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‘Woman of the Hour’ Review: Anna Kendrick Directs a Thriller About the ’70s Serial Killer Who Was a Contestant on ‘The Dating Game’

19 October 2024 at 05:58
What "Woman of the Hour" is going for isn’t some ultimate period-piece authenticity. It’s trying to deconstruct television, along with the male aggression that can descend into violence, and to show you how they work together.

‘Smile 2’ Review: A Skillfully Disquieting Sequel Turns the Life of a Pop Star Into a Horror Ride of Mental Breakdown

16 October 2024 at 13:00
"Smile 2" is a flash-cut horror parable, but the story it’s telling is that pop fame makes you crazy. Though the movie is hardly subtle, Parker Finn has become a clever enough filmmaker to make reality feel like a hallucination and hallucinations feel like reality.  

‘Suburban Fury’ Review: Sara Jane Moore, Who Tried to Assassinate President Ford, Gets Her Own Self-Centered, Radical-Chic Documentary

15 October 2024 at 02:32
The very premise of "Suburban Fury," with Moore, during the interviews, posed in ironic period backdrops like the rear seat of a '70s station wagon, makes her seem a classic performative personality — a woman who descended into the darkness out of a need for attention. What’s odd about "Suburban Fury," even as it holds you with rapt authority, is that the film’s point-of-view is so limited to Sara Jane Moore’s rationalization of her own life that the movie seems, by the end, almost flirts with endorsing her defense of her actions: that she tried to kill the president as a skewed trigger for social justice.

Why Did ‘The Apprentice’ Bomb? Maybe Because the Most Chilling Thing About Donald Trump Is Offscreen

13 October 2024 at 18:30
In May, after I saw and reviewed the how-Donald-Trump-learned-to-be-Donald-Trump biopic “The Apprentice” at the Cannes Film Festival, I had dinner with a group of very sharp-minded film folks, and we all agreed that the movie, if treated with the right marketing savvy, had the potential to make a splash. A few days later, I woke […]

‘Terrifier 3’ Review: Art the Clown Is Back in the Latest and (If It’s Even Possible) Sickest Entry Yet in the Gruesomely Inventive Franchise

11 October 2024 at 03:17
If they gave out an Academy Award for best performance by a silent harlequin in a white clown suit who can mime a giggle fit while slicing people’s faces off (don’t try this at home — the slicing or the silent laughing), the award would be a lock for Art the Clown, the mascot of beyond-anything-you’ve-ever-seen slasher mayhem who’s the depraved mascot/killer of "Terrifier 3." Art the Clown is to Freddy and Jason and Michael Myers what the Sex Pistols were to the Who and the Stones: their scandalous culmination, their punk end point.

‘Blitz’ Review: Steve McQueen’s World War II Film Is Skillful and Touching Yet Almost Shockingly Conventional

9 October 2024 at 18:30
What may take you by surprise, if you’re a McQueen fan, is what a shockingly conventional and middle-of-the-road ersatz-Hollywood movie it is. Taken on its own terms, "Blitz" is well done, yet it could almost be a middlebrow Barry Levinson Oscar-bait movie from 1992.

‘The Fire Inside’ Review: Ryan Destiny Gives a Powerfully Gritty Performance in a True-Life Boxing Drama That’s Like ‘Girlfight’ Meets ‘Air’

6 October 2024 at 16:50
Given her relative youth, we expect a story of ferocity and grit, of the unstoppable rise of a boxer who turns out to be piston-pounding dynamo. "The Fire Inside" gives us all that; it’s a real rouser. Yet it’s rooted in a galvanizing feeling for the trauma that can be the flip side of triumph.

In the Vice-Presidential Debate, Tim Walz Had Better Policy Points, But His Agitated Delivery Rolled Right Off J.D. Vance’s Reaganesque Smoothness

2 October 2024 at 04:44
Donald Trump, as dark and threatening as his second presidency would be to this country, has never stopped acting like the politician as walking TV show — a reality-based character who is really, in his way, an entire series, because he carries so much drama around with him. Of course, that doesn’t mean that we […]

‘One to One: John & Yoko’ Review: A Revelatory Inside Look at John Lennon, in Concert and in the World

1 October 2024 at 03:20
The music gives the film shape and propulsion. But so does the way that Macdonald, keying off Lennon’s TV habit, presents images of the period as an ongoing channel-surfing montage.

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