Butterfly in the Sky [Tribeca Review]
Butterfly in the Sky shows love and honesty about the show’s 26-year battle to stay on air, and why every generation needs their Reading Rainbow.
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Butterfly in the Sky shows love and honesty about the show’s 26-year battle to stay on air, and why every generation needs their Reading Rainbow.
Butterfly in the Sky [Tribeca Review] Read More »
SXSW Jethica is a dark and comedic film that takes stalking to another level. Using the landscape and actors, Pete Ohs joins the supernatural and real.
Jethica [SXSW ’22] Review Read More »
Sell/Buy/Date, a docudrama mixed in comedy, premiered at SXSW Festival. It stars Sarah Jones, with a story by her and David Goldblum that looks at the sex…
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Aftershock, directed by Paula Eiselt and Tonya Lewis Lee, personalizes the Black maternal mortality and morbidity epidemic in the United States in this documentary. Through the heartache of two fathers who lost their partners due to subpar hospital care, we see the grief and determination that galvanizes them to activism. Heartbreaking does not begin to
Aftershock [Sundance ’22 Review] Read More »
Emergency starts as a comedy but spirals into a dramatic film that leaves you filled with dread as it progresses. Directed by Carey Williams and written by…
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Quirky with a helping of cringe and creep, When You Finish Saving The World is entertaining, although it lacks deeper substance.
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Satoshi Kon, The Illusionist celebrates a marvelous creator, gone too soon, by showing us his humanity in all its messy splendor.
Satoshi Kon, The Illusionist: NIGHTSTREAM ’21 Review Read More »
Poser is a slow burn about identity, isolation and obsession. It blends artistic directing, the underground art and music scene with a steady pace to make a drama that is equal parts compelling and unnerving.
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It’s told in a tonal mix with colorful hues that showcase the frenzied temperament of the man. The Electrical Life of Louis Wain manages to be magical and heartfelt with moments of crushing sadness.
The Electrical Life of Louis Wain: TIFF ’21 Review Read More »
Despite copaganda elements, The Guilty is a fraught, riveting movie with dynamic acting and overarching themes of systemic issues, provided you haven’t seen…
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