With Gimme Danger, Jim Jarmusch returns to the word of documentary and chronicles the music of Iggy Pop and the Stooges.
Keep ReadingPart mystery thriller, part autobiography, part meta-examination, Karl Marx City is shaped by the writings of both Bentham and Foucault.
Keep ReadingThe Stairs by Hugh Gibson should help to shape a changing vision of Toronto, which struggles to deal with race, immigration and poverty.
Keep ReadingRodnye (Close Relations) intertwines personal and collective history as Mansky interrogates his Ukrainian heritage after living in Russia
Keep ReadingGaza Surf Club by Philip Gnadt and Mickey Yamine finds an inspiring subject in Sabah, a 15-year-old Palestinian girl who longs to surf.
Keep ReadingDrift cautiously with Fire at Sea, though, and one will appreciate the depth of Rosi’s waters.
Keep ReadingAbbas Kiarostami’s hybrid films draw upon documentary, neo-realism, and dramatic filmmaking, and blur the lines of fiction/non-fiction.
Keep ReadingHighlights from TIFF 2015 include Miss Sharon Jones!, Thru You Princess, Where to Invade Next, The Music of Strangers, Sherpa, and Being AP.
Keep ReadingKent Jones' Hitchcock/Truffaut features a who's who of great directors in conversation about two titans of classic cinema.
Keep ReadingThe game in Where to Invade Next is simple: show Americans how much the myth of the American dream fails them.
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