Email Author Andrew Schenker
Fred (Noah Bean) is the slimiest little shit to hit the screen in years, and one of the chief pleasures of J.C. Khoury's inadvertently topical... More >>
Fanny, Annie & Danny is one of those movies where everyone is either a nasty human being or a loser—often both at the same time.... More >>
Good intentions don’t always translate into good cinema, and in Victor A. Martinez and Ryan Schafer’s documentary, Laredoans Speak:... More >>
A middling portrait of mid-20th-century Lithuanian violin virtuoso Jascha Heifetz, Peter Rosen’s doc God’s Fiddler attempts to... More >>
With an incisive understanding of character, believably naturalistic acting, and lengthy scenes that don’t feel stretched out so much as... More >>
The Double, Michael Brandt’s post–Cold War spy film, is grade-B hokum, but it’s not without its occasional generic... More >>
Cargo, the latest entry in the emergent sex-slavery subgenre, posits forced prostitution as a model of global capitalism. The trade is run... More >>
Everything documented in Frederick Marxs Journey from Zanskar is fraught with the potential for sensationalist and/or inspirational... More >>
"Found films from the everyday" is how filmmakers Alex Kalman and Benny and Josh Safdie describe the hundreds of tiny video snippets that... More >>
Brimming over with outrage not so much at the eponymous Ponzi schemer as against the government body that failed to rein him in, Chasing... More >>
In the dusty small-town Texas of Amy Wendel's All She Can—the centerpiece movie of the week-long Latino-themed Maya Indie Film... More >>
Charting a self-enclosed world of dancing, drugs, and fucking—and eventually true love—House of Boys details the mid-'80s... More >>
It would be virtually impossible to present the 197-mile relay race that gives Christoph Baadens Hood to Coast its title as... More >>
What do demons, zombies, and a kid that looks like a vampire have to do with one another? Not a whole lot, except that all figure one way or... More >>
Who is invited to speak for the tribe? asks filmmaker Deborah Kaufman in Between Two Worlds, pondering the hijacking of the... More >>
We probably need another prison drama like a shiv to the chest, but R has at least a few things going for it. Tobias Lindholm and... More >>
If the structure behind Jig seems familiar, it is. Thats because Sue Bournes film employs the same formula as nearly every... More >>
Back in 2005, Albert Brooks went Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World. In Ahmed Ahmeds Just Like Us, the... More >>
Uruphong Raksasads Agrarian Utopia is the most heavily process-oriented film to hit screens in recent years. Recalling Lisandro... More >>
A grandfather on deaths door, a slightly shady uncle, a New Agey Momand one college kid returning home for the summer to the... More >>
In the brief segment of Under the Boardwalk: The Monopoly Story devoted to the history of the classic board game, we learn that the... More >>
For a film about spiritual crisis, Vito Bonafacci is surprisingly placidall lush widescreen photography and soothing strings. But... More >>
Lebanon, Pa. begins as a tale about male, middle-aged self-discovery, but soon becomes something quite different: a clear-eyed if... More >>
When charged with making a documentary about a subject whose work is far more interesting than his life, how does a filmmaker proceed? If... More >>
Only a true fanatical follower of the freak folk musical scene with a high tolerance for artless verité camerawork will find... More >>
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