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    • Leonardo DiCaprio Will Lead Martin Scorsese’s Home; Apple and Todd Field to Produce

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    • Paris’ La Clef Revival Comes to New York for Week of Film Screenings; Watch Appreciations from Martin Scorsese and John Carpenter

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    • Sex Work in 1970s Japan Gets the Spotlight in Exclusive Trailer for Noboru Tanaka’s Newly Restored The Oldest Profession

    • Léa Seydoux, Elle Fanning, and Luca Marinelli Lead New Trailer for Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding 2: On the Beach

    • A Palestinian Teacher Fights Back in U.S. Trailer for Farah Nabulsi’s Acclaimed Drama The Teacher

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    • The Actor Review: André Holland is Terrific in Duke Johnson’s Surreal Solo Directorial Debut

    • SXSW Review: Death of a Unicorn is a Mythical, Predictable Genre Mash-Up

    • SXSW Review: The True Beauty of Being Bitten by a Tick is a Fascinating DIY Bergman-Esque Experiment

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    • 7 Films to See at MoMI’s First Look 2025

    • Posterized March 2025: Grand Tour, Eephus, Misericordia & More

    • New to Streaming: Gene Hackman, Michael Mann, Vermiglio, CHAOS: The Manson Murders & More

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    • Philippe Lesage on Who by Fire, the Importance of Imperfection, and What TV Can Never Steal From Cinema

    • Bruno Dumont on The Empire, Star Wars, and the Maelstrom of Human Nature

    • Matías Piñeiro on You Burn Me, Departing Shakespeare, and Hong Sangsoo’s Constant Reinvention

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    • The Film Stage Presents Emulsion: Episode One

    • The B-Side – 2025 Oscars Special (with Joe Reid & Chris Feil)

    • The B-Side – Peter Hyams (with Mike Ryan)

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    • Leonardo DiCaprio Will Lead Martin Scorsese’s Home; Apple and Todd Field to Produce

      1
    • Sex Work in 1970s Japan Gets the Spotlight in Exclusive Trailer for Noboru Tanaka’s Newly Restored The Oldest Profession

      2
    • A Mother and Son Form a Taboo Bond in Exclusive U.S. Trailer for Isabelle Stever’s Grand Jeté

      3
    • Sex Work in 1970s Japan Gets the Spotlight in Exclusive Trailer for Noboru Tanaka’s Newly Restored The Oldest Profession

    • 7 Films to See at MoMI’s First Look 2025

    • Léa Seydoux, Elle Fanning, and Luca Marinelli Lead New Trailer for Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding 2: On the Beach

    • The Actor Review: André Holland is Terrific in Duke Johnson’s Surreal Solo Directorial Debut

    • SXSW Review: Death of a Unicorn is a Mythical, Predictable Genre Mash-Up

    • SXSW Review: The True Beauty of Being Bitten by a Tick is a Fascinating DIY Bergman-Esque Experiment

    • SXSW Review: Jay Duplass’ The Baltimorons is a Sincere Throwback to Mumblecore’s Heyday

    • The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie Review: An Enjoyable Exercise in Updated Nostalgia

    • Philippe Lesage on Who by Fire, the Importance of Imperfection, and What TV Can Never Steal From Cinema

    • Leonardo DiCaprio Will Lead Martin Scorsese’s Home; Apple and Todd Field to Produce

    • SXSW Review: The Threesome is an Ambitious, Flawed Rom-Com From Chad Hartigan

    • SXSW Review: Rodney Ascher’s Ghost Boy is a Moving, Philosophical Documentary About Being Trapped

    • Sex Work in 1970s Japan Gets the Spotlight in Exclusive Trailer for Noboru Tanaka’s Newly Restored The Oldest Profession

    • 7 Films to See at MoMI’s First Look 2025

    • Léa Seydoux, Elle Fanning, and Luca Marinelli Lead New Trailer for Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding 2: On the Beach

    • The Actor Review: André Holland is Terrific in Duke Johnson’s Surreal Solo Directorial Debut

    • SXSW Review: Death of a Unicorn is a Mythical, Predictable Genre Mash-Up

    • SXSW Review: The True Beauty of Being Bitten by a Tick is a Fascinating DIY Bergman-Esque Experiment

Reviews

See all reviews here and see all Critic's Picks here.

The Actor Review: André Holland is Terrific in Duke Johnson’s Surreal Solo Directorial Debut

For as much light as The Actor is bathed in, it’s equally shrouded in darkness. Duke Johnson’s solo directorial debut is a film of bleary s...

SXSW Review: Death of a Unicorn is a Mythical, Predictable Genre Mash-Up

A film with a few solid laughs and crowd-pleasing moments, Death of a Unicorn never quite pushes the envelope as far as it could or should....

SXSW Review: The True Beauty of Being Bitten by a Tick is a Fascinating DIY Bergman-Esque Experiment

Falling somewhere between a horror film and dark comedy about wellness crazes, The True Beauty of Being Bitten by a Tick is, like director ...

SXSW Review: Jay Duplass’ The Baltimorons is a Sincere Throwback to Mumblecore’s Heyday

A return to form for Jay Duplass, who's also making his solo-directing debut, The Baltimorons is a charming throwback to the low-budget ind...

Latest Podcast

The Film Stage Presents Emulsion: Episode One

Interviews

  • “Cinema Should Serve as a Doorway to the Transcendent”: Nino Martínez Sosa on Liborio

  • Philippe Lesage on Who by Fire, the Importance of Imperfection, and What TV Can Never Steal From Cinema

  • Bruno Dumont on The Empire, Star Wars, and the Maelstrom of Human Nature

  • Matías Piñeiro on You Burn Me, Departing Shakespeare, and Hong Sangsoo’s Constant Reinvention

  • There’s Still Tomorrow Director Paola Cortellesi on Domestic Violence, Global Success, and Drawing From Italian Neorealism

  • Ben Burtt on How Modern Hollywood Has Lost a Sensitivity for Sound, Lightsabers, and the Wilhelm Scream

  • “Cinema Should Serve as a Doorway to the Transcendent”: Nino Martínez Sosa on Liborio

  • Philippe Lesage on Who by Fire, the Importance of Imperfection, and What TV Can Never Steal From Cinema

Features

Streaming picks, films to see, lists, and more.

  • Posterized February 2025: Armand, Universal Language, The Monkey & More

  • 7 Films to See at MoMI’s First Look 2025

  • Posterized March 2025: Grand Tour, Eephus, Misericordia & More

  • New to Streaming: Gene Hackman, Michael Mann, Vermiglio, CHAOS: The Manson Murders & More

  • The Best Movies Now Playing in Theaters

  • 15 Films to See in March

  • New to Streaming: Presence, La Cocina, A Complete Unknown, Nickel Boys & More

  • New to Streaming: The Brutalist, The Room Next Door, The Last Showgirl, Companion & More

  • NYC Weekend Watch: Hideaki Anno, Claude Chabrol, Pale Flower & More

  • New to Streaming: Hard Truths, Nickel Boys, Broken Rage, The Seed of the Sacred Fig & More

  • NYC Weekend Watch: Vincent Gallo, Dutchman, Wild at Heart & More

  • Recommended New Books on Filmmaking: Terrence Malick, Chateau Marmont, Korean Cinema & More

  • Posterized February 2025: Armand, Universal Language, The Monkey & More

  • 7 Films to See at MoMI’s First Look 2025

计划幸运5开奖号码查询精准+最新开奖结果官网预测 Film Festival Coverage

Sundance, Berlinale, Cannes, Venice, TIFF, NYFF, and beyond. See more here.

SXSW Review: Death of a Unicorn is a Mythical, Predictable Genre Mash-Up

SXSW Review: The True Beauty of Being Bitten by a Tick is a Fascinating DIY Bergman-Esque Experiment

SXSW Review: Jay Duplass’ The Baltimorons is a Sincere Throwback to Mumblecore’s Heyday

SXSW Review: The Threesome is an Ambitious, Flawed Rom-Com From Chad Hartigan

Read More

The Film Stage Presents Emulsion: Episode One

“Why on Earth is there another film podcast?” Is the question you, the reasonable listener, will ask while nevertheless hitting play on this pilot-of-sorts for...

Posterized March 2025: Grand Tour, Eephus, Misericordia & More

The Oscars have ended, and the nominees and winners should garner some interest both in theaters and at home––viewership was marginally up from last ye...

You Burn Me Review: Matías Piñeiro Muses on Sapphic Fragments and Unrequited Love

In You Burn Me, the Argentinian littérateur-filmmaker Matías Piñeiro uses his vintage Bolex camera like the iOS Notes app. Shooting over the course of a few ye...

New to Streaming: Gene Hackman, Michael Mann, Vermiglio, CHAOS: The Manson Murders & More

Each week we highlight the noteworthy titles that have recently hit streaming platforms in the United States. Check out this week’s selections below and past r...

A Palestinian Teacher Fights Back in U.S. Trailer for Farah Nabulsi’s Acclaimed Drama The Teacher

Following No Other Land's major Oscar win earlier this week, more films capturing the plight of the Palestinian people are getting wider distribution here in t...

CHAOS: The Manson Murders Review: Errol Morris Succinctly Investigates a Complex Conspiracy

Over half a century later, what new information can be gleaned from the nights of August 9 and 10, 1969? Tom O'Neill and Dan Piepenbring’s riveting (if convolu...

Black Bag Review: Steven Soderbergh Delivers Slick, Barbed Spy Thriller

If a James Bond or Mission: Impossible film excised all its action scenes––save a stray explosion or gunshot––while employing a script with a pop John le C...

Bruno Dumont on The Empire, Star Wars, and the Maelstrom of Human Nature

Initially considered the heir to Robert Bresson, Bruno Dumont shocked audiences in 2014 with the heel-turn of his Twin Peaks-inspired miniseries P'tit Quinquin...

Exclusive Trailer for Robina Rose’s Extraordinary, Restored Nightshift Tracks One Night In a Hotel

I wish there were an exact subgenre for Robina Rose's Nightshift so I could see every single one of its kin. The British feature––recalling the austere melanch...

The Best Movies Now Playing in Theaters

Looking for what to see in theaters? Our feature, updated weekly, highlights our top recommendations for films currently in theaters, from new releases to rest...
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