Reviews
The Zero Theorem
Terry Gilliam's first science fiction film since "12 Monkeys" is an inventively designed but oddly inert satire on technology, God and the future of humankind.
Terry Gilliam's first science fiction film since "12 Monkeys" is an inventively designed but oddly inert satire on technology, God and the future of humankind.
This is a soap opera set on a space station, designed and costumed to evoke a long-lost piece of 1970s science fiction; it's as odd as it sounds.
Tsai Ming-Liang's first feature in five years is a mysterious and alienating series of tableaus about the fragility of flesh and the smallness of humanity.
"The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Them" is an affecting but disjointed film about trauma's impact on one couple and their families.
An appreciation of the actor's perseverance through age 63 despite depression.
Part ten in Scout Tafoya's The Unloved series tackles The Village.
A title as good as "The Last of Robin Hood" deserves a better movie. In fact, it deserves a good movie.
In this excitingly nasty but ultimately confused action picture, Pierce Brosnan plays a retired government hitman drawn out of retirement to untangle a global political crisis as only he can.
Jean-Paul Belmondo and Françoise Dorléac star in this sprightly adventure about a man trying to rescue his kidnapped fiancée.