Vanessa Kirby
Napoleon feels a lot like its titular character: loudly ambitious to a fault, and it can’t make up its mind on what to be.
Dead Reckoning Part One is a vigorous dose of action filmmaking at its finest.
The film takes a personal look at Napoleon Bonaparte’s origins, and his swift, ruthless climb to emperor.
Peter has his busy life with new partner Emma and their baby is thrown into disarray when his ex-wife Kate turns up with their teenage son, Nicholas.
A writer loses her memory. Adrift in NYC, she connects with a group of teenagers – in conversations both real and imagined – and searches for a way home.
In the American East Coast frontier, two neighboring couples battle hardship and isolation, challenging them both physically and psychologically.
Pieces of A Woman is remarkable – it’s either the final great film of 2020 or the first masterwork of 2021.
After the losing her baby, a woman embarks on an emotional journey while navigating her grief while working through fractious relationships.
Pieces of a is nevertheless chock-full of indelible moments; ones that help you ride out its harsher sequences with earnest warmth and genuine care.
Lee Jutton spoke with Agnieszka Holland about her film Mr. Jones, the most surprising thing she learned while making the film, and the role of journalism in keeping democracy alive today.
Mr. Jones highlights the need for investigative journalism even in a world where hard evidence can be met with accusations of untruth.
Mr. Jones is a harsh, masterful film about being wary of the lies being fed to you by your media and your government.
Overlong, overblown, and painfully unfunny at times, Hobbs & Shaw is a misguided endeavor that struggles to offer a sense of fun.
In Hobbs & Shaw, lawman Luke Hobbs and outcast Deckard Shaw form an unlikely alliance when a cyber-genetically enhanced villain threatens the future of humanity.