Sundance 2025 Review: Sorry, Baby – “A film with humour and heart.”
A warning – this film, and hence this review, mentions sexual assault. Please take care while reading. I didn’t really know...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Train Dreams – “A thoughtful exploration of a life lived.”
Trying his best to survive the ebb and flow of life in the American West is a logger who witnesses the best and worse of human behaviour...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Omaha – “A solid directorial debut.”
A young widower struggling financially takes his daughter and son on a cross country road trip. In the early hours of the morning, a...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: The Things You Kill
The suspicious death of his mother causes a part-time university professor to seek retribution. A dream being recounted by the wife of an...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: LUZ
An ex-con attempting to reconnect with his estranged daughter and a Hong Kong gallerist dealing with the impending death of her stepmother...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Prime Minister – “Makes a world leader approachable and understandable.”
In 2017, Jacinda Ardern became the self-described ‘reluctant’ Prime Minister of New Zealand. Just weeks before an election...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Middletown
In the early 1990s an unconventional high school teacher leads his students on a journalistic crusade against the toxic waste being...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Khartoum – “an endearing and authentic presentation.”
Refugees from Khartoum, Sudan recount and reenact their life before, during, and after the civil war. What began as a project to profile...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Where the Wind Comes From
Frustrated by their stagnate lives in Tunisia, a rebellious teenager and a young adult attempt to make the artistic aspirations of the...
Read MoreSundance 2025 Review: Brides – “The filmmakers create empathy while exploring the reasons for their decisions.”
Two teenagers sit in an airport, sharing a milkshake and scarfing fries. They look slightly older than their fifteen years, perhaps...
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