821 Best Releases From the Genre Drama (Page 25)
I Know What You Did Last Summer
In 1973, Lois Duncan created the perfect premise for a thriller: a group of teens on a midnight joyride run over a pedestrian and make a pact to keep it a secret. They think they're successful in hiding the crime. Then, a year later, one of them receives an ominous note stating simply, "I Know What You Did Last Summer." While the teens try to solve the mystery of who is harassing them, they soon realize that whoever knows their secret wants them dead. Continue Reading →
You
The ultimate representation both of making it, and of giving up, the soul-crushing blandness and hidden darkness of suburbia is a well drawn from many, many times. HOAs and smiling politely through block parties and feigning interest in rose bushes, moving to the suburbs is frequently painted as the end of adventure and creativity. What happens when the couple that moves to their shiny new house to start shiny new lives aren’t just leaving the city but also a trail of bodies behind? Can a relationship work when you’re not just newlyweds and new parents but are also trying your darndest not to murder any more people or each other? Continue Reading →
הברך
StudioARTE France Cinéma,
A motorcycle streaks through the rainy streets of Tel Aviv. Its rider is Ahed Tamini, a Palestinian woman who slapped an Israeli soldier in the face when he was attempting to break into her house. In response, an Israeli parliament member tweeted “In my opinion, she [Tamini] should have gotten a bullet, at least in the kneecap. That would have put her under house arrest for the rest of her life.” Oh wait, that isn’t actually Ahed Tamini. We’re seeing an actress auditioning to play her in an edgy digital video project. The flutter and flurry of disorienting images feel confusing, anxious, and raw. Continue Reading →
Scream: The TV Series
KinoKultur is a thematic exploration of the queer, camp, weird, and radical releases Kino Lorber has to offer.
Pretty Peggy Johns (Sian Barbara Allen) wants to do her best for the environment. Yet while she rides her bicycle, bell-bottoms billowing, through the California hills to Elliot Mansion in Scream, Pretty Peggy (1973), the most ecological thing she does is star in the film, which is assembled entirely from recycled plots and recycled stars.
Scream, Pretty Peggy and The Screaming Woman are two new-to-Blu-ray TV-movie thrillers from the early 1970s starring dames of Classical Hollywood. Each is a knowing hodgepodge of different Hollywood horror tropes that, instead of languishing in “hagsploitation” hell, allows its special guest star to shine. Continue Reading →
One of Us Is Lying
NetworkPeacock,
StudioUCP,
There has been something of a teen thriller renaissance of late. Shows like Cruel Summer, The Wilds, Panic, and Outer Banks have mined the teen streaming audience to deliver stories that all had at least something about them worth watching. Joining the fold this week is Peacock’s One of Us Is Lying, an adaptation of the Karen McManus book of the same name. Continue Reading →
The Eyes of Tammy Faye
Watch aftertick tick... BOOM! (2021), West Side Story (2021),
StudioSearchlight Pictures,
Have you ever spoken to a friend who was tangentially involved in a big event? They know the players, they saw some of it go down, but they’re missing pieces of information. They lack the perspective of someone directly involved and the insights that come with that. That’s the experience of watching The Eyes of Tammy Faye. Continue Reading →
The Baby-Sitters Club
In its first season, Netflix’s The Baby-Sitters Club had to strike a very difficult balance: satisfying adults who might be checking out the show based on nostalgia for the classic YA series by Ann M. Martin, and drawing in new, younger fans with relatable stories at the same time. Luckily, it stuck the landing, with remarkable humor and warmth. Season 2 picks up where the Baby-sitters left off and thoughtfully deepens their relationships with each other and their families, bringing even more dimension and depth to an already exemplary family program. Continue Reading →
რას ვხედავთ, როდესაც ცას ვუყურებთ?
Alexandre Koberidze's mystical romance is lovely and well-performed, but overly insistent on its epic status.
This review is part of our coverage of the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival.)
Like Alice Rohrwacher’s Happy as Lazzaro or Olivier Laxe’s Mimosas, Alexandre Koberidze’s What We Do When We Look at the Sky? begins as a promising addition to the subgenre of modern-day religious fables. But ultimately, it left me shrugging my shoulders. Continue Reading →
Lamb
SimilarAlex Strangelove (2018),
As Shakespeare famously opined: What’s in a name? Based on the religious nature of the character’s names in Valdimar Jóhannson’s debut film, Lamb, there must be something allegorical about the movie’s plot. Yet, as compelling as Lamb is, in the final analysis, its religious symbolism amounts to little. Continue Reading →
The Tragedy of Macbeth
Watch afterNightmare Alley (2021), The Power of the Dog (2021), West Side Story (2021),
(This is part of our ongoing NYFF coverage.) Continue Reading →
The Many Saints of Newark
SimilarA Bronx Tale (1993), A History of Violence (2005),
Brubaker (1980) The Departed (2006), Walk the Line (2005),
Watch afterDon't Look Up (2021), Free Guy (2021),
StudioNew Line Cinema,
When Anthony “Tony” Soprano first appears in Alan Taylor’s The Many Saints of Newark, he’s just a kid, hanging on the shoulder of his Uncle Richard “Dickie” Moltisanti (Alessandro Nivola). Much like the show it precedes, Taylor’s crime drama focuses on family, a group of related and unrelated men and women influencing and subsequently controlling various parts of New Jersey. Billed as a Tony Soprano origin story, a prequel that wasn’t needed but wanted, the film never feels inherently necessary or emotional. It coasts upon characters it has already set up, actors with pedigree playing said characters, and the understanding that this David Chase-created world is still connected and worth our time. Continue Reading →
Doom Patrol
NetworkHBO Max, Max,
SimilarBatman Beyond, Birds of Prey, HAPPY!,
Justice League Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers, Spider-Man: The New Animated Series, Static Shock,
Writing about Doom Patrol Season 3 is a surprisingly tricky task. After all, how many times can one stress that its budget aesthetics are a distinct part of its charm? How many times can you praise its willful strangeness, its willingness to embrace the bizarre without ignoring the need for characterization? How many times can a critic declare, “yes, still very good.”? Continue Reading →
Midnight Mass
Contains spoilers about Netflix’s Midnight Mass (read our spoiler-free review here) Continue Reading →
Invisible
T.J. Parsell's documentary about queer women and the country music they make gives its subjects and their work space to shine.
(This review is part of our 2021 coverage of Reeling: The Chicago LGBTQ+ International Film Festival)
Bonnie Baker. Kye Fleming. Jess Leary. Mary Gauthier. Pam Rose. Mary Ann Kennedy. Dianne Davidson. Virginia Team. Ruthie Foster. Cidney Bullens. Chely Wright. Continue Reading →
Bergman Island
StudioARTE France Cinéma,
Mia Hansen-Løve's latest wrestles with the creative and romantic frustrations between men and women, with Ingmar Bergman watching mindfully overhead.
(This review is part of our coverage of the 2021 New York Film Festival.)
It's an unwritten rule of film festivals that there have to be at least a few films in the program dealing with either the history of cinema or the filmmaking process. Bergman Island, the latest from Mia Hansen-Løve, covers both of those bases. It's a quietly beguiling look at a pair of filmmakers as they go about generating their latest projects, literally standing in the looming shadow of one of filmmaking's most towering figures. Continue Reading →
At the End of Evin
Mehdi and Mohammad Torab-Beigi's drama presents intriguing questions about the trans body and the experience of transition.
(This review is part of our 2021 coverage of Reeling: The Chicago LGBTQ+ International Film Festival).
When we talk about transgender operations, it’s commonly along the binary path from dysphoria to liberation. For many it is. But not for Amen, the main character in Mehdi and Mohammad Torab-Beigi’s new film At the End of Evin. Continue Reading →
Benedetta
In the opening scene of Benedetta, a young girl stops along the road to pray to a shrine of the Virgin Mary. A group of bandits ambushes her and her family, nobles who are well-off but by no means excessively affluent. Benedetta curses the thieves as they snatch her mother’s gold necklace, promising that the Holy Mother will haunt them for the rest of their days. Suddenly, a small bird flies from a nearby tree and shits in the eye of the bandit leader. The men laugh and toss the jewelry back to Benedetta’s mother, preferring not to risk it. Still, we’re left wondering – was this divine intervention? Or just a case of well-timed bird poop? Continue Reading →
Foundation
Foundation is big. It is glossy. It is grand in scale and epic in tone. Worlds upon worlds, filled with trillions of people, hang in the balance. Well-dressed futuristic figures in smartly-appointed rooms give high-minded speeches at one another, debating the fate of civilization as it unspools over millennia. Continue Reading →
The Survivor
StudioBron Studios, Endeavor Content,
The post-WWII boxing drama wastes Ben Foster and Vicky Krieps in an overfamiliar prestige drama that botches its handling of the Holocaust.
For a one-time perennial Oscar-contending director, Barry Levinson has had one of the most curious careers of the 21st century. His recent work includes thrillers and comedies like Envy, The Bay, and Man of the Year. With Bill Murray vehicle Rock the Kasbah, Levinson seemed to have mildly scraped the zeitgeist once again. Now, with The Survivor he’s plunging back into the Oscar/prestige realm with The Survivor, a black-and-white Holocaust/ boxing drama.
The Survivor is based on the life of Harry (original name Hertzko) Haft, a Jewish man who survived Auschwitz by boxing as a ringer for a Nazi commander. When this becomes public knowledge, Haft is derided as a traitor by New York’s Jewish community. In execution, The Survivor hews closely to the standard patterns of prestige drama, to the point that there is very little distinct or interesting about its craft. Continue Reading →
Quickening
Arooj Azeem gives a breakout performance, but the rest of the film simply does not match her good work.
It’s unfortunate that Quickening, which clearly has good intentions, ends up looking and feeling like a commercial. Consumer electronics and media industry decisions have, in recent years, made a lot of independent cinema, especially that which ends up in smaller sections of fests, presents itself like highlight reels for the filmmaker and cinematographer. Slow-motion, steady-cam shots—these have become what many consider a “professional.” But in Quickening, the cinematic grammar is off and the film that results is uninteresting.
Quickening is a coming-of-age drama about a Pakistani girl named Sheila (Arooj Azeem) navigating her parents’ strained marriage, her relationship with a boy she meets in a performance arts class, and a surprise pregnancy that collides with her culture’s traditional values on marriage and sex. These stories have been told time and again, and for South Asians (like myself) they are all too relatable. But their impact is not tied to their familiarity, especially when the picture in question doesn’t do the work to make itself stand out. Continue Reading →