Tribeca Film Festival
Kristy Strouse samples some of the Immersive and Gaming opportunities at this year’s Tribeca Film Fesrtival.
From anger to frustration to tears, Take Care of Maya delivers a deeply affecting look at the breakdown of a family when another says its broken.
With Catching Dust, Stuart Gatt crafts a narrative tale around the explosive power of human emotion.
The spell Playland casts over its subject matter, an act of poetic reanimation, carries over to its viewers.
This is Not Financial Advice achieves its overall goal, without explicitly telling audiences the right or wrong way to embark on the financial market.
Against All Enemies is surprising in the emotions its garners from its audience, always resolute to is overall message, but unafraid to listen.
Rule of Two Walls is one of the most vital and poignant documentaries of the 2023 Tribeca Film Festival.
One of my favorite times of the year is coming to a close. While I…
Spanning the release of her film Hustlers to her Superbowl Halftime performance, Amanda Micheli’s Halftime documents Jennifer Lopez.
With her second report, Kristy Strouse covers Cherry and Next Exit!
Fear and paranoia are the perfect catalysts for mass panic in Natalia Sinelnikova’s We Might As Well Be Dead.
In Sophie Hyde’s Good Luck To You, Leo Grande, the stigma surrounding sexuality and age are examined and pushed.
Cynthia Lowen’s Battleground dives into the realities of an America at war with women’s reproductive rights.
In her first report from Tribeca Film Festival 2022, Kristy Strouse reviews Family Dinner, Huesera & A Wounded Fawn!
At the 2022 Tribeca Film Festival, Patrick Bresnan and Ivete Lucas’ Naked Gardens delves into a secluded nudist colony in Florida.