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Category: Film

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On Borat Subsequent Moviefilm

A review of the latest Sasha Baron Cohen comedy.

by David Chmielewski on November 8, 2020November 8, 2020

The Virtue of Ambiguity

A Review of the Film: Parasite

by Drew Pugliese on November 10, 2019November 10, 2019

The Fourth Annual Princeton Independent Film Festival

Narrative as a discourse, and the opportunities within collective interpretation.

by Max Feldman on December 9, 2018December 8, 2018

Left Alone

To escape from society, head for the woods.

by Tom Hoopes on December 2, 2018December 4, 2018

Falling in Space

Hopefully this means we didn’t fake the moon landing.

by Dylan Fox on November 11, 2018November 10, 2018

Crazy Rich Asians Review

“My first draft of this review started with a disclaimer saying that, whatever my opinions of Crazy Rich Asians may be, its all-Asian cast is worth celebrating as a landmark for representation. Then my editor sent me an article explaining how the movie’s depiction of Singapore is analogous to a depiction of America only featuring white people, and now I don’t know what to think. In the context of Hollywood’s shameful history of white actors playing Asian characters, this still feels like a step in the right direction, though it’s hard to forgive the ignorance of Singaporean racial diversity. This stuff is complicated and there are two sides to every issue. Anyway, Crazy Rich Asians is awful.”

by Max Feldman on October 14, 2018October 12, 2018

You’re Christopher Robin and Don’t You Forget It

On the collision course of youthful innocence and adulthoods muted palette.

by Noa Wollstein on October 7, 2018October 6, 2018

Eighth Grade review

“Eighth Grade, a movie about adolescents, is like an adolescent: energetic, emotional, and not quite as interesting as it thinks it is.”

by Max Feldman on August 12, 2018

Sorry to Bother You review

“What the story lacks in cohesion and clarity, though, it makes up for in inventiveness and provocation. It seems intentionally on-the-nose that the protagonist’s name is “Cash Green,” as the film takes the inherent absurdity and selfishness of capitalism to the extreme.”

by Katie Duggan on July 31, 2018July 29, 2018

A review of the Death of Stalin

“To convert political horror into comedy might only be possible at the risk of transposing the profundity of mass death, racism, greed and systemic terror into something as trivial as quibbles over funeral decorations.”

by Carson Welch on April 22, 2018April 21, 2018

A review of You Were Never Really Here

Both squarely within and bushing the boundaries of Lynne Ramsey’s heralded artistries.

by Joshua Judd Porter on April 22, 2018April 21, 2018

Isle of Dogs review

“In any case, it is left up to the viewer to not get too lost in the dazzling visual spectacle of the film, and be sure to consider that despite the immaculate attention to detail, some details might still have been rendered invisible.”

by Katie Duggan on April 15, 2018April 14, 2018


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