While searching for her missing mother, intrepid teen Enola Holmes uses her sleuthing skills to outsmart big brother Sherlock and help a runaway lord.
Shawn Glinis continues his video dispatches with There’s Always Tomorrow, An Ideal Place to Kill, Film Noir: The Dark Side of Cinema IV and Distant Journey.
While frequently animated and wry, Words on Bathroom Walls persists on being realistic with its portrayal of schizophrenia.
Entwined, from director Minos Nikolakakis, succeeds in its story, a slow burn that is hypnotizing, peeking the interest of its viewers.
Alex Lines had the opportunity to interview TT the Artist, the director of musical documentary Dark City Beneath the Beat.
While there are dozens of memorable moments, the way the film makes Batman a genuinely interesting and complex character remains its lasting legacy.
While Lucifer season 5 suffers from its fair share of shortcomings, the series remains entertaining and engaging.
Far from the dumpster fire many feared, The New Mutants is a much more mundane disappointment: a near miss.
#Unfit is a timely and vital documentary on the nature and presidency of Donald Trump.
A New York woman and her impulsive, larger-than-life father try to find out if her husband is having an affair.
Film Inquiry recently had the chance to talk with Scottish filmmaker Ninian Doff about his whacky, psychedelic teenage film, Get Duked!
Yankee won’t be a film that pleases everyone, but its flaws don’t necessarily tarnish what is an otherwise solid effort from a budding filmmaker.
Away is clearly built to inspire, a sense of inspiration feels even stronger and more emotional by the time you arrive at the finish line.
Cetigrade is a chilly thriller that never turns up the heat, leaving the audience with little reason to chill with the imperiled couple.
Wilson Kwong spoke with director Alex Prieur-Grenier about his film 2011, premiering at Fantasia Film Festival 2020.