![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/static.rogerebert.com/uploads/review/primary_image/reviews/sweet-dreams-film-review-2024/primary_sweet-dreams-2024.jpg)
Reviews
Sweet Dreams
A strange and memorable though only intermittently successful film, "Sweet Dreams" turns colonialism into a source of pitch-black slapstick comedy
A strange and memorable though only intermittently successful film, "Sweet Dreams" turns colonialism into a source of pitch-black slapstick comedy
Francis Ford Coppola's Megalopolis is reportedly scaring studios away with its price tag. Someone needs to save this movie. We're looking at you, France.
There was originally supposed to be one more scene before the end of Unforgiven, and by cutting it, Clint Eastwood cemented the film's masterpiece status
It's as engrossing, thoughtful, heartfelt, angry, hopeful, and altogether valuable as his best work. If it is indeed Loach's farewell, it's one hell of a fine note to go out on.
The settlement of a lawsuit against the creators of an unauthorized AI ripoff of George Carlin offers a glimmer of hope for artists sick of being exploited by tech companies
Roger Ebert's Top 10 lists each year always contained a few surprising picks that said a lot about what he valued in moviegoing and criticism.
The pandemic robbed a lot of good movies of a chance to be seen in theaters. Why not give them another chance?
Our beloved series gets to 1968's Play Dirty.
A thoughtful, minimalist drama about a helpline counselor, featuring a subtle lead performance by Tessa Thompson