Thrillist Entertainment Staff
Thrillist Entertainment Staff's reviews only count toward the Tomatometer® when published at Tomatometer-approved publication(s).
4 Little Girls (1997)
100%
EDIT
“4 Little Girls is a masterpiece that needs to be seen and remembered.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Unseen (2016)
EDIT
“This true-crime documentary offers a harrowing look at what fate unfortunately often has in store for marginalized women, and why society turns a blind eye to their wellbeing.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
No No: A Dockumentary (2014)
97%
EDIT
“No No: A Dockumentary explores the incident, Ellis' rebellious life, and the contextual culture of the 1960s and '70s that turned the player into a low-key folk hero.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Janis: Little Girl Blue (2015)
94%
EDIT
“Until Janis Joplin came along. Her scratchy, whiskey-bruised voice arrested a generation and, however accidentally, carved a place for those without a Y chromosome. Little Girl Blue tracks her rock takeover to the very end, up to her tragic death.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Long Strange Trip (2017)
100%
EDIT
“Love 'em or hate 'em, when someone goes this deep, you can't help but feel absorbed.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Gleason (2016)
96%
EDIT
“What sounds like a completely devastating tearjerker is filled with humor thanks to its subjects' candor.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Gimme Danger (2016)
95%
EDIT
“Like Jarmusch's movies, Gimme Danger is 100% authentic cool from beginning to end, fortified by Iggy Pop's shirtless interviews and joint-smoked memories.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
I Am Not Your Negro (2016)
99%
EDIT
“This documentary, based on Baldwin's unfinished Remember This House manuscript, offers a view of the United States as disturbingly relevant today as it was in the late 1970s.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Human Flow (2017)
91%
EDIT
“In beautiful visual language, Ai Weiwei conveys the stark horror and brutalist logic of the choices people make when stuck between a rock and a hard place -- or a war and abject poverty.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
The Endless Summer (1966)
100%
EDIT
“There's living the dream life, and then there's living the effin' dream.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Cropsey (2009)
93%
EDIT
“One of the creepiest documentaries ever made, Joshua Zeman and Barbara Brancaccio's film shows how some urban legends are based on true stories even more unsettling than the myths.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
The Central Park Five (2012)
92%
EDIT
“The Central Park Five dissects the political and social tension that turned an already shocking series of events into one of the most racially charged moments in New York City history.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Cartel Land (2015)
90%
EDIT
“The run-and-gun style and Heineman's jaw-dropping access will keep your heart pounding through this examination of the current War on Drugs.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
The Bomb (2013)
EDIT
“A kaleidoscopic montage of archival footage of military exercises, nuclear bomb tests and more unnerving material -- some of it more beautiful than you'd prefer to acknowledge.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
De Palma (2015)
95%
EDIT
“Pretty much anyone with an eye for great film loves Brian De Palma.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Cameraperson (2016)
100%
EDIT
“It serves as a peek behind the curtain of documentary filmmaking, exposing even more than what's usually shown in the genre.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
City of Ghosts (2017)
98%
EDIT
“Not for the faint of heart, but well worth it.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer (2003)
85%
EDIT
“A deeply fascinating follow-up because of how much of Wuornos' story is changed from one film to the next, as well as for its moving consideration of the complex and often unbalanced relationship between documentarian and subject.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Author: The JT LeRoy Story (2016)
77%
EDIT
“A highly compelling collage of stylish archival footage and recorded phone conversations that flesh out this notorious Catfish-like caper of the literary world.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
The Act of Killing (2012)
96%
EDIT
“It all makes sense when you submit yourself to Oppenheimer's bizarre, tragic, and eye-opening experiment.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
Abacus: Small Enough to Jail (2016)
93%
EDIT
“It's a slice of recent history that still has yet to become a part of the collective consciousness, but Abacus aims to play a small part in rectifying that.” –
Thrillist
Nov 28, 2018
Full Review
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