Classic Corner: To Catch a Thief

“A lightweight story.” That was what Hitchcock called his 1955 romantic thriller: “It wasn’t meant to be taken seriously.” In his expansive chat with Francois Truffaut for the book Hitchcock/Truffaut, the Master of Suspense is more than modest about To Catch A Thief, fresh out on Blu-ray from Paramount Presents (and streaming on Amazon Prime). […]

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“The Imprisonment of Being a Girl”: On the Emotive Legacy of Sofia Coppola’s The Virgin Suicides

Sofia Coppola’s career is nearly universally concerned with the unspoken loneliness of womanhood, and her directorial debut, The Virgin Suicides, often feels like a partially grasped memory or a half-forgotten dream. Her 1999 adaptation of Jeffrey Eugenides’s 1993 novel is hazy and sun-kissed, with imaginative cinematic flourishes that transform the film’s central sisters into more […]

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Watch This: Selah and the Spades

It shouldn’t be too surprising at this point that streaming platforms make pretty good career launching pads. Just last week, for example, this column covered the filmmaking debut of Alan Yang, who rose to prominence working on shows for Netflix and Amazon. The distribution system may not be perfect (all those promising new releases can […]

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Adventures in Home Video: Rowdy Reporters

I have a VHS problem. They are my Chapstick: bought frequently, replaced before sufficient use, and lost from my pockets as collateral damage when I retrieve change overzealously. Adventures in Home Video is an attempt to subsidize that problem and justify its consuming ruin by digging into three loosely connected, barely discussed VHS tapes that […]

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Review: The Quarry

Desperate men will do desperate things. That may as well be the tagline of director Scott Teems’ latest, The Quarry. Based on the Damon Galgut novel of the same name, the sun-bleached neo-noir follows a nameless man as he hurls himself from one desperate measure to the next, paying no care to those he brings […]

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American Psycho at 20 and the Idolization of Patrick Bateman

When Mary Harron’s American Psycho hit theaters twenty years ago, it sent shockwaves through mainstream cinema. It was daring, intelligent, and bolstered by a chillingly charismatic leading performance from Christian Bale as the malevolent Patrick Bateman. But like many films of its ilk, this satirical piece with a fairly clear political message is  puzzlingly taken […]

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Watch This: Tigertail

Tigertail is the feature directorial debut of Alan Yang, who until now has been known more for his visually adventurous work on streaming series like Master of None and Forever. Master of None, in particular, often showed a flair for the cinematic, and portrayed nuanced stories about the immigrant experience (Yang co-wrote several of the […]

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Review: Corona Zombies

Everyone responds to trauma differently. For some, joking about terrible events is the only way to cope, even if those jokes are morbid. For others, it’s about creating something new, using difficult circumstances as the springboard for artistic expression. The most generous possible reading of Corona Zombies, a new “movie” from schlock titan Charles Band […]

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