While most concert documentaries take on the standard approach of a mix of on-stage footage and a collection of interviews, as well as the occasional back-s...
Perhaps the finest theatrical experience I had last year was witnessing a restoration of Jacques Demy's charming 1964 French musical The Umbrellas of Cherbo...
This summer, Godzilla will stomp back into theaters and while we may be naive, with Gareth Edwards behind the camera and a strong cast, we're actually looki...
After spending extensive time with just Robert Redford at sea, All is Lost director J.C. Chandor is returning to a bigger ensemble, akin to his debut Margin...
After proving they can make a reboot work with 21 Jump Street, Phil Lord and Chris Miller convinced us they can take a brand and turn into a worthwhile, hil...
Released late last summer, unfortunately Cinedigm didn't have the resources to give Brie Larson an awards campaign for her role as social worker for trouble...
Just a year before his drama Slumdog Millionaire grossed nearly $400 million worldwide and picked up a Best Picture Oscar, Danny Boyle's sci-fi thriller Sun...
From early on his career, Lars von Trier has been endlessly fascinated with breaking down and shifting structure and style in his films, evidenced in the me...
With Jay Leno out (again), Jimmy Fallon brought The Tonight Show back to New York for the first time in over 40 years last night, and with it, he also recru...
Not to be confused with Denis Villeneuve's thriller Enemy (which we just got a trailer for), Richard Ayoade's The Double also premiered to high praise on th...
Jordan Raup is the founder and editor-in-chief of The Film Stage and a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic. Track his obsessive film-watching on Letterboxd.