Kristen Johnson's Cameraperson is an entertaining, engaging work, which is surely one of the finest non-fiction films of the year.
Keep ReadingFerne Pearlstein’s entertaining and deeply philosophical Last Laugh asks if Jews, or even gentiles, tell jokes about the Holocaust?
Keep ReadingClay Tweel's Gleason invites viewers into the home of former NFL player Steve Gleason and his wife Michel as they face Steve's ALS diagnosis.
Keep ReadingEva Orner's Chasing Asylum takes audiences to the remote islands of Nauru and Manus where refugees wait in despondent limbo.
Keep ReadingTony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru may be a concert movie where the viewer doesn’t love the band, but appreciates a portrait that is both entertaining and enlightening.
Keep ReadingAs food porn, Ants on a Shrimp has got enough chewable money shots to make even the most jaded of foodies salivate.
Keep ReadingNorman Lear: Just Another Version of You by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing is a touching portrait of the television icon.
Keep ReadingCharlie Lyne discusses his film Fear, which explores the ways people give themselves up to fear when they watch horror movies.
Keep ReadingJosh Fox brings a sly approach to climate change with How to Let Go of the World (and Love All the Things Climate Can’t Change)
Keep ReadingCity 40 reveals the extremes a totalitarian state will go to in its will to cover up inconvenient truths and ignore the well being of citizens.
Keep Reading