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Matt Fagerholm

Matt Fagerholm

Matt Fagerholm is the Literary Editor at RogerEbert.com and is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association. He spent four years writing film reviews and interviews for HollywoodChicago.com and has contributed to a variety of publications including Time Out Chicago, The A.V. Club, No Film School, Cinema Femme and Magill's Cinema Annual. His writing/editing experience includes serving as Assistant A&E Editor at the Columbia Chronicle and a full-time writer interviewing such icons as Betty White, Ed Asner and Judy Collins at the Woodstock Independent. For nearly a decade, he served as a monthly guest on Vocalo radio's The Morning AMp program, and is also the founder of Indie Outlook, a blog and podcast featuring exclusive interviews with some of the most exciting voices in modern independent filmmaking. Follow him on Twitter at @IndieOutlook and @mattfagerholm.

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Framing Agnes
Master of Light
Dos Estaciones
McEnroe
I'm Fine, (Not) Really
Return to Space
Brighton 4th
President
Torn
Detainee 001
The Human Factor
Erēmīta (Anthologies)
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I Am Greta
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The Perfect Weapon
Mighty Ira
Features

Thumbnails 4/3/15

Jesus' radical politics; Astonishingly good Iran deal; Franchises that made it to Part 7; Christian film "Beyond the Mask" gets an "A" for effort; The many faces of Tatiana Maslany.

Features

Thumbnails 4/2/15

Jim Hemphill on "The Trouble with the Truth"; 1980s Atlanta as a backdrop of the future; How to make Blu-rays relevant again; Recreating Klimt; In defense of Trevor Noah.

Features

Thumbnails 3/30/15

Errol Morris names his best movie; Celebrity impersonators on Twitter; Rise of Cryptopticon; Rise of the Christian film; Scientology's final say on "Going Clear."

Features

Thumbnails 3/27/15

The strange unraveling of Cinderella; Kimmy Schmidt skewers empowerment culture; Charles Grodin's fine art of reaction; Putting "use" back in fair use; Yoga pants are ruining women.

Features

Thumbnails 3/26/15

Abel Ferrara on "Ms. 45"; Advice "Deadwood"-style; Why "The Jinx" could be bad for documentaries; "Life Just Is" is worth a look; Joan Scheckel on The Technique.