Francis Ford Coppola had already cemented his Hollywood legacy after a string of critical and commercial successes in the 1970s, but discussion of his filmograp...
We sat down with Bonello at the 57th New York Film Festival to discuss meeting real-life zombies, the great lengths he went to respect the Haitian tradition of voodoo while telling a taboo story, using Clairvius Narcisse’s zombification to contextualize contemporary cultural tensions, and recruiting historian Patrick Boucheron to explain how liberalism obscures liberty....
How does a self-taught upright bass player who dropped out of Julliard to pursue his parents' dream of medical school become a bona fide superhero? Easy. He rai...
American novelist Jack London was an active proponent of socialism, his writing offering self-reflexive deconstructions of their values within distinct, incongr...
After being in the works for over a decade, Martin Scorsese's The Irishman finally premiered at the 57th New York Film Festival on Friday. Following the p...
It’s a critical cliché to describe a filmmaker’s late-period output as elegiac, nostalgic, or any other adjective that suggests an aging artist grappling with t...
When a filmmaker is well-known for reiterating certain narratives or themes, perhaps even having a specific character reappear to embody such ideas, unfamiliar ...
In First Cow, Kelly Reichardt carves out space for friendship and generosity amidst an otherwise selfish landscape. Set in the 1820s Pacific Northwest, a famili...
Tomorrow, Martin Scorsese's long-awaited The Irishman will be world premiering as the opening film of the 57th New York Film Festival. Ahead of the premiere...