a story of staying alive to a closeup of a private hell.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 8, 2012
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Even when Christopher Robin stumbles or steers itself into a corner, it never stops trying to understand what people lose when they let go of the things they love. The movie sells itself by keeping one foot on the ground at all times.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2018
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Whenever Lee ventures away from the outrageous particulars of the plot, "Da Sweet Blood of Jesus" transforms into a stylish means of exploring contemporary struggles in urban black America by depicting it as a ballet of navigating personal and practical conflicts alike.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 25, 2014
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Adam Solomons
The Sun Rises On Us All soon becomes the disheartening but affecting story of a pair of broken people for whom salvation is simply unaffordable in a morally expensive world.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Brawl in Cell Block 99 unleashes a fascinating gamble, blending the grimy aesthetic of a one-note action movie with undercurrents of blue-collar frustration. It doesn’t quite succeed at fusing those two elements, but it’s further proof of a filmmaking sensibility willing to push beyond the presumed barriers of formula.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
As a movie, Black Mass often drowns its dramatic potential in a dreary atmosphere and grisly violence used to dubious effect. Depp, however, operates on another level.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Fresh and stale in equal measure, Coco represents the best of what Pixar can be, and the worst of what they’ve become.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Caught by the Tides” is by nature an imprecise film, tethered to the buoys that Jia has collected over the years and prone to drifting through time without any clear sense of where it might take it.- IndieWire
- Posted May 19, 2024
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Radcliffe’s performance ensures that the movie is engaging from start to finish — like Letts, the lynchpin of his portrayal is in the confidence of his voice — but Ragussis is afraid to follow his lead actor down the rabbit hole.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 15, 2016
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
As a platform for Bilot’s efforts and why they deserve a national profile, the movie has a sincere sense of purpose. It’s a 20-year-old drama that extends into the present, and as environmental concerns continue to escalate, it couldn’t feel more contemporary.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 13, 2019
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
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
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
It’s biopic syndrome, this impulse to condense events to hit the high notes, to provide fans with recognizable stories, to essentially act as a greatest hits album, and it sinks the second half of an otherwise compelling, funny and extremely entertaining film with a beat all its own.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 31, 2015
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Alas, the trouble with trying to capture a mercurial artist on such a legible canvas is that the attempt — no matter how sincere and self-aware it might be — can only do justice to its subject through its failure to see them clearly.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 27, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
By giving the spotlight to an archetype usually relegated to the background, writer-director Jared Moshé puts a revisionist spin on the familiar oater, but everything else about The Ballad of Lefty Brown is by the book.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 14, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Leila Latif
It’s a challenge to conclude a documentary on an ongoing and fast-evolving conflict. The news will continue to tally up the dead bodies and destroyed cities, from which the film refuses to allow us to distance our emotions. But where “Freedom on Fire” proves valuable isn’t in the brutality of the corpses but in the reminder that these are individual people being broken, and real families being torn apart.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Sunao Katabuchi’s In this Corner of the World is scattered and emotionally disjointed from start to finish, but few films have done so much to convey the everyday heroism of getting out of bed in the morning — not just surviving in the shadow of death, but living in it as well.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
This kind of hushed, low-key story certainly wouldn’t be the most obvious place to start an epic, but it’s a captivating chunk of mood and personality begging for future chapters. Here’s hoping Bateman finds a way to tell them.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
While frequently very funny and sustained by a pair of boldly unlikable female protagonists, Fort Tilden adopts the glorious stupidity of its stars, and echoes their gratingly obnoxious temperaments.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 14, 2014
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Every scene is relaxedly suffused with the tension between the limits of perspective and the empathy of storytelling, until the act of seeing becomes as problematized as the refusal to look, and the boundaries between reality and fiction grow as blurred as those between the various genres that Gavagai swirls into an unclassifiable sludge.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Great horror movies should feel unsafe, but this one just leaves you feeling beaten down.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 26, 2020
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by
-
-
Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
At its best, Prevenge feels like a hilarious distillation of every conflicted, politically incorrect thought that many pregnant women are too polite to share in public.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 23, 2017
- Read full review
-
Reviewed by