2010
For this Horrific Inquiry we take a look at 2010’s vampiric Let Me In.
Sleeping With Other People aptly captures humor while offering a generous dose of heartfelt moments.
While the Boston movie itself seems to have gone the way of the Western, the appeal of its core themes, and its sensibility seems to remain.
For this Horrific Inquiry, we take a look at the 2010 horror starring Ryan Reynolds: Buried.
Queerly Ever After #60 focuses on Baldvin Zophoníasson’s Icelandic film Jitters, a teen drama filled with first crushes and tragic events.
J.C. Calciano’s Is It Just Me? is a gay romantic-comedy of chat rooms, miscommunication and false identity.
Gavin Michael Booth faultlessly achieves the split-screen/single-take technique, while also exploring the matter of suicide with unadorned honesty.
One of the more poetic documentaries, I Wish I Knew is an ode to the impact one city has had, across so many decades, on so many lives.
What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire is a showcase for filmmaker Roberto Minervini and a telling portrait of poverty in New Orleans.
While it has the right foundation to create a raw and emotional story that leaves you with something to ponder Maine will leave you unfulfilled and possibly apathetic.
A Fine Wife is an important film and a conversation starter, giving us a raw inside look at mental illness from the point of view of a loving mate.
Season two of Alone Together captures the realism and humor of its first season, while also developing its characters and their relationship.
Abundant Acreage Available is a simple package of meditation about life and death you will be thinking about long after the film has ended.
Although filled with flaws, this charming mini-sequel, Red Nose Day Actually is hard to criticise due to its good, charitable intentions.
Lacking substance or exploration of themes, The Bad Batch is a pointless post-apocalyptic, psychedelic trip to nowhere-land.