The complicated relationship that formed between the FBI analyst Bill Hagmaier and serial killer Bundy during Bundy’s final years on death row.
The Surge at Mount Sinai details the struggle early healthcare workers faced in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.
A pair of housewives create a $40 million coupon scam.
Thirty years on, the poignant, thoughtful Only Yesterday stands out as a mature, sophisticated gem among Studio Ghibli’s catalog.
This week, Jesse Nussman is joined by Josh Martin to recap the news from this year’s Cannes Film Festival.
While this could all lead up to an intriguing and genre-bending work, They Make Movies does not seem to know how to stick the landing.
In this episode of So Grosse Such Pointe Much Blank, Joe and Blake discuss minute six, an uneven minute of the film.
While Settlers doesn’t quite reach its lofty goals, it instills a palpable sense of dread that keeps you planted in your seat.
A man interviews five unborn souls to determine which one can be given life on Earth.
Ena Sendijarević’s Take Me Somewhere Nice is a movie most cinema-goers have probably seen before, at least in pieces.
Looking at the legacy of Gorō Miyazaki’s best film, From Up On Poppy Hill, which was written by his father, the legendary Hayao Miyazaki.
Based on performances alone, it is a memorable coming-of-age tale, and it is a step in the right direction when it comes to destigmatizing mental illness.
Based on Hannelore Cayre’s novel, Jean-Paul Salomé’s La Daronne – Mama Weed in the U.S. – is a dark comedy about a translator-turned-queenpin.
A G.I. Joe spin-off centered around the character of Snake Eyes.
In rapid succession over the past couple of years, the cinema of Hong Sang-soo has…