John Fink

[Tribeca Review] Bridegroom

Bridegroom is a curious, highly personal documentary, an intimate portrait of Tom and Shane, two all-American kids in love from the Midwest. What is so curious ...

[Tribeca Review] Adult World

Adult World is a likeable, boarding on loveable, comedy staring Emma Roberts as Amy, a recent college graduate with a degree in poetry. Not exactly a lucrative ...

[Tribeca Review] Sunlight Jr.

A bleak work edging towards neo-realism, Sunlight Jr. takes place in a welfare state: a trailer park outside of Tampa. There aren’t full on revaluations about t...

[Tribeca Review] A Case of You

A Case of You is a dumb romantic comedy -- not without a few laughs, but it's certainly missing many brain cells. Sam (Justin Long) writes novelizations of popu...

[Tribeca Review] Teenage

Matt Wolf’s Teenage is an awfully bland telling of an interesting story. Combining media, including archival materials with some newly shot footage, it traces t...

[Tribeca Review] Reaching for the Moon

Reaching for the Moon is a lush, erotic and mature drama chronicling several years (we're uncertain how long, but it's temporal disorientation is intentional) i...

[Tribeca Review] Trust Me

Clark Gregg’s Trust Me is an often hilarious dark comedy, evolving into satire, veering towards drama and then continuing back to where it began. Where it goes ...

John Fink

John Fink is a New York City area-based critic, filmmaker, educator and curator. He currently serves as the Artistic Director of the Buffalo International Film Festival.