Reviews of Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go For It, Bring Your Own Brigade, Faya Dayi, and Playing with Sharks from the 2021 Sundance Film Festival.
Keep ReadingSundance reviews for Flee ("documents the unfilmable"), Rebel Hearts ("entertaining and vivid"), and The Most Beautiful Boy in the World ("adopts an undercurrent of homophobia").
Keep ReadingNancy Kulik looks up to screen icon Sophia Loren and recalls seeing in the strong characters of films like Two Women, Marriage, Italian Style, and Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow a role model
Keep Reading"When I wrote the story I hoped this film would affect contemporary women. It’s not just a story from the past," says Claude Demers.
Keep ReadingClapboard Jungle: Surviving the Independent Film Business (Canada, 98 min.) Dir. Justin McConnell How does an aspiring talent survive in the independent film scene? This question fuels Justin McConnell’s Clapboard Jungle, which navigates
Keep ReadingL.A. Tea Time (Canada, 82 min.) Dir. Sophie Bédard-Marcotte Program: Markers “Hi, Miss July. Um…hi, Miranda? Hi, my name is Sophie and I am a filmmaker based in Montreal,” director Sophie Bédard-Marcotte
Keep Reading-Ariel Nasr’s NFB film The Forbidden Reel shares rare excerpts from classic Afghan cinema and images of life pre-Taliban.
Keep ReadingTales from a Prison Cell (Hungary/Croatia/UK, 80 min.) Dir. Ábel Visky Programme: Artscapes (World Premiere) A Hungarian prison might not be the place one expects to encounter uplifting children’s stories. However, Tales from
Keep ReadingNatalie Wood: What Remains Behind (USA, 100 min.) Dir. Laurent Bouzereau Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind might be the documentary its creators hoped to make. It’s an affectionate and loving portrait of
Keep ReadingA Secret Love (USA, 83 min.) Dir. Chris Bolan Across seventy-two years of love and companionship, Terry Donahue and Pat Henschel have seen it all. Stories of the love lives of the
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