Reviews

[Tribeca Review] In Transit

Ripe with rich source material each worthy of their own feature films, In Transit provides a glance into various lives and narratives. Some intersect and intera...

[Tribeca Review] King Jack

An impressive debut feature from Felix Thompson, King Jack is a powerful day-in-the-life drama following two lower-middle class families at war with each other ...

[Tribeca Review] Killing Them Safely

Killing Them Safely is, above all, an example of excellent, ethical, fair, and balanced journalism allowing both sides to state their case. What emerges in its ...

[Tribeca Review] A Faster Horse

The branded documentary is a curious creation. On one hand, it is dismissive to consider A Faster Horse a car commercial, but as one, it works. The bind the pic...

[Review] The Age of Adaline

If Nicholas Sparks took a stroll through The Twilight Zone, it might look a little like The Age of Adaline, a new fantasy ambitious enough to make the case that...

[Review] The Water Diviner

With his directorial debut The Water Diviner, Russell Crowe already aligns himself with the Ben Affleck ideology of acting-directing. The ideas are the same her...

[Tribeca Review] Maggie

A barren post-apocalyptic landscape with spare living humans and dilapidated cities seems to be the prerequisite for the standard zombie feature. It's clear fro...

[Tribeca Review] Dirty Weekend

Returning again to the scope of his previous dialogue-driven films, Neil LaBute’s Dirty Weekend is a playful buddy comedy with notes of Neil Simon – and a littl...

[Tribeca Review] Cartel Land

Following in the footsteps of the late, great, cinematic badass Michael Glawogger, whose work often put him on the front-lines of the most dangerous jobs (or at...

[Review] Avengers: Age of Ultron

Avengers: Age of Ultron probably shouldn't work. It's packed to the brim with characters, and the fact that almost all of them have their own moments to shine -...