Review: Parasite

Income inequality has seldom been funnier than in Parasite, a scathing satire-farce-tragedy-horror from South Korea’s Bong Joon-ho (Snowpiercer, The Host) in which a family of scrappy strivers weasel their way into the employ of a rich family and find out how the 1 percent lives. Turns out there’s plenty of misery to go around, it’s […]

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Review: Primal

The one advantage of Nicolas Cage starring in approximately 87 straight-to-video movies a year for the past decade is that he sometimes adds a bit of unique flavor to rote thrillers and action movies that would otherwise be entirely forgotten. Cage doesn’t bring much to the table in Primal, though, playing a military veteran who […]

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Review: Last Christmas

Not all Christmas movies need to be great art. The Hallmark Channel, Lifetime and even Netflix have proven that for every The Bishop’s Wife or It’s a Wonderful Life, there’s also a place for improbable romantic cheese involving holiday spirit and a strategically placed sprig of mistletoe. Sometimes, you just need something sweet. The Paul […]

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Review: The Irishman

In a way, The Irishman speaks to the odd crossroads where we find ourselves in the midst of the streaming wars. It’s been said, and accurately, that one of Netflix’s strengths is the ability to greenlight the kind of content that traditional film studios usually don’t. It’s likely that most studios relying on theatrical release […]

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Review: Harriet

Kasi Lemmons’ Harriet is a biopic about abolitionist icon Harriet Tubman that feels as if it were made not in 2019 but the 1990s. It’s part of an old-school subset of movies based on true events that work more as history lessons than as cinema. Think, for example, of Apollo 13 (1995) or Amistad (1997) […]

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Review: The Twentieth Century

Winnipeg, Canada, has produced more than its share of strange and singular filmmakers. Guy Maddin is likely the most well-known, but Manitoba’s capital has also issued forth George Toles (Maddin’s frequent screenwriter), John Paizs (writer/director/star of the unclassifiable “Colour Crime Movie” Crime Wave), the Astron-6 film collective (makers of Manborg and The Editor), and Nia […]

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Review: Countdown

In Countdown, the mildly stupid teen horror flick about a phone app that tells you how long you have to live, it’s not the app that kills you. The app doesn’t have any control over your lifespan, either, which is to say, the act of asking has no effect on the answer. The app is […]

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Amazing Colors to Wear This Fall

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Review: Greener Grass

Greener Grass is an absurdist suburban satire written and directed by Upright Citizens Brigade alumnae Jocelyn DeBoer and Dawn Luebbe, populated with like-minded sketch-and-improv workhorses (including SNL’s Beck Bennett), everyone clearly having a good time doing their weird things. It’s set in a sunny, artificial, candy-colored world with manicured lawns and interchangeable husbands (I mean […]

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