Tammy Faye Bakker and her husband, Jim, rise from humble beginnings to create the world’s largest religious broadcasting network and theme park.
It’s far from perfect but Zola delivers strong performances, visual language and sound design to make something unique and alluring.
Identifying Features takes time to get going but successfully wagers the audience’s patience with a terrifying finale that lingers long after the credits.
This week, Blake and Joe welcome Mike Jordan Laskey, host of AMDG: A Jesuit Podcast.
For this Queerly Ever After, we take a look at the 2012 film Morgan.
Let Us In attempts to recreate the feel of classic horror properties for children, only the results are not creepy, interesting, or original.
This week host Jesse Nussman is joined by Emily Wheeler and Kristy Strouse to discuss 20 years of Fast & Furious movies.
Mankind’s earliest settlers on the Martian frontier do what they must to survive the cosmic elements and one another.
F9 keeps to what the series does best: absurdly fun action and time spent with a family you root for, but it’s not the smoothest ride of the series.
While Petrunya herself is certainly a figure worthy of veneration, the film doesn’t quite live up to her character.
A summary of the films and screenwriting journey of Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, who gave the world Ed Wood and Man on the Moon.
As a portrait of one of the higher-profile fights to close the gender pay gap, it gets the job done with gusto.
To protect an 8-year-old girl, a dangerous assassin reunites with her mother and her lethal associates to take down a ruthless crime syndicate.
Film Inquiry spoke with James Kicklighter, director of the new documentary: The Sound of Identity.
The new Criterion release allows the viewer to appreciate everything Kobayashi’s towering masterwork has to offer at an even greater level.