While Ang Lee's war story Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk was billed to be technology-advancing fare, the reactions of such advancements were quite mixed co...
The good news: James Gray's highly-anticipated, long-gestating The Lost City of Z is well worth the wait. The bad news: if you didn't get a chance to see it...
It is the little-stated, undeniable truth that critics are surrounded by nearly innumerable factors when experiencing the work they've been assigned to review. ...
The film adaptation of a satirical novel about American soldiers returning from combat to be celebrated at home by a people that can never fully appreciate thei...
The head of Karl Marx glooms over Chemnitz, Germany -- figuratively, as this city was once part of the Eastern Bloc, formerly known as Karl-Marx-Stadt, and lite...
Since any New York City cinephile has a nearly suffocating wealth of theatrical options, we figured it’d be best to compile some of the more worthwhile repe...
Unless you live in New York City and have some cash to spend or a P&I pass to wave, the New York Film Festival can feel a bit distant. But the Film Soci...
After years and years of no word from Paul Verhoeven (excepting the Jesus book he might one day make into a film), the Dutch auteur has suddenly entered con...
Has Mike Mills ever been unsympathetic to another human being? If his two most recent features, Beginners and this year's NYFF centerpiece selection, 20th Centu...
Humanity gave birth to inequality. The American experience is rooted in institutionalized racial inequity. Our forefathers came to this nation either by choice ...