Genuinely funny and made with a real passion for its heroes, Bill & Ted Face the Music is a most excellent addition to the franchise.
A lonely college freshman forges a strong connection with his resident assistant during a fraternity party.
Musanna Ahmed is back with four more films for this month’s September Bollywood column.
Michael Frank had the chance to chat with Amelia Moses about her latest film Bleed with Me, its beginnings, the disturbing imagery and more!
We Are Who We Are thankfully delivers on what it promises in an immersive coming of age drama from one of the greatest filmmakers of our generation.
Brutal in its subtlety, Língua Franca is a harrowing portrait of not only Trump’s America but also Duterte’s Philippines.
Apples is a gritty, subversive take on identity, memory and grief and an outstanding first feature from Greek director Christos Nikou.
Stephanie Archer had the opportunity to participate in a round table with director Jon Stevenson and cast members Wil Wheaton and Brian Landis Folkins about Rent-A-Pal.
Blake Collier takes a deeper look at the three Estus W Pirkle-Ron Ormond films that bookended the 1970s.
There is a rare nature and rough surface to Holler that will resonate with audiences through the need for survival, perseverance and opportunity.
Here are our seven featured crowdfunding campaign picks from our friends at Seed&Spark.
Matthias & Maxime, Xavier Dolan’s most open and tender film to date, sees him reclaiming his wunderkind status as a director once again.
While it may not land as smoothly as it hopes for, what #Alive offers here is still refreshing, warranting the attention of its audience.
In this second episode, Jake and Kristy recommend two more films they love: Something Wild & Your Sister’s Sister.
Radha is a down-on-her-luck NY playwright, who is desperate for a breakthrough before 40, so she reinvents herself as rapper RadhaMUSPrime.