1014962

12 items

‘The Vast of Night’

First-time director Andrew Patterson’s low-budget, wildly inventive take on vintage “look to the sky” science fiction is just the mind bender we need for the virus-fed paranoia of our troubled times. A small town in 1950s New Mexico may or may not be the first stop of an alien invasion. Who says a teen radio […]

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‘True History of the Kelly Gang’

Director Justin Kurzel’s revisionist Western about Aussie outlaw Ned Kelly (a stellar George McKay) is looking for a deeper truth about the legendary rock-star bank robber and his 19th-century gang of cross-dressing bandits, who fought against British colonial rule in the name of the rural poor. Trained by bushranger Harry Power (Russell Crowe, fully deranged), […]

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‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’

There were bigger, showier movies in the first half of 2020, but none took a more direct path to the heart than Eliza Hittman’s quiet stunner about a Pennsylvania teen named Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) and her trip to Manhattan for an abortion. With only her cousin Skylar (Talia Ryder) to lean on, Autumn faces harrowing […]

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‘The King of Staten Island’

SNL favorite and Staten Island native Pete Davidson had a firefighter dad who died on 9/11. Davidson — the film calls him Scott (his dad’s name) — was just seven when tragedy struck. With invaluable input from director and co-writer Judd Apatow, the comedian uses just enough of his own story to play Scott as […]

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‘The Invisible Man’

Elisabeth Moss and film-maker Leigh Whannell raise the bar on the 1897 H.G. Wells classic by making the smart and timely decision to shift focus from the title character — a wealthy optics innovator (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) — to his architect girlfriend (Moss), whom he keeps controlling and abusing even after his alleged death. The spotlight […]

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‘First Cow’

This new masterwork from director Kelly Reichardt (Old Joy, Meek’s Cutoff), set in Oregon during the 1820s Gold Rush, pits a cook named Cookie (John Magaro) and a runaway Chinese immigrant (Orion Lee) in a fight for survival. Their deliverance comes in the form of a crime and a cow, whose milk they steal undercover […]

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‘Da 5 Bloods’

Spike Lee delivers a righteous, unforgettable epic about four Vietnam vets known as “Da Bloods” (played by Delroy Lindo, Clarke Peters, Norm Lewis, and Isiah Whitlock Jr.), who return to their former battleground to bring home the remains of the fifth blood (Chadwick Boseman) and recover a buried treasure. That’s just the plot. What simmers […]

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‘Crip Camp’

Subtitled “A Disability Revolution,” this documentary (part of Barack and Michelle Obama’s Higher Ground series) is a genuine eye-opener. Camp Jened, dubbed “Crip Camp” by attendees, was a hippie-run haven for the handicapped near Woodstock, New York. Through archival footage shot during the 1970s, filmmakers James Lebrecht and Nicole Newnham show us the pleasure these […]

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‘Blue Story’

A London-set crime drama about rival street gangs, this standout first feature from rapper-director Andrew Onwubolu, a.k.a. Rapman, follows Timmy (Stephen Odubola) and Marco (Micheal Ward), friends who go to the same high school but live in different neighborhoods. Class warfare erupts before the violence does. And the West Side Story romance between Timmy and […]

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‘Beastie Boys Story’

It only sounds simple to film Michael “Mike D” Diamond and Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz onstage at Brooklyn’s Kings Theatre in 2019, using live talk, music videos, vintage photos, and home movies (along with archival interviews with Adam “MCA” Yauch, who died of cancer in 2012) to tell the Beastie Boys’ story. But their pal, director […]

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‘Bad Education’

As a New York public-school superintendent who embezzled more than $11 million from the system, Hugh Jackman gives the performance of his career (sorry, Wolverine). His character, Frank Tassone, is passionate about education — but does this man’s genuine dedication to his job jibe with his self-deception, Botox addiction, and a secret life funded through […]

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‘The Assistant’

What does it feel like to work for a monster? Look to this lacerating, low-budget provocation from writer-director Kitty Green for an answer. Jane, an office assistant played with riveting restraint by Julia Garner, works for a predatory movie mogul who seems a lot like Harvey Weinstein — or really, any employer who uses his […]

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