Ten years ago, a Japanese teenager wrote a book that quickly became regarded as “an envoy from another world.”
With The Reason I Jump, 13 year-old Naoki Higashida expressed in poetic detail how a nonverbal autistic child sees the world.
In short, it’s “details first…then the whole thing.”
For the film adaptation, veteran documentarian Jerry Rothwell gently weaves narrated passages from the book around visits with a handful of other mostly nonverbal autistic teens from around the globe.
The wonderful cinematography from Ruben Woodin Deschamps is a perfect vessel to unveil the beautifully undiscovered country the film explores. These teens are talented, intelligent and expressive, longing for friendships that only require “peace from the world.”
And more than anything, they want to change the perception of autism by joining the conversations they’ve long been the subject of. The Reason I Jump is a touching introduction into how much we can learn by listening to them.
Meagan Good and Tamara Bass have essentially grown up before
our eyes. Mainly taking supporting roles in films and TV, the veterans have
been fairly consistent presences since the Nineties.
For their latest, they create their own roles and their own
stories. If Not Now, When?—written by Bass and co-directed by the
duo—chronicles the lives of four high school besties facing their thirties and
wondering what went wrong.
Good and Bass co-star as, respectively, a professional
facing her addiction problem and a nurse unwilling to hope for a family of her
own. They’re joined by Mekia Cox as a football star’s unhappily pregnant wife,
and, most impressively, Meagan Holder as a mother torn between family and ambition.
The four have a fairly solid chemistry, with Holder bringing a mellow, peacemaker vibe that diffuses much of the melodrama the film flirts with. A solid supporting cast—Edwin Hodge is especially strong as a love interest—help give each character’s personal story some needed depth and interest.
Bass’s script is too often superficial, creating moments for each star to shine, but those moments invariably feel unearned. Without weightier or more believable interior lives and conflicts, flashes of heartbreak or breakthrough come off as little more than fodder for an acting reel. They rarely feel like honest moments in a character’s life.
If Not Now, When? does a lot right, too. The pacing
of each character’s arc is different, so the excitement and poignant moments are
staggered—more like real life. We don’t all hit our own personal highs and lows
simultaneously (thank God), and neither should these characters. The cadence
not only lends some needed authenticity, but it gives the film a slight irregularity
in its structure, which keeps it from feeling formulaic or predictable.
In keeping with that thread of authenticity, Bass wisely avoids closing each individual story with tidy precision. Will she or won’t she? And how will that turn out for her? The questions are rarely answered with any real finality, and that emphasizes the film’s point, which is not how each one is doing individually. Bass and Good are more interested in exploring how they do together.
Pieces of a Woman opens with a crew working on bridge construction. It closes with that new bridge standing strong after many months of work. And it between, the film gracefully navigates how one woman learns to rise above some deeply troubled waters.
Vanessa Kirby is devastatingly good as Martha, a pregnant Bostonian who settles in with her partner Sean (Shia LaBeouf, a bit too showy) for the home birthing experience they have planned since day one.
What they didn’t plan on was backup midwife Eva (a terrific Molly Parker) having to take the lead when their original choice is tied up with another, longer-than-expected delivery. And when events turn tragic, Martha and Sean are hit with waves of grief while family, friends, and lawyers search for blame and restitution.
Director Kornél Mundruczó wields a camera that meanders to great effect, utilizing slow, extended takes and Benjamin Loeb’s dazzling cinematography to completely immerse us in Martha’s emotional upheaval. Mundruczó teams again with screenwriter Kata Wéber (White God, Jupiter’s Moon) for a gentle journey toward one woman’s healing, where the clear metaphors (the bridge, Martha’s fixation on apples) and moody score (credit composer Howard Shore) ultimately land with more sincerity than force.
And what a vessel the filmmakers have in Kirby, who stakes her claim as a talent full of staggering depth. From the robotic, soul-deadening way Martha responds to condolences to her final defiance against her tone deaf mother (a blistering Ellen Burstyn), Kirby delivers every note of Martha’s arc with a humanity that is achingly real.
This is a film that delivers just what the title promises: one woman, shattered into pieces, grasping for the chance to heal in her own way, on her own terms. And even in its most uncomfortable moments, Pieces of a Woman doesn’t blink.
Sometimes, you’re just in the mood for a B movie, especially
if it’s a creature feature.
Extra points if it’s a feminist take on a misogynist’s
story.
Shadow in the Clouds co-writer Max Landis has been
accused of sexual misconduct and/or outright assault by eight different women. And
while it’s tough to stomach any ticket purchase benefitting him, the truth is
that co-writer/director Roseanne Liang’s film has stylized fun in depantsing
exactly the kind of weak, entitled, insecure crybaby that makes you think of
Max Landis.
If you’ve seen the New Zealander’s 2017 horror short Do No Harm, you’ll recognize Liang’s writing here.
The film tags along on a non-combat WWII military flight out
of New Zealand. With seconds to spare, an unexpected female flight officer
named Maude Garrett (Chloe Grace Moretz) boards the flight carrying a duffel
bag with confidential contents.
The rowdy, boorish, some would say violently sexist crew
quickly stashes Maude – sans duffel – in the gun turret until take off.
This is a brilliant move, cinematically. It creates
immediate, palpable tension because she is locked into a tiny cell dangling
from a moving airplane and dependent upon the good nature of the mainly bad
natured men above.
It also allows Moretz and Liang the opportunity to introduce
any number of terrifying elements out there in the clouds.
But mainly, it gives Moretz the chance to own the film for a while, and she does. Together filmmaker and lead slyly reveal more about Maude, ratcheting tensions and thrills as they do. Liang leans into budgetary constraints, developing a cheesy retro vibe while finding appealing ways to introduce different characters.
In many respects, the writing is the weakness. Too often
scenes devolve into obvious but inauthentic ways to further the plot. Still, a
lot tends to be forgivable in an openly, charmingly B movie.
If the style doesn’t engage you immediately, abandon all
hope. The film builds on style, repaying your attention with increasingly
insane action ending in a climax where one fight, one monster stands in for
every belittling, dangerous, violent, controlling obstacle Maude has ever
faced.
You can picture Max Landis if you like.
Shadow in the Cloud is a ludicrous, over-the-top action horror. It knows what it is and it delivers on its promises.
Nominees for the 19th annual Columbus Film Critics Association awards
(Columbus, January 3, 2021) The Columbus Film Critics Association (COFCA) is pleased to announce the nominees for its 19th annual awards. Winners will be announced on the evening of January 7th, 2021.
Founded in 2002, the Columbus Film Critics Association is comprised of film critics based in Columbus, Ohio and its surrounding areas. Its membership consists of 26 print, radio, television, and online critics. COFCA’s official website at www.cofca.org contains links to member reviews and past award winners.
The 2020 Columbus Film Critics Association awards nominees are:
Best Film
–First Cow
–Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
–Mank
–Minari
–Never Rarely Sometimes Always
–Nomadland
–Promising Young Woman
–Soul
–Sound of Metal
–The Trial of the Chicago 7
Best Director
-Lee Isaac Chung, Minari
-Emerald Fennell, Promising Young Woman
-David Fincher, Mank
-Darius Marder, Sound of Metal
-Chloé Zhao, Nomadland
Best Actor
-Riz Ahmed, Sound of Metal
-Chadwick Boseman, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
-Delroy Lindo, Da 5 Bloods
-Gary Oldman, Mank
-Steven Yeun, Minari
Best Actress
-Viola Davis, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
-Sidney Flanigan, Never Rarely Sometimes Always
-Julia Garner, The Assistant
-Frances McDormand, Nomadland
-Elisabeth Moss, Shirley
-Carey Mulligan, Promising Young Woman
Best Supporting Actor
-Sacha Baron Cohen, The Trial of the Chicago 7
-Chadwick Boseman, Da 5 Bloods
-Bill Murray, On the Rocks
-Paul Raci, Sound of Metal
-Mark Rylance, The Trial of the Chicago 7
Best Supporting Actress
-Maria Bakalova, Borat Subsequent Movie Film
-Olivia Colman, The Father
-Olivia Cooke, Sound of Metal
-Amanda Seyfried, Mank
-Youn Yuh-jung, Minari
Best Ensemble
–Da 5 Bloods
–Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
–Minari
–Promising Young Woman
–The Trial of the Chicago 7
Actor of the Year (for an exemplary body of work)
-Sacha Baron Cohen (Borat Subsequent Moviefilm and The Trial of the Chicago 7)
-Chadwick Boseman (Da 5 Bloods and Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom)
-Elisabeth Moss (The Invisible Man and Shirley)
Breakthrough Film Artist
-Radha Blank, The Forty-Year-Old Version – (for producing, directing, screenwriting, and acting)
-Emerald Fennell, Promising Young Woman – (for producing, directing, and screenwriting)
-Sidney Flanigan, Never Rarely Sometimes Always – (for acting)
-Kitty Green, The Assistant – (for producing, directing, screenwriting, and film editing)
-Eliza Hittman, Never Rarely Sometimes Always – (for directing and screenwriting)
-Alan S. Kim, Minari – (for acting)
-Darius Marder, Sound of Metal – (for directing and screenwriting)
Best Cinematography
-Christopher Blauvelt, First Cow
-Eric Messerschmidt, Mank
-Lachlan Milne, Minari
-Joshua James Richards, Nomadland
-Hoyte Van Hoytema, Tenet
Best Film Editing
-Alan Baumgarten, The Trial of the Chicago 7
-Kirk Baxter, Mank
-Robert Frazen, I’m Thinking of Ending Things
-Mikkel E.G. Nielsen, Sound of Metal
-Kelly Reichardt, First Cow
Best Adapted Screenplay
-Sarah Gubbins, Shirley
-Charlie Kaufman, I’m Thinking of Ending Things
-Kemp Powers, One Night in Miami
-Jonathan Raymond & Kelly Reichardt, First Cow
-Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
-Chloé Zhao, Nomadland
Best Original Screenplay
-Lee Isaac Chung, Minari
-Emerald Fennell, Promising Young Woman
-Darius Marder & Abraham Marder, Sound of Metal
-Andy Siara, Palm Springs
-Aaron Sorkin, The Trial of the Chicago 7
Best Score
-Alexandre Desplat, The Midnight Sky
-Ludovico Einaudi, Nomadland
-Emile Mosseri, Minari
-Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, Mank
–Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, Soul
Best Documentary
–Boys State
–Collective (Colectiv)
–Crip Camp
–Dick Johnson is Dead
–The Painter and the Thief
–Time
Best Foreign Language Film
–Bacurau
–Beanpole (Dylda)
–Martin Eden
–Minari
–The Whistlers (La Gomera)
Best Animated Film
–The Croods: A New Age
–Onward
–Over the Moon
–Soul
–Wolfwalkers
Best Overlooked Film
–The Assistant
–Bloody Nose, Empty Pockets
–Palm Springs
–Possessor
–The Vast of Night
COFCA offers its congratulations to the nominees.
Previous Best Film winners:
2002:Punch-Drunk Love
2003: Lost in Translation
2004: Million Dollar Baby
2005: A History of Violence
2006: Children of Men
2007: No Country for Old Men
2008: WALL·E
2009:Up in the Air
2010:Inception
2011: Drive
2012: Moonrise Kingdom
2013: Gravity
2014: Selma
2015: Spotlight
2016: La La Land
2017: Lady Bird
2018: If Beale Street Could Talk
2019: Parasite (Gisaengchung)
For more information about the Columbus Film Critics Association, please visit www.cofca.org or e-mail info@cofca.org.
The complete list of members and their affiliations:
And please, if you have not sought it out yet, a film that made our Best of 2019 list—Devil to Pay—is finally available. So, while we won’t add it to this year’s list, please do watch it!
In the meantime, here are our picks for the ten best horror films of 2020.
10. His House
A remarkable braiding of human tragedy, global political peril and traditional ghost story, co-writer/director Remi Weekes’s His House was one of 2020’s great surprises. Two powerful lead performances from Sope Dirisu and Lovecraft Country’s Wumni Mosaku pull you into the story of South Sudanese refugees Vol (Dirisu) and Rial (Mosaku). You ache for them as they try to find a way to fit into their new life in London—a life where so many other refugees have failed.
Tension builds quietly but steadily as the two navigate
their new community and the rules good refugees must follow, but worry for them
and their security leaps to new heights as certain horrors bring about risky
behavior. You never know whether you’re more worried that they’ll be sent back
or they’ll have to stay.
Mosaku’s stare is weightier and more powerful than anything else
you’ll encounter in this film, but it’s balanced by the vulnerability Dirisu
brings to Bol. The two deliver an urgent and profound message about guilt,
tragedy and forgiveness.
9. She Dies Tomorrow
She Dies Tomorrow is a horror film that’s one part Coherence, one part The Beach House, one part The Signal (2007, not 2014) and yet somehow entirely its own. It helps that so few people have seen any of those other movies, but the truth is that writer/director Amy Seimetz (creator of The Girlfriend Experience) is simply braiding together themes that have quietly influenced SciFi horror hybrids of late. What she does with these themes is pretty remarkable.
Her film weaves in and out of the current moment, delivering a dreamlike structure that suits its trippy premise. Amy (Kate Lyn Sheil) believes she is going to die tomorrow. She knows it. She’s sure.
She calls her friend Jane (the always amazing Jane Adams), who senses that Amy is not OK but has this obligation to go to her sister-in-law’s party…whatever, she’ll stop over on her way.
By the time Jane gets to the party, she’s also quite certain she will die tomorrow. It isn’t long before the partygoers sense their own imminent deaths; meanwhile, Amy is spreading her perception contagion elsewhere.
8. Gretel & Hansel
Sophia Lillis (IT) narrates and stars as Gretel, the center of this coming of age story—reasonable, given the change of billing suggested by the film’s title. The witch may still have a tasty meal on her mind, but this is less a cautionary tale than it is a metaphor for agency over obligation.
Alice Krige and her cheekbones strike the perfect mixture of menace and mentorship, while Sammy Leakey’s little Hansel manages to be both adorable and tiresome, as is required for the story to work.
Perkins continues to impress with his talent for visual storytelling and Galo Olivares’s cinematography heightens the film’s folkloric atmosphere.
There’s no escaping this spell. The whole affair feels like an intriguing dream.
7. The Other Lamb
The first step toward freedom is telling your own story.
Writer C.S. McMullen and director Malgorzata Szumowska tell this one really well. Between McMullen’s outrage and the macabre lyricism of Szumowska’s camera, The Other Lamb offers a dark, angry and satisfying coming-of-age tale.
Selah’s (Raffey Cassity) first period and her commune’s migration to a new and more isolated Eden offer the tale some structure. Like many a horror film, The Other Lamb occupies itself with burgeoning womanhood, the end of innocence. Unlike most others in the genre, Szumowska’s film depicts this as a time of finding your own power.
The Other Lamb does not simply suggest you question authority. It demands that you do far more than that, and do it for your own good.
6. The Lodge
Several Fiala and Veronika Franz follow up their creepy Goodnight Mommy with this “white death” horror that sees a future stepmom having a tough time getting to know the kids during a weeklong, snowbound cabin retreat. Riley Keough is riding an impressive run of performances and her work here is slippery and wonderful. As the unwanted new member in the family, she’s sympathetic but also brittle.
Jaeden Martell, a kid who has yet to deliver a less than impressive turn, is the human heartbeat at the center of the mystery in the cabin. His tenderness gives the film a quiet, pleading tragedy. Whether he’s comforting his grieving little sister or begging Grace (Keough) to come in from the snow, his performance aches and you ache with him.
There’s no denying the mounting dread the filmmakers create, and the three central performances are uniquely effective. Thanks to the actors’ commitment and the filmmakers’ skill in atmospheric horror, the movie grips you, makes you cold and uncomfortable, and ends with a memorable slap.
5. The Dark and the Wicked
Bryan Bertino is not a filmmaker to let his audience off the hook—if you’ve seen The Strangers, you know that. Like that effort, TD&TW is a slow burn with nerves fraying inside an isolated farmhouse as noises, shadows, and menacing figures lurk outside.
Bertino and cinematographer Tom Schraeder work the darkness in and around a goat farm to create a lingering, roaming dread. But where Bertino, who also writes, scores extra points is in crafting believable characters.
Too often in horror you find wildly dramatic behavior in the face of the supernatural. One character adamantly denies and defies what is clearly happening while another desperately tries to communicate with “it.” No one would do either, but this is the best way to serve the needed action to come in lesser films.
4. The Wolf of Snow Hollow
Two years ago. Thunder Road was a pretty fantastic breakout for writer/director/star Jim Cummings. A visionary character study with alternating moments of heart and hilarity, it felt like recognizable pieces molded into something bracingly original.
Now, Cummings feels it’s time to throw in some werewolves.
Cummings is officer John Marshall of the Snow Hollow sheriff’s department. John’s father (Robert Forster, in his final role) is the longtime sheriff of the small ski resort town, but Dad’s reached the age and condition where John feels he’s really the one in charge.
John’s also a recovering alcoholic with a hot temper, a bitter ex-wife and a teen daughter who doesn’t like him much. But when a young ski bunny gets slaughtered near the hot tub under a full moon, suddenly John’s got a much bigger, much bloodier problem.
At its core, The Wold of Snow Hollow is a super deluxe re-write of Thunder Road with werewolves. I call that a bloody good time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OP2m2pG6Qn4
3. Werewolf
Liberation isn’t always the good time it’s cracked up to be. In his strangely hopeful tale Werewolf, writer/director Adrian Panek offers a different image of social rebuilding.
Werewolf is beautifully shot, inside the crumbling castle, out in the woods, even in the early, jarring nonchalance of the concentration camp’s brutality. Panek hints at supernatural elements afoot, but the magic in his film is less metaphorical than that.
The film is creepy and tense. It speaks of the unspeakable – the level of evil that can only really be understood through images of Nazi horror—but it sees a path back to something unspoiled.
2. Swallow
Putting a relevant twist on the classic “horrific mother” trope, writer/director Carlo Mirabella-Davis uses the rare eating disorder pica to anchor his exploration of gender dynamics and, in particular, control.
Where Mirabella-Davis’s talent for building tension and framing scenes drive the narrative, it’s Bennett’s performance that elevates the film. Serving as executive producer as well as star, Haley Bennett transforms over the course of the film.
When things finally burst, director and star shake off the traditional storytelling, the Yellow Wallpaper or Awakening or even Safe. The filmmaker’s vision and imagery come full circle with a bold conclusion worthy of Bennett’s performance.
1. Possessor
Brandon Cronenberg’s created a gorgeous techno world, its lulling disorientation punctuated by some of the most visceral horror to make it to the screen this year. There is something admirably confident about showing your influences this brazenly.
Credit Cronenberg, too, for the forethought to cast the two leads as females (Jennifer Jason Leigh playing the remarkable Andrea Riseborough’s boss). The theme of the film, if driven by males, would have been passe and obvious. With females, though, it’s not only more relevant and vital, but more of a gut punch when the time comes to cash the check.
Possessor is a meditation on identity, sometimes very obviously so, but the underlying message takes that concept and stabs you in your still-beating heart with it.
Most of the movies we hoped to love in 2020 have been pushed to 2021, but it turns out, that may just have opened up opportunities for gems we’d have ignored otherwise. Yes, the best films of 2021 are smaller than the best films of 2019, but they are still great. Here’s the list of our favorite 25 movies from our least favorite year on record.
1.First Cow
Kelly Reichardt films tell a story, but not in the traditional
Hollywood sense. She draws you into an alien environment, unveils universal
humanity and shows you something about yourself, about us. There’s usually a
story buried in there somewhere. In this case, it’s about two outsiders in 19th
Century Oregon who find friendship.
And a cow.
The narrative lulls you with understated conversations and observations while the meticulously captured natural beauty onscreen beguiles. Within that, we see the potential of a young country through the eyes of Americans determining the dream.
2. Time
What director Garrett Bradley delivers with this documentary of a woman’s daily toil to end her husband’s prison sentence is a miracle of love, hope and superhuman perseverance. The film unfolds in a poetic, sometimes stream-of-consciousness fashion, enveloping you in the indefatigable spirit of Fox Rich. The film sings in a style that is simply transportive, carried by the voice of a true wonder woman.
Time is a stunning journey, searingly intimate with a sobering undercurrent of commonality. You wear this film like a blanket of feeling. Don’t miss the chance to wrap it around you.
3. Soul
For Soul, Pete Docter and co-writer/co-director Kemp
Powers create a deceptively simple, beautifully constructed ode to happiness.
And what a beautiful, big screen-begging journey it is. Soul looks
like no Pixar film before it, with wonderfully layered and personality-laden
animation for hero Joe’s daily life that morphs into an apt Picasso vibe for
our time spent with Joe in other worlds.
Just when you think you know where the film will leave you, it has other plans, and that’s okay. Because while the best of Pixar has always touched us with family adventures that speak to what it means to be human, Soul leaves plenty of room for our own improvisations, producing a heartfelt composition that may be Pixar’s most profound statement to date.
4. Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
In 1927 Chicago, four musicians – three vets and a brash
youngster – gather in the basement of a downtown recording studio. They tune up
and rib each other, waiting for the star vocalist to arrive.
That would be one Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, legendary “Mother of the
Blues” and one of the first blues singers to make records. And in the late
1920s, those records sold, which meant Ma didn’t waste her time in studio
basements.
That spatial divide becomes the metaphorical anchor in director George C. Wolfe and screenwriter Ruben Santiago-Hudson’s adaptation of August Wilson’s Tony Award-winning play. And thanks to the blistering adversarial performances by Chadwick Boseman and Viola Davis, the film has a show-stopping pillar on each floor.
5. Nomadland
Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland follows Fern (Frances
McDormand) on her journey in “Vanguard,” the van that serves as her new home.
Without an ounce of vanity or artifice, McDormand’s performance allows this
film to be one of resilience and promise. Given that Normadland is,
in fact, the story of a penniless Sixtysomething widow who lives in a van, that
is in itself a minor miracle.
But that’s the film—a minor miracle. Perhaps only in a year when the billion-dollar franchises were mainly held at bay could we make enough space to appreciate this vital and beautiful reimagining of the rugged American tale of individualism and freedom, which is almost always also a story of poverty.
6. Da 5 Bloods
A heist movie on the surface, Da 5 Bloods is
clearly about a great deal more than making it rich. Writer/director Spike Lee
has a lot to say about how those in power tell us what we want to hear so we
will do what they want us to do.
As commanding a presence as ever at 68, Delroy Lindo blends
vulnerability into every action, whether funny, menacing or melancholy. His
MAGA hat-wearing, self-loathing, dangerously conflicted character gives Lee’s
themes a pulse.
It should surprise no one that Lee’s latest happens to hit the exact nerve that throbs so loudly and painfully right now, given that he’s been telling this exact story in minor variations for 30+ years.
7. Mank
David Fincher’s rapid-fire dialogue is beautifully layered and
lyrically precise, more like the final draft of a script than authentic
conversations, which only reinforces the film’s commitment to honoring the
power of writing.
Gary Oldman expertly sells Herman Mankiewicz’s truth-to-power
rebellion as a sly reaction to his own feelings of powerlessness. His charm as
a “court jester” belies a growing angst about America’s power structure that
Orson Welles (Tom Burke) is eager to illustrate.
And though much of Mank‘s power is verbal (just try to catch a breath during Oldman’s drunken Don Quixote speech), Fincher crafts a luscious visual landscape. Buoyed by Erik Messerschmidt’s gorgeous B&W cinematography, Fincher recreates the era with sharp period detail and tips his hat to Welles with CitizenKane-esque uses of shadow, forced perspective and one falling glass of booze.
8. Never Rarely Sometimes Always
With her 2013 debut It Felt Like Love, Eliza
Hittman brought a refreshing honesty to the teen drama. At its core, Never
Rarely Sometimes Always could be seen as Hittman’s kindred sequel to
her first feature, as two friends (Talia Ryder and a stunning Sidney Flanagan)
navigate a cold, sometimes cruel world that lies just beyond the hopeful
romanticism of first love.
NRSA shows
Hittman in full command of her blunt truth-telling, demanding we accept this
reality of women fighting to control their own bodies amid constant waves of
marginalization.
Just three films in, Hittman has established herself as a filmmaker of few words, intimate details and searing perspective. NRSW is a sensitive portrayal of female friendship and courage, equal parts understated and confrontational as it speaks truths that remain commonly ignored.
9. One Night in Miami
Regina King, who already has an acting Oscar, jumps into the
race for Best Director with a wise and wonderful adaptation of Kemp Powers’s
stage play. Powered by a bold and vital script from Powers himself, King
invites us into a Miami hotel room in 1963, on the night a young Cassius Clay
upset Sonny Liston for the Heavyweight title.
Clay, NFL legend Jim Brown and soul sensation Sam Cooke think
it’s party time, but Clay’s mentor Malcom X uses the occasion to engage the
room in a frank discussion about the next steps in the civil rights movement,
and about each man’s role in the struggle.
The four leads – especially Aldis Hodge as Brown and Leslie Odom, Jr as Cooke – are fantastic, propelling a film that finds its profundity through a refusal to settle for easy answers. Though existing mainly inside one room, One Night in Miami is in a constant state of motion. The characters challenge each other, and the film challenges us with a beautiful dignity that shines in the face of bigotry.
10. Shirley
Director Josephine Decker’s languid style seduces you, keeps you
from pulling away from her films’ underlying tensions, darkness, sickness. She
specializes in that headspace that mixes the story as it is and the story as
it’s told, which makes her a fitting guide for Susan Scarf Merrell’s
fictionalized account of this slice of Shirley Jackson’s life.
Decker manipulates the pacing, melancholy and sensuality of her
tale beautifully, drawing a stirring performance from Young. But my god, what
she gets from Elisabeth Moss and Michael Stuhlbarg.
The result is dark and unseemly, appropriately angry and gorgeously told—a fitting tribute to the titular author.
11. Promising Young Woman
In a riotous and incredibly assured feature debut as writer and
director, Emerald Fennell twists both knife and expectations in a rape-revenge
riff that’s relevant, smart and surprisingly hilarious—if you like your humor
dark.
A pessimism runs through Fennell’s film that’s hard to ignore
and even harder to criticize. But the film is true to the character of Cassie—a
woman who’s profoundly dark and unforgiving but not wrong.
Fennell’s film is not a nuanced drama concerning rape culture. It’s not telling us anything we don’t honestly know already. It’s not a scalpel to the brain, it’s a sledgehammer to the testicles.
12. Collective
On October 30, 2015, a massive fire broke out at the Colectiv
Club in Bucharest, Romania. Twenty-seven people died in the initial blaze while
another 180 were injured. In the days and weeks following the fire, dozens of
survivors died in the hospital of preventable infections. Over the next year,
journalist Catalin Tolontan would uncover a trail of corruption that had all
but hobbled the country’s health care system.
There’s a matter-of-factness to this film that is methodical and
precise. This clinically observational approach feels more authentic. For a
film so steeped in the hunt for the truth, Alexander Nanau’s fly-on-the-wall
perspective just seems right.
Collective isn’t
a flashy film – it doesn’t want to be. What it is, though, is a gripping look
at the good that can come from honest, professional investigative
journalism.
*Originally reviewed by Brandon Thomas.
13. The Trial of the Chicago 7
Chicago 7 artfully
and urgently recreates the scene of the federal court hearing against eight
defendants alleged to have conspired to incite the infamous riot at the 1968
Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Writer/director Aaron Sorkin’s film rings with historical significance as well as disheartening immediacy. An alarmingly relevant look at the power of due process, free speech, and justice, Chicago 7 is catapulted by more than the self-righteousness that sometimes weights down Sorkin’s writing. This is outrage, even anger, as well as an urgent optimism about the possibilities in human nature and democracy.
14. News of the World
GD National Treasure TomHanks is Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd, a
Civil War veteran who travels from town to town reading news stories to weary
people looking for a distraction. In his travels he comes across a 10-year-old
girl (Helena Zengel, wonderful) who’d been raised by Kiowa people and is now
being returned against her will to her natural aunt and uncle.
Reluctantly, Captain Kidd agrees to transport her 200 miles
across dangerous territory. Not because he wants to or because he will benefit
in any way from it. In fact, he will probably die, and she with him.
Westerns lend themselves to poetry of a sort. News of the World offers a simple hero’s journey, understated by director Paul Greengrass’s influence and Hanks’s natural abilities.
15. I’m Thinking of Ending Things
The inimitable Charlie Kaufman adapts Iain Reid’s wildly
circuitous novel about delusion, self-hatred and self-inflicted loneliness. Who
better?
Jessie Buckley gives an award-worthy performance as a woman
visiting her boyfriend’s family for the first time. Unbeknownst to him, she’s
thinking of ending things.
Buckley’s effortlessly adaptable performance in an endlessly puzzling narrative ensures the movie never loses focus. She’s surrounded by sharp turns from Jesse Plemons, Toni Collette and David Thewlis in a darkly funny near-horror of existential dread.
16. The Devil All the Time
The constant fight to overcome the worst in ourselves lies at
the heart of The Devil All the Time, director Antonio Campos’s
darkly riveting realization of Donald Ray Pollock’s best-selling novel.
Redemption is a slippery aim in and around Knockemstiff, Ohio,
and grace is even harder to come by. With a heavier hand, this film would have
been a savage beating or a backwoods horror of the most grotesque kind.
Campos and his formidable ensemble (Tom Holland, Robert Pattinson, Riley Keough, Bill Skarsgard, Jason Clark and More) deliver Pollock’s tale with enough understatement and integrity to cut deeply, unnerving your soul and leaving a well-earned scar.
17. Sound of Metal
Riz Ahmed is Ruben, a heavy metal drummer suddenly and
irrevocably going deaf. It’s a performance that brings this man to life with so
many layers and such nuance and power it requires your attention.
Even before you begin to appreciate Ahmed’s remarkable
performance, you’ll likely notice writer/director Darius Marder’s choices when
it comes to what he allows you to hear.
The sound design evokes the sensation of being in Ruben’s head. What he can’t really hear, you can’t, either. Marder mimics the humming, echoing, and blurring together of sounds to create an immersive sensation that never feels like a gimmick. It transports you, as does Ahmed’s performance, to a place you’ve probably never been.
18. Possessor
Possessor is
a meditation on identity, sometimes very obviously so, but the underlying
message takes that concept and stabs you in your still-beating heart with it.
Brandon Cronenberg’s created a gorgeous techno world, its
lulling disorientation punctuated by some of the most visceral horror to make
it to the screen this year.
Credit Cronenberg, too, for the forethought to cast the two leads as females (Jennifer Jason Leigh playing boss to a remarkable Andrea Riseborough). The theme of the film, if driven by males, would have been passe and obvious. With females, though, it’s not only more relevant and vital, but more of a gut punch when the time comes to cash the check.
19. Swallow
Putting a relevant twist on the classic “horrific mother” trope,
writer/director Carlo Mirabella-Davis uses the rare eating disorder pica to
anchor his exploration of gender dynamics and, in particular, control.
Where Mirabella-Davis’s talent for building tension and framing
scenes drive the narrative, it’s Haley Bennett’s performance that elevates the
film. Serving as executive producer as well as star, Bennett’s character
transformation is startlingly true.
When things finally burst, director and star shake off the traditional storytelling of the Yellow Wallpaper or Awakening or even Safe. The filmmaker’s vision and imagery come full circle with a bold conclusion worthy of Bennett’s performance.
20. Senior Love Triangle
Co-writer/director Kelly Blatz creates a minor cinematic miracle
with his feature debut, Senior Love Triangle.
Inspired by co-writer Isadora Kosofsky’s remarkable longterm photo essay of the same name,
the film delivers a candid look into the intimate relationship among three
elderly characters: William (Tom Bower), Adina (Anne Gee Byrd) and Jeanie
(Marlyn Mason).
The film is equal parts charming, frustrating and heartbreaking. More importantly, it takes its characters seriously. In an era where veteran actors entertain us via “those crazy old people!” vehicles (watching Diane Keaton become a cheerleader in Poms sapped my will to live), Senior Love Triangle feels gloriously anarchic. The magic of Blatz’s film is that it offers a character study of the sort we simply never see.
21. Capital in the 21st Century
New Zealand filmmaker Justin Pemberton has assembled an array of
scholars and historians (including Thomas Piketty, author of the source book)
for a 103-minute presentation that is so informative, measured and concise it
should earn you college credits.
There are graphs, illustrations and pop culture snippets from
film and television that Pemberton weaves throughout the lecture material to
attract the eye and boost the film’s overall entertainment value. But make no
mistake, his mission is about breaking down the 400 years of history that
explain the social and economic precipice we’re teetering on right now.
And while some of the lessons are not new (i.e. we need a strong middle class) the context here is so vivid and relevant many observations may land with an echo of “eureka!” inside your head.
22. Wolfwalkers
One of the brightest spots in a relatively weak year for
animated films, Wolfwalkers spins another beautiful Irish folk
yarn from the team behind The Secret of Kells and Song
of the Sea.
Robyn, a young English girl whose father is tasked with wiping
out wolves from an Irish village, longs to be a hunter herself. Things change
quickly when Robyn meets up with Mebh, a young firebrand who belongs to a
legendary group that transforms into wolves by falling asleep.
It’s a film bursting with dazzling animation and captivating lore, one full of warm silliness, gentle danger, wonderful voice work and a timeless, touching finale perfect for multiple family movie nights.
23. The Wolf of Snow Hollow
Writer/director/star JimCummings is officer John
Marshall of the Snow Hollow sheriff’s department. John’s father (Robert
Forster, in his final role) is the longtime sheriff of the small ski resort
town, but Dad’s reached the age and condition where John feels he’s really the
one in charge.
John’s also a recovering alcoholic with a hot temper, a bitter
ex-wife and a teen daughter who doesn’t like him much. But when a young ski
bunny gets slaughtered near the hot tub under a full moon, suddenly John’s got
a much bigger, much bloodier problem.
At its core, The Wolf of Snow Hollow is a super deluxe re-write of Cummings’s heartbreaking and hilarious 2018 character study Thunder Road with werewolves. We call that a bloody good time.
24. Boys State
Imagine what you get when you bring over a thousand 17-year-old
boys together to play politics.
Fight Club with
zits?
You get Boys State, an annual exercise into the
“civil discourse” of state government. An American Legion program since 1935,
Boys State (and its corresponding project for girls through the Legion
Auxiliary) gives selected high school juniors the chance to build a
representative government from the ground up.
For directors Amanda McBaine and Jesse Moss, the result is an endlessly fascinating and thoroughly entertaining mixture of shock and awe.
25. The Vast of Night
Opening with vintage Rod Serling welcoming us to “Paradox
Theatre,” director Andrew Patterson unveils an incredibly polished debut, one
that’s full of meticulous craftsmanship, effective pacing and wonderfully
engaging storytelling.
Peterson’s commitment to production and sound design results in
a totally immersive experience. The period details – from costumes to recording
equipment – are more than just historically correct. Paired with the quick,
comfortably lived-in dialog from screenwriters James Montague and Craig W.
Sanger, they create a throwback setting that charms without the tell of undue
effort.
Peterson also flexes confidently behind the camera, moving from extended tracks to slow pans to quiet stills, all in service of the film’s wondrous tone. With Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz leading a stellar ensemble, what could have been a generic sci-fi time filler becomes a smart parable with an eerie grip.
Let’s be honest, no one saw much of anything movie-wise this year. The highest grossing cinematic releases made so little they would have been considered catastrophic bombs in any other year, and streaming numbers confirmed that we were having a hard time zeroing in on new releases.
Still, there were some exceptional films that simply disappeared without even a hello. These are movies that broke new ground, broke our hearts, explored new genre hybrids, reimagined familiar tales, startled our senses, and otherwise just impressed the hell out of us. We really want to introduce you to these guys, which we list in alphabetical order because they deserve equal attention (and we argued too much about the ranking).
Black Bear
Available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Google Play and Vudu.
As slippery as it is inviting, Lawrence Michael Levine’s Black Bear is an intoxicating trip through the inspirations and indulgences that take root in creative minds. It feels intensely personal, and yet – once Levine delivers his midstream shape shift – malleable enough to bend to myriad perspectives and interpretations. Black Bear isn’t a comedy – except when it’s funny. It’s also dramatic and slightly horrific, depending on your viewpoint.
Most of all, it’s emotional, propelled by career high performances from Christopher Abbott, Sarah Gadon, and Aubrey Plaza. The glee each performer takes in upending character expectations is evident, with Plaza seamlessly moving from a cool, casual customer to the emotionally frayed flashpoint of a volatile triangle.
Bloody Nose, Empty Pockets
Available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Google Play and Vudu.
Similar to the hybrid reality it creates, Bloody Nose, Empty Pockets is an oddly compelling cocktail. It’s like a foul odor you step back from quickly, then find perversely comforting once you’ve had time to soak in it.
Sitting unceremoniously at the edge of Las Vegas, the bar The Roaring Twenties is down to its final day. Directors Bill Ross IV and Turner Ross drop us off before noon, when grizzled regular Michael (Michael Martin, perfect) is cleaning up in the bathroom and daytime bartender Mark is hanging up some cheap decorations for the farewell party.
As drinks are poured, ashtrays are emptied and daytime TV gives way to nighttime jukebox singalongs, we get to know the parade of souls that have come to call this dive bar home.What The Florida Project was to Disney World, Bloody Nose is to Lost Wages, eschewing tourist playgrounds for the world-weariness of an existence in exile, and of outsiders no longer bothering to look in.
Capone
Available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Google Play and Vudu.
You’ve seen Capone on film: films about him, films containing him, films about gangsters reminiscent of him. A lot of these movies have been great – some of them classic. But you have never seen Alphonse Capone the way writer/director Josh Trank sees him.
The film focuses on the final year of the infamous mobster’s life—the adult diapers and dementia year. Tom Hardy finds the faulty humanity in this character. His depiction of Capone’s confusion is unerringly human, and in his hands Trank’s macabre humor never feels like mockery.
Trank’s loose narrative is less concerned with the scheming, criss-crossing and backstabbing from underlings trying to find the money than it is with Capone’s deterioration, and that’s what makes this film so gloriously odd.
No doubt some viewers will be disappointed—those who tuned in to see Hardy play a badass at the top of his game. My guess is the reason one of the finest actors working today was drawn to Capone was the opportunity to do something just this unexpected.
The Devil to Pay
Available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Google Play and Vudu.
“They want nothing from you and God help you if you try to interfere.” – 2010 census worker.Welcome to The Devil to Pay, Lane and Ruckus Skye’s lyrical backwoods epic, grounded in a lived-in world most of us never knew existed.
One of the most tightly written thrillers in recent memory, The Devil to Pay peoples those hills with true characters, not a forgettable villain or cliched rube among them. The sense of danger is palpable and Danielle Deadwyler’s commitment to communicating her character’s low-key tenacity is a thing of beauty.
The Devil to Pay remains true to these fascinating souls, reveling in the well-worn but idiosyncratic nature of their individual relationships—a tone matched by sly performances across the board. And just when you think you’ve settled into a scene or a relationship, the film shocks you with a turn of events that is equal parts surprising and inevitable.
Dirty God
Available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Google Play and Vudu.
There is an unerring authenticity about the slice of life that is Dirty God. Co-writer/director Sacha Polak sugar coats nothing, wallows nowhere, and dares you to judge Jade (a breathtaking Vicky Knight), regardless of her behavior.
The approach is provocative because Jade’s torment is almost inconceivable. Few of us could honestly imagine it. Polak doesn’t soft pedal, and she doesn’t let the viewer off the hook with a pitiable or noble character.
Dirty God—a film about self-image and the unfair reality of limitations—makes other “coming of age” style films feel like soft drink ads.
Faith Ba$ed
Available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Google Play and Vudu.
Luke and Tanner are big movie fans, and when they discover just how profitable the faith-based market is, a plan emerges. If they can make their own “Jesus” film and sell it to ChristFlix pictures, there should be more than enough profit to stuff their pockets and help out the local Elevate Church where Luke’s father (Lance Reddick) is the pastor.
Director Vincent Masciale, helming his second feature, brings an irresistibly absurdist vibe to the shenanigans that practically begs you not to overthink any of it. Good-natured fun is certainly had at the expense of the faith-based industry. But the delightful surprise is what else Luke Barnett’s script gives us: a church community that is welcoming to all, one where people missing something in their lives can and do find real fulfillment.
And the film gives us plenty of laughs, memorable quotes and overall nuttiness at a time when we could use it.
Get Duked!
Available on Amazon Prime.
What does one homeschooled teen and three high school ne’er do wells in trouble for blowing up a lavatory have in common? Impending doom.
The four boys are making the Duke of Edinburgh Award trek across the Scottish Highlands. Dean (Rian Gordon), his daft mate Duncan (Lewis Gribben), and the future of hip-hop DJ Beatroot (Viraj Juneja) have no choice after that lav incident, while Ian (Samuel Bottomley) just earnestly wants to complete the challenge and include the award on his college applications.
But it’s a long hike and a lot could go wrong, especially now that Dean’s used the map to roll a joint. Will Ian ever be able to check off the requirements of teamwork, foraging and orienteering?
The horror is light, the comedy raucous, the fun explosive. Writer/director Ninian Doff’s Get Duked! may not change you, but it will brighten your mood.
I Used to Go Here
Available on HBO Max, YouTube, Google Play, Vudu, Amazon Prime and Hulu.
Thirtysomething Kate (Community‘s Gillian Jacobs, fantastic) is bumming over a breakup and the cancellation of the promo tour for her very first book. A phone call from her old professor David (Jemaine Clement) perks Kate right up.
Would she come back to Illinois U. as a “Distinguished Alumni” and do a reading from her novel? She would.
Even at its nuttiest, I Used to Go Here is a deceptively smart look at the complexities of accepting adulthood. It’s Noah Baumbach’s While We’re Young with a lighter touch, a film that might make the “your future starts now” message on the back on Kate’s t-shirt ring true for both filmmaker and star.
The Nest
Available on YouTube, Google Play, Vudu and Amazon Prime.
If you saw the quietly unnerving Martha Marcy May Marlene nine years ago and have had the name Sean Durkin filed away since then, you’re not alone. Good news for all of us then, as Durkin finally returns as writer and director with The Nest, another precisely crafted examination of family dynamics.
This time, though, it’s a nuclear family led by a strong Jude Law and a remarkable Carrie Coon, one that’s slowly imploding before our eyes.
Though it lacks the sinister edge of MMMM, Durkin’s storytelling here still carries a chill, assembling precise details with a subtlety that often betrays a focused narrative. With a microscope trained on the rot of wealth and the minutiae of finding a work/life balance, Durkin gives his stellar leads plenty of room to dig indelible, often heartbreaking layers.
Never Rarely Sometimes Always
Available on HBO Max, YouTube, Google Play, Vudu, Amazon Prime and Hulu.
With her 2013 debut It Felt Like Love, Eliza Hittman brought a refreshing honesty to the teen drama. At its core, Never Rarely Sometimes Always could be seen as Hittman’s kindred sequel to her first feature, as two friends (Talia Ryder and a stunning Sidney Flanagan) navigate a cold, sometimes cruel world that lies just beyond the hopeful romanticism of first love.
NRSA shows Hittman in full command of her blunt truth-telling, demanding we accept this reality of women fighting to control their own bodies amid constant waves of marginalization.
Just three films in, Hittman has established herself as a filmmaker of few words, intimate details and searing perspective. NRSW is a sensitive portrayal of female friendship and courage, equal parts understated and confrontational as it speaks truths that remain commonly ignored.
The Other Lamb
Available on YouTube, Google Play, Vudu, Amazon Prime and Hulu.
The first step toward freedom is telling your own story.Writer C.S. McMullen and director Malgorzata Szumowska tell this one really well. Between McMullen’s outrage and the macabre lyricism of Szumowska’s camera, The Other Lamb offers a dark, angry and satisfying coming-of-age tale.
Selah’s (Raffey Cassity) first period and her commune’s migration to a new and more isolated Eden offer the tale some structure. Like many a horror film, The Other Lamb occupies itself with burgeoning womanhood, the end of innocence. Unlike most others in the genre, Szumowska’s film depicts this as a time of finding your own power.
The Other Lamb does not simply suggest you question authority. It demands that you do far more than that, and do it for your own good.
The Painted Bird
Available on YouTube, Google Play, Vudu and Hulu.
If you paint the wings of a sparrow (or stitch a star to his jacket) the rest of the flock will no longer recognize him. The other birds will swarm and peck him until he plummets back to the earth. This is just one of the horrific lessons a young boy learns as he desperately searches for anywhere or anyone safe in war-torn Eastern Europe.
What follows is a brutal parade of the worst humanity has to offer. Domestic abuse, graphic violence, multiple instances of animal abuse and death, rape, child abuse and rape, and more. Then the war crimes start around hour three.
The Painted Bird is a test of endurance. It’s also a beautifully shot, well performed, and incredibly moving piece of cinema. You simply have to be willing to go where it wants to take you. And all of those places are dark and darker.
Senior Love Triangle
Available on YouTube, Google Play, Vudu and Amazon Prime.
Co-writer/director Kelly Blatz creates a minor cinematic miracle with his feature debut, Senior Love Triangle.
Inspired by co-writer Isadora Kosofsky’s remarkable longterm photo essay of the same name, the film delivers a candid look into the intimate relationship among three elderly characters: William (Tom Bower), Adina (Anne Gee Byrd) and Jeanie (Marlyn Mason).
The film is equal parts charming, frustrating and heartbreaking. More importantly, it takes its characters seriously. In an era where veteran actors entertain us via “those crazy old people!” vehicles, Senior Love Triangle feels gloriously anarchic. The magic of Blatz’s film is that it offers a character study of the sort we simply never see.
Shadow of Violence (Calm with Horses)
Available on YouTube, Google Play, Vudu and Amazon Prime.
Nick Rowland’s crime drama follows Douglas “Arm” Armstrong (Cosmo Jarvis). Once a promising Irish boxing champion, Arm left the gloves behind for the reliable income and familiar treatment offered by the Devers crime family. As their chief enforcer, Arm is feared, which often hampers his relationship with his ex Ursula (Naimh Algar) and their autistic son Jack.
The delicate co-existence of Arm’s two worlds is a constant struggle, but when family patriarch Paudi Devers (Ned Dennehy) finally orders Arm to kill, it becomes clear there is room for only one set of loyalties.
She Dies Tomorrow
Available on YouTube, Hulu, Google Play, Vudu and Amazon Prime.
With She Dies Tomorrow, writer/director Amy Seimetz (creator of The Girlfriend Experience) is simply braiding together themes that have quietly influenced SciFi horror hybrids of late. What she does with these themes is pretty remarkable.Amy (Kate Lyn Sheil) believes she is going to die tomorrow. She knows it. She’s sure.
She calls her friend Jane (the always amazing Jane Adams), who senses that Amy is not OK but has this obligation to go to her sister-in-law’s party…whatever, she’ll stop over on her way. By the time Jane gets to the party, she’s also quite certain she will die tomorrow. It isn’t long before the partygoers sense their own imminent deaths; meanwhile, Amy is spreading her perception contagion elsewhere.
A remarkable film unfurls from this simple but powerful idea.
True History of the Kelly Gang
Available on YouTube, Vudu and Amazon Prime.
Planting its flag unapologetically at the corner of accuracy and myth, The True History of the Kelly Gang reintroduces a legendary 1870s folk hero through consistently bold and compelling strokes.
Director Justin Kurzel and screenwriter Shaun Grant – the duo behind the true crime shocker The Snowtown Murders nine years ago – go bigger this time, trading spare intimacy for a tableau of grand visual and narrative ideas.
With a direct nod to the moment when “the myth is more profitable than the man,” Kurzel spins an irresistible yarn that manages to balance the worship of its hero (George MacKay) with some condemnation for his sins.
And as the road to Kelly’s guns-blazing capture unfurls, the film incorporates elements of both a tense crime thriller and a Nightingale-esqe reminder of savage colonialism.
The Vast of Night
Available on Amazon Prime.
Opening with vintage Rod Serling welcoming us to “Paradox Theatre,” director Andrew Patterson unveils an incredibly polished debut, one that’s full of meticulous craftsmanship, effective pacing and wonderfully engaging storytelling.
Peterson’s commitment to production and sound design results in a totally immersive experience. The period details – from costumes to recording equipment – are more than just historically correct. Paired with the rapid-fire, comfortably lived-in dialog from screenwriters James Montague and Craig W. Sanger, they create a throwback setting that charms without the tell of undue effort.
Peterson also flexes confidently behind the camera, moving from extended tracks to slow pans to quiet stills, all in service of the film’s wondrous tone. With Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz leading a stellar ensemble, what could have been a generic sci-fi time filler becomes a smart parable with an eerie grip.
Werewolf (Wilkolak)
Available on Amazon Prime.
Liberation isn’t always the good time it’s cracked up to be. In his strangely hopeful tale Werewolf, writer/director Adrian Panek offers a different image of social rebuilding.
Werewolf is beautifully shot, inside the crumbling castle, out in the woods, even in the early, jarring nonchalance of the concentration camp’s brutality. Panek hints at supernatural elements afoot, but the magic in his film is less metaphorical than that. The film is creepy and tense. It speaks of the unspeakable – the level of evil that can only really be understood through images of Nazi horror—but it sees a path back to something unspoiled.
Why Don’t You Just Die!
Available on YouTube, Google Play and Amazon Prime.
Given that 75% of writer/director Kirill Sokolov’s Why Don’t You Just Die! takes place in a single apartment—one room of that apartment, really—you might be surprised to learn that it’s an action film.
It’s pretty heavy on the action, actually, amplified by inspired framing, kinetic cinematography, sometimes hilarious but always eye-popping choreography, and blood.
Just a shit ton of blood.
This movie is a hoot!
With a spare script, visual wonder and energy to burn, Why Don’t You Just Die! promises to snatch your attention like a duffle bag of cash and hang on until exactly enough blood is spilled.
That’s a lot.
Yes, God, Yes
Available on Netflix, YouTube, Google Play, Vudu and Amazon Prime.
Natalia Dyer (Stranger Things) is Alice, a Catholic high school junior who has done absolutely nothing (regardless of one persistent rumor), but still thinks she may be a budding pervert hurtling toward eternal damnation.
It seems a lot of people may harbor that same suspicion of Alice.
Dyer is wonderfully expressive, especially in her most quiet moments. Her understated comedic energy belies a gawky sweetness that makes Alice easy to root for. Writer/director Karen Maine takes full advantage with a raunchy sex comedy that manages never to lose its sweet disposition.