All Reviews articles – Page 201
-
Reviews
'The Third Wife': Toronto Review
A 14-year-old girl becomes the third wife of a wealthy landowner in 19th century Vietnam
-
Reviews
'Outlaw King': Toronto Review
David Mackenzie recreates medieval Scotland for this violent Netflix-funded historical epic.
-
Reviews
'Greta': Toronto Review
An unexpectedly camp thriller from Neil Jordan benefits from an eye-raising performance from Isabelle Huppert
-
Reviews
'The White Crow': Telluride Review
Ralph Fiennes tracks the tense defection of Kirov Ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev to the West in 1961
-
Reviews
'Capri-Revolution': Venice Review
Mario Martone’s lurid drama is set on the island off Naples in 1910
-
Reviews
'Dachra': Venice Review
School students uncover the mysteries of a creepy village in this Tunisian horror
-
Reviews
'The Fall Of The American Empire': Toronto Review
A big-hearted caper from Denis Arcand, 30 years after ‘The Decline of the American Empire’
-
Reviews
'The Summer House': Venice Review
More familial musings from director, co-writer, and lead actor Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
-
Reviews
'Our Time': Venice Review
Carlos Reygadas writes, directs and co-stars with his wife in this unflinchingly honest film
-
Reviews
'22 July': Venice Review
Paul Greengrass sensitively depicts the 2011 terrorist attacks in Norway
-
Reviews
'If Life Gives You Lemons': Venice Review
A mother’s illness forces her son to grow up fast in this intimate Italian drama
-
Reviews
'American Dharma': Venice Review
Errol Morris takes on Steve Bannon in this cinematic if elusive documentary
-
Reviews
'Vox Lux': Venice Review
Brady Corbet takes the stage for his second film, with Natalie Portman starring in this ’intellectually-charged spectacle’
-
Reviews
'The River': Venice Review
Five brothers begin to break free of constraints in a remote Kazakh village
-
Reviews
'The Accused (Acusada)': Venice Review
A young woman stands trial for a sensational murder in Buenos Aires
-
Reviews
'Jinpa': Venice Review
Pema Tesden’s fifth feature from Tibet is backed by Hong Kong’s Wong Kar-wai