Arts
Sundance Film Review: Flee
Flee is a magnificent achievement in directing, and a genuine game changer for documentaries as an artform. … read more
Sundance Film Review: I Was a Simple Man
Christopher Makoto Yogi’s I Was a Simple Man spreads the fiction of life out into an elegy for a man, a time, a family and a place. … read more
“Own the Truth”: An Interview with Knocking’s Frida Kempff and...
Knocking presents a war between Molly’s (Cecilia Milocco) resilience and society’s churn of normalized silencing. … read more
Sundance Film Review: Playing With Sharks
Playing with Sharks is so much more than just the latest cash grab on the subject—it’ s a loving tribute to an extraordinary person. … read more
Sundance Film Review: How It Ends
Zoe Lister-Jones & Daryl Wein’s pre-apocalyptic How It Ends is slight and forgettable, but it is an enjoyable little excursion. … read more
Sundance Film Review: Son of Monarchs
Son of Monarchs explores the warring dichotomy between the sleek, fleeting promises of the modern world and the immoveable beauty of nature. … read more
Cryptozoo Brings a Dash of Imagination to Sundance
Prolific in the medium of graphic novels, Dash Shaw views the virtual format of this year’s Sundance festival as well suited to Cryptozoo. … read more
Sundance Film Review: Coda
Coda perfectly encapsulates the idea of challenging narrow viewpoints regrading the ways we communicate, the ways we live and the ways we love. … read more
Sundance Film Review: Censor
Censor aims to make its audience squirm in their seats, balking at the perversity of their own act of spectating. … read more
Sundance Film Review: One for the Road
Baz Poonipiriya’s One for the Road is not without its moments, but it’s irritating, flashy and shallow beyond words, … read more