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Rating Title | Year Author Quote
6/10
Time and Water (2026) Gregory Nussen By the time Magnason has related the death of Iceland's ice caps to global warming, the film has lost its ability to be a clarion call.
Posted Jan 28, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
See You When I See You (2026) Gregory Nussen At its best, See You When I See You makes cinematic what has previously felt so dry in other films: a therapy session.
Posted Jan 28, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
The Oldest Person in the World (2026) Gregory Nussen A soft and gentle hug of a film, one that reifies life's most sacred values while retaining the essential mystery behind our most pressing questions.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Public Access (2026) Gregory Nussen Smith's kaleidoscopic and deeply moving documentary is a wildly impressive archival project that curates a wide breadth of footage from a period of public television that was especially radical in its application of free speech.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
I Want Your Sex (2026) Gregory Nussen It's a funny film, an occasionally sexy film, and it's definitely an odd film, but its never really any of those things for as much as it could be and never quite for the reasons Araki thinks it is.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
3/10
The Moment (2026) Gregory Nussen There is a certain hubris to making a film that is absolutely devoid of stakes, but it's hard to describe that gall as anything but absurdly arrogant, or else woefully out of touch.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
4/10
Bedford Park (2026) Gregory Nussen Without any proper attention paid to momentum, it feels impossible to believe there's any chemistry percolating here
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Silenced (2026) Gregory Nussen Silenced works as a solid primer in helping us understand the gaps of the #MeToo movement and the enduring work we all must put in to erase implicit gender bias in the courtroom.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
The Friend's House Is Here (2026) Gregory Nussen An extraordinary film of uncommon bravery, it acts as a protest by the nature of its very existence, a story of underground artists refusing censorship and authoritarianism in favor of a life lived with joy in truthfulness.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
Islands (2025) Emedo Ashibeze It’s watchable, occasionally absorbing, but rarely urgent. It’s hard to shake off the feeling that Gerster introduces narrative ideas he has little interest in fully developing.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
4/10
Worldbreaker (2025) Emedo Ashibeze Worldbreaker’s problem, however, is not necessarily a lack of a grand budget but a prosaic script that underexplores the movie's full potential, resulting in an experience unworthy of its own sci-fi ambitions.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
Wicker (2026) Gregory Nussen Brought to life by yet another astounding performance by Olivia Colman, Wicker's treasure is in its hopeless romanticism that insists that pure love and adamant individuality can create irrevocable progress through osmosis.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
Carousel (2026) Gregory Nussen Beautiful and gently stirring, Lambert's film works best on the backs of Pine and Slate's performances, both of which rank amongst the best of each actor's respective careers.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
The Wrecking Crew (2026) Grant Hermanns The combination of Soto's slick direction and nice chemistry between Bautista and Momoa ultimately keeps The Wrecking Crew mostly afloat.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
The Invite (2026) Gregory Nussen The Invite is a magnetic, acerbically funny, romantic nightmare in the vein of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
4/10
The Gallerist (2026) Gregory Nussen The Gallerist is a tepid satire. Even calling it such feels generous, as the film is almost entirely devoid of genuine humor.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
10/10
Once Upon a Time in Harlem (2026) Gregory Nussen As much a testament to the tenacity of spirit of a bygone generation of Black leadership as it is to the power of a good cocktail party, The Greaves' family documentary is nothing if not an endorsement for archival preservation.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Take Me Home (2026) Gregory Nussen The film's warmth and its heartbreak are reflections of her perspective alone. But its approach is so diffuse that its uncertain and purposefully ambiguous ending is misguided at best.
Posted Jan 27, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
Send Help (2026) Todd Gilchrist There’s no director likelier to elicit shock, hysterical laughter and complete disgust from the same moment, and Raimi delivers those moments with the frequency and precision of planes waiting behind each other on a runway.
Posted Jan 26, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Return to Silent Hill (2026) Grant Hermanns Between unnecessary lore changes and a lack of thematic heft in some of its storytelling, the filmmaker's return to the franchise is a weird mix of exciting recreations, gorgeous visuals and disappointing execution.
Posted Jan 23, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
The Last First: Winter K2 (2026) Gregory Nussen An unusual documentary in that its surface-level subject matter acts as a metaphor for a score of contemporary social ills, The Last First is a surprising doc of uncompromising tension.
Posted Jan 23, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
Paralyzed by Hope: The Maria Bamford Story (2026) Gregory Nussen An essential doc that reveals the origins of her singular voice with exceeding warmth and vulnerability.
Posted Jan 23, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
The Incomer (2026) Gregory Nussen A darling movie brought to life by a star-turning performance from Gayle Rankin, but there's not a ton under the hood.
Posted Jan 23, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
American Pachuco: The Legend of Luis Valdez (2026) Gregory Nussen David Alvarado's loving and truly joyous portrait of Valdez is as big and as exciting as the man's theatrical output, but it is also frustratingly topographical and abrupt.
Posted Jan 23, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
The History of Concrete (2026) Gregory Nussen The History of Concrete is, unsurprisingly, for the How To With John Wilson creator, blisteringly funny. More startling is that it is also one of the finer, more moving documentaries of recent memory.
Posted Jan 23, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Mother of Flies (2025) Gregory Nussen The film's creeping dread and emotional beats are strong, but it is also frustratingly repetitious and energetically stagnant.
Posted Jan 22, 2026Edit critic review
4/10
H Is for Hawk (2025) Gregory Nussen H is for Hawk induces the same effect as taking a sedative.
Posted Jan 22, 2026Edit critic review
4/10
Mercy (2026) Gregory Nussen There is a lot of exciting, tactile action and the 3D is satisfyingly justified, but its neoconservative outlook on these burgeoning sociopolitical questions is bland, absurd, and exceedingly silly.
Posted Jan 22, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
A Useful Ghost (2025) Gregory Nussen Underneath its story of the sudden animation of household products is a layered critique of late-stage capitalism.
Posted Jan 16, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
Deepfaking Sam Altman (2025) Gregory Nussen Lough's film is watchable and charming, though as protest, or even as simple critique, it's fairly thin.
Posted Jan 16, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Killer Whale (2026) Emedo Ashibeze Writer-director Jo-Anne Brechin's stance on wildlife captivity permeates the film, inexorably softening the survival thriller's intensity.
Posted Jan 16, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
The Rip (2026) Alex Harrison It's like the film is cosplaying as a tense, twisty thriller – there's a shared understanding it's not the genuine article, but the better its imitation, the more endearing it becomes.
Posted Jan 16, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
A Private Life (2025) Gregory Nussen What begins as an off-kilter character portrait of a prickly intellectual comfortably slides into a murder mystery investigated by an amateur sleuth with a personal life more chaotic than the lives of the people she treats.
Posted Jan 15, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Night Patrol (2025) Grant Hermanns Ryan Prows has assembled a star-studded cast and its base structure of corrupt cops being vampires is one rife for tackling the very real issues of police corruption in the world, yet the mix never quite comes together.
Posted Jan 15, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (2026) Gregory Nussen It is certainly the franchise's best film, the most empathetic thus far while also being unrelenting in its tension.
Posted Jan 13, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
People We Meet on Vacation (2026) Molly Freeman A wildly entertaining and heartwarming romantic comedy that's perfect for fans of the genre, those who've read Henry's original novel and anyone looking for a date night movie.
Posted Jan 12, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Signing Tony Raymond (2025) Emedo Ashibeze Its center of gravity comes neither from a player nor a coach nor even performance, but from the behind-the-scenes capitalism that governs the game.
Posted Jan 12, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
All You Need Is Kill (2025) Gregory Nussen Kenichiro Akimoto's brisk film is a more faithful adaptation of Hiroshi Sakurazaka's book than Doug Liman's was, but what it gains in authenticity it loses in propulsion.
Posted Jan 12, 2026Edit critic review
9/10
Seeds (2025) Gregory Nussen Shyne's film addresses the entrenched and systemic racial discrimination these generational farmers face, but most of the film’s emotional heft comes to us through uncommon and highly focused images.
Posted Jan 12, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
Shuffle (2025) Gregory Nussen Flaherty provides an essential, if sometimes overstretched, personal look at the way people in legitimate need of help are exploited for financial gain.
Posted Jan 12, 2026Edit critic review
7.5/10
Greenland 2: Migration (2026) Liz Declan Greenland 2 ultimately lands itself in a league of its own by proving that movies like these can tell a story about the aftermath of a disaster that's just as spectacular as the destruction it follows.
Posted Jan 08, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
Primate (2025) Gregory Nussen The pulpier and the dumber it gets, Primate provides a pretty good reason to get to the theater in January.
Posted Jan 08, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
The Mother and the Bear (2024) Gregory Nussen When Ma focuses on the grounded journey of Sara's fish-out-of-water story and the genuine chemistry between her and Sam, the film sings.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
Homegrown (2024) Gregory Nussen Much of the footage is illuminating, particularly when it focuses on the complexities of former Proud Boys chief of Salt Lake City Thad Cisneros, but a lot of what is included does not add much to an already crowded conversation.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
3/10
I Was a Stranger (2024) Gregory Nussen Because Andersen doesn't let us sit with any one perspective for longer than about fifteen minutes, we are stuck at arm's length.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
3/10
My Neighbor Adolf (2022) Gregory Nussen It is effectively a two-hander buddy comedy that asks you to be sympathetic towards one of history's great villains, treating both Nazism and extreme PTSD as personality quirks.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
All That's Left of You (2025) Gregory Nussen Despite how intimate its narrative is, it is able to collapse time and space to lay out in painstaking detail the domino effect of state-sanctioned violence, and how it inevitably, irrevocably, bleeds into the domestic space.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
OBEX (2025) Gregory Nussen Watching OBEX is a rare treat, most successful as hapic gaming recreation, perhaps ironically, when it isn't in the game but within Conor's oddball, isolated world.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
1/10
Sleepwalker (2026) Gregory Nussen If, for most of us, nightmares are our worst fears made manifest in surrealist, haunting imagery that is difficult to recall even moments after having been seen, then Auman's imagination is woefully stuck in painfully obvious, literalist overdrive.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
Young Mothers (2025) Gregory Nussen A patchwork portrait of five teenagers with newborns or little ones on the way, the film boasts likable performances but not much else.
Posted Jan 07, 2026Edit critic review
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