English director Jonathan Glazer has directed four films in the past 25 years, and they present an intriguing cross-section of many of the ways films can be great.
English director Jonathan Glazer has directed four films in the past 25 years, and they present an intriguing cross-section of many of the ways films can be great.
As I review Dune: Part Two, which I quite like, I must confront a question
Atomic Blonde is the first film credited to director David Leitch, but it is not the first film he made.
Silent cinema is full of legendary figures, but none is quite so mythic as Abel Gance.
Denis Villeneuve’s Dune is, above all else, an adaptation.
Cancer movies are typically a tug of war:
Earlier this year I did a binge of Matthew Vaughn’s movies, and my main takeaway is that I am not a Matthew Vaughn fan.
Louis Sachar has written some of my favorite children’s books ever.
Zoe Lister-Jones bubbled under the surface of the indie comedy-drama film scene for the better part of the ‘00s and early ‘10s.
The cinematic comedy-drama is in a state of peril.