Reviews
Jurassic World
Jurassic World is simultaneously much smarter than you expect it to be and a lot dumber.
Jurassic World is simultaneously much smarter than you expect it to be and a lot dumber.
The June 2015 edition of Unloved looks at Joseph Losey's M.
An essay on how technology has rendered us a one-handed species.
Brad Bird's "Tomorrowland" articulates its messages rather awkwardly, but the filmmaking is superb, and it doesn't feel like anything else.
Scout Tafoya's video series continues with a look at Mary Harron's The Moth Diaries.
Avengers: Age of Ultron is bigger, louder and messier than the first Avengers, but hits more original notes.
An appreciation of Time Magazine writer Richard Corliss.
Though it's hampered by rather bloodless lead performances, this story of an ageless woman and her two great loves finds its tone in its second half, becoming a sentimental opera about commitment, loss and transcendence.
Russell Crowe's directorial debut, a drama about a man trying to save three sons who disappeared at the battle of Galliipoli, wants to be a mournful antiwar film and a rousing adventure, impulses that don't match well.