Hotel Dallas refreshingly offbeat and innovative as it mixes abstractions, dramatizations, and outrageous musical numbers.
Keep ReadingCallshop Istanbul recounts a tale with which many migrants are probably familiar: that of the waiting zone between an old home and a new one.
Keep ReadingHighlights of Toronto's 2016 Images Festival include Kelly O'Brien's Postings from Home and Mike Hoolboom's Incident Reports.
Keep ReadingAs the inspiring new doc CodeGirl shows, there’s a wealth of brilliant young women ripe for the tech industry.
Keep ReadingIn Almost Holy, Steve Hoover observes the work of Gennadiy “Pastor Crocodile” Mokhnenko, a priest who runs an orphanage for street children.
Keep ReadingFrackman doesn’t really offer anything new to the fracking cause, although the film gives an admirable portrait of a committed activist.
Keep ReadingIn The Pearl Button, Patricio Guzmán wades deep into the complex colonial history of his native Chile considering the nation's shoreline.
Keep ReadingIn The Uncondemned, Michele Mitchell and the late Nick Louvel tackle the complexity of trying rape as a war crime.
Keep ReadingI Am Sun Mu is a bold and compelling portrait of an artist fighting a totalitarian system and triumphing through his work.
Keep ReadingThe Infinite Happiness shows that some of the most satisfying elements of urban life aren’t to be found in concrete jungles.
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