Werner Herzog and Clive Oppenheimer look to the stars in Fireball, the duo's latest collaboration after Into the Inferno and Encounters at the End of the World.
Keep ReadingThe Great Green Wall (UK, 92 min.) Dir. Jared P. Scott Imagine growing an 8000 kilometer wall of trees blocking off the sands of the Sahara from the rest of Africa. It’s
Keep ReadingWho Farted? (Canada, 51 min.) Dir. Albert Nerenberg, Nik Sheehan “I have never been a fan of farts,” observes Albert Nerenberg, who narrates Who Farted? and serves as its onscreen guide. “They have always
Keep ReadingIn place of the usual dire forecasts that doom-and-gloom eco docs burden open audiences, 2040 offers some new: hope.
Keep ReadingWood (Austria/Germany/Romania, 95 min.) Dir. Monica Lãzurean-Gorgan, Michaela Kirst, Ebba Sinzinger Program: World Showcase James Bond might be on hiatus until November, but cinephiles hankering for a spy game will appreciate Wood. The
Keep ReadingFirst We Eat Canada, 101 min.) Dir. Suzanne Crocker Program: To Serve & Protect A force of nature blocks access to the general store in a remote area of the Yukon and
Keep ReadingWorkhorse (Canada, 82 min.) Dir. Cliff Caines Is any animal more cinematic than the horse? The equine characters of Cliff Caines’ Workhorse seem like naturals before the camera. There is ample posing to be
Keep ReadingMeat the Future (Canada, 90 min.) Dir. Liz Marshall Over the past couple of years, it’s become impossible not to know about plant-based foods that mimic meat. The appropriately named Impossible Foods
Keep ReadingSHAME on these filmmakers for making a film like this, full of misinformation and disinformation, to intentionally depress audiences, and make them think there are no alternatives.
Keep ReadingPlanet of the Humans (USA, 100 min.) Dir. Jeff Gibbs You’ve got to hand it to Michael Moore. The Oscar winning documentarian has always been provocative, whether he’s exposing the US gun lobby
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