Festivals & Awards
Cannes 2022: Tchaikovsky's Wife, The Eight Mountains, Scarlet
With Tchaikovsky's Wife, the Russian dissident director Kirill Serebrennikov was finally able to be present for a new film's premiere in Cannes.
With Tchaikovsky's Wife, the Russian dissident director Kirill Serebrennikov was finally able to be present for a new film's premiere in Cannes.
The Rendez-Vous with French Cinema runs from March 3-13 at New York's Walter Reade theater.
Ben Kenigsberg reviews Memoria, the first feature in six years from the Palme d'Or winner Apichatpong Weerasethakul, along with Jacques Audiard's Paris, 13th District and Ildiko Enyedi's The Story of My Wife.
A review of the new film by Roman Polanski, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival.
A tribute to the legendary Italian filmmaker, Bernardo Bertolucci.
Reviews from the Toronto International Film Festival on Louis Garrel's sophomore feature and Olivier Assayas' latest.
61 films from all 28 EU nations will screen this month at the Chicago European Union Film Festival.
A dispatch from the New York Film Festival, including thoughts on the latest from Arnaud Desplechin and Claire Denis.
A report on the opening day press conference for Cannes 2017 and the premieres of "Ismael's Ghosts" and "Loveless."
An extensive look at what films will be playing the 22nd "Rendez-Vous with French Cinema," which runs from March 1-12 at the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theater in New York.
An oral history of "Boogie Nights"; Douglas Trumbull's latest project; Reassessing "Zero Dark Thirty"; Five great foreign titles from 2014; Paul Thomas Anderson on "Inherent Vice."
The competition film "A Castle in Italy," a lightweight comedy, seems strangely out of place.
Marie writes: Once upon a time, a long time ago and in a childhood far, far away, kids used to be able to buy a special treat called a Frosted Malt. Then, with the arrival of progress and the subsequent destruction of all that is noble and pure, the world found itself reduced to settling for a frosty at Wendy's, at least where I live. Unable to support a "second rate" frosted malt for a second longer, I decided to do something about it!
Marie writes: I've always found the ocean more interesting than space and for invariably containing more delights and surprises. Case in point, discovering the existence of an extraordinary underwater museum...
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