Fresh Kills is a uniquely compelling piece of work in the pantheon of gangster movies, grounded by powerful performances and a stellar directorial debut.
While Minted presents intrigue in both the product and the artists behind them, it struggles to become a cohesive unity of art and information.
A cathartically devastating film, Our Son reaches deep into the wells of emotion.
In our latest review from the Tribeca Film Festival, One Night with Adela may be a bumpy ride, but it’s a wild one.
The Line is a well-oiled stress machine with its depiction of this pervasive, casually cruel facet of college life.
Common Ground is deeply impactful, becoming the vital eye opening documentary it needs to be.
Making a good double feature, Payton McCarty-Simas reviews He Went That Way and Dead Girls Dancing!
Fantastical yet relatable, Bucky Fucking Dent is a moving debut by David Duchovny.
From Tribeca Film Festival Payton McCarty-Simas pairs two films, one an ode to midnight movies past, with another paean to movie obsessives.
There’s lots of potential in Taylor Mac’s 24-Decade History of Popular Music, but only Taylor Mac fully lives up to it.
Sadly, the film’s attempts to generate tone and intrigue can’t overcome the obstacles of a weak, confusing script.
Kristy Strouse delivers her second report from Tribeca Film Festival 2023!
In her first report from Tribeca Film Festival 2023, Kristy Strouse reviews Laroy, Chasing Chasing Amy & The Graduates!
With the buzz surrounding the hype of the upcoming Oppenheimer, the lackluster representation of Richland weighs heavy.
What results is an engrossing, often painful, always warm portrait of the challenges of wanting to make art in a world hostile to the prospect.