T/movie-reviews

‘Clika’ Review: Dreaming of the Stage
Movies, January 22

This film about a fieldworker trying to make it in music offers a Mexican American spin on underdog dreamer movies like “8 Mile.”

‘Mercy’ Review: Watching the Detective Watching
Movies, January 22

Chris Pratt plays a man accused of killing his wife in this witless action-thriller where harsh justice is dispensed by artificial intelligence.

‘Return to Silent Hill’ Review: A Macabre Spectacle
Movies, January 22

This latest installment in the video game movie franchise looks like it’s meant to be played.

‘In Cold Light’ Review: On Parole and on the Run
Movies, January 22

In this dreary thriller, an ex-con faces escalating dangers and familial strife when she attempts to regain control of her drug operation.

‘A New Love in Tokyo’ Review: Sex in the Air
Movies, January 22

The erotic film, first shown in 1994, finds room for sweetness with its kink.

‘H Is for Hawk’ Review: All Shall Be Well
Movies, January 22

Claire Foy stars along with a goshawk in an adaptation of Helen MacDonald’s award-winning memoir.

‘Disneyland Handcrafted’ Review: Making the Happiest Place on Earth
Movies, January 22

Leslie Iwerks’s documentary is a captivating look at the creative and logistical challenges of building a beloved theme park on California farmland.

‘Mr. Nobody Against Putin’ Review: Indoctrination in the Classroom
Movies, January 22

A primary schoolteacher in Russia documents the government’s efforts to teach students pro-war messages.

‘Kidnapped: Elizabeth Smart’ Review: A Survivor Speaks Out
Movies, January 21

In this documentary, Smart tells the frightening narrative of her 2002 kidnapping at age 14, in Utah.

In ‘Seeds,’ Farms and a Way of Life Hang in the Balance
Movies, January 16

The director Brittany Shyne’s film is slow-moving and lyrical in its focus on the seasonal rhythms of the work, even as it shifts to policy concerns.

‘The Rip’ Review: Clean Cop, Dirty Cop
Movies, January 16

Matt Damon and Ben Affleck play grizzled cops looking at each other sideways in this Netflix crime thriller that has all the concepts but not much else.

‘Queen Kelly’ Review: His Majesty, Von Stroheim
Movies, January 15

The 1929 silent film returns in a shimmering, sensitively scored restoration that brings out the lurid and the romantic in Erich von Stroheim’s story of orphan-meets-prince.

‘A Useful Ghost’ Review: Machine Yearning
Movies, January 15

A grieving widower finds his problems are just beginning when his wife returns in the form of a household appliance in this gloriously funny, shape-shifting debut feature.

‘Sound of Falling’ Review: A Fortress of Feminine Mysteries
Movies, January 15

This detour-heavy film moves across time periods to follow girlhood mischief, desire and abuse on a German farm.

‘Shuffle’ Review: The Real Price of Rehab
Movies, January 15

Benjamin Flaherty discovered some disturbing tendencies in the addiction recovery industry. His documentary is upsetting and revelatory.

‘A Private Life’ Review: Jodie Foster Uncovers a Twisty Plot in Paris
Movies, January 15

Speaking in French (but cursing in English), the actress plays an American psychiatrist abroad who stumbles into unexpected intrigue.

‘Night Patrol’ Review: Things That Go Bump in the Night
Movies, January 15

Rival gangs in Los Angeles join forces when a bloodsucking unit of the police department invades their community.

‘Deepfaking Sam Altman’ Review: Altmanesque
Movies, January 15

A filmmaker who can’t secure an interview with the A.I. executive turns to technology for a solution.

‘All You Need Is Kill’ Review: It Doesn’t Bear Repeating
Movies, January 15

By condensing the logic of the action, this anime adaptation of Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s light novel undermines the story’s excitement.

‘28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ Review: Sympathy for the Devil
Movies, January 15

The latest installment in the zombie saga is all about evil and good, and whether any of it exists.

‘Primate’ Review: Going Ape
Movies, January 9

This blood-splattered survival film about a rabies-infected chimpanzee is powered by unabashedly simple pleasures.

‘People We Meet on Vacation’ Review: When Stuffy Met Silly
Movies, January 9

Love grows between a restless travel writer and a contented homebody in this occasionally cute, instantly forgettable romantic comedy.

‘Magellan’ Review: The Beauty and the Bloodshed of a Smaller World
Movies, January 8

Gael García Bernal plays the explorer Ferdinand Magellan in Lav Diaz’s portrait of a brutal adventurer and his travels across the globe.

‘Greenland 2: Migration’ Review: The New World
Movies, January 8

Gerard Butler returns for more earthshaking action in this crowd-pleasing postapocalyptic thriller.

‘Young Mothers’ Review: Teen Parents, Breaking Cycles
Movies, January 8

The Dardenne brothers’ latest film is a tender portrait of four teenage moms in a Belgian maternity shelter.

‘OBEX’ Review: An Analog Nightmare
Movies, January 8

In this indie oddity boasting visceral D.I.Y. effects, a gentle loner enters the world of a video game to save his beloved dog.

‘My Neighbor Adolf’ Review: The Nazi Next Door
Movies, January 8

The actors Udo Kier and David Hayman square off in this domestic drama where a man is convinced that his neighbor is Adolf Hitler.

‘Holding Liat’ Review: Hostage Situation
Movies, January 8

This unpredictable documentary follows a man and his family as they wait for news of his daughter and her husband, who were kidnapped in the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel.

‘Dead Man’s Wire’ Review: When the Action Is Razor Thin
Movies, January 8

Dramatizing an odd news item from 1977, Gus Van Sant’s crime film isn’t crazy enough.

‘All That’s Left of You’ Review: Hearts, Minds, History
Movies, January 8

The Palestinian American director Cherien Dabis offers eloquent context with her generational drama about Palestinian men.

‘We Bury the Dead’ Review: A Down Under Twist on the Zombie Flick
Movies, January 1

Daisy Ridley plays a woman who hopes her husband will spring back to life after a tragedy annihilates the population of Tasmania.

‘The Mother and the Bear’ Review: Dating for Her Daughter
Movies, January 1

This Korean Canadian soap opera is a moderately charming, if blandly earnest, drama about the dissonance and frictions between immigrant parents and their children

‘The Dutchman’ Review: André Holland Is Lost in New York
Movies, January 1

The actor stars along side Kate Mara in a psychological thriller that goes deep into the Black Arts archives.

‘Cirque du Soleil: Without a Net’ Review: How the Magic Happens
Weekend, July 25

This documentary chronicles the reboot and reopening in Las Vegas of the acrobatic show “O,” which shutdown during the pandemic.

‘Fire Through Dry Grass’ Review: Unsafe Space
Weekend, September 28

This enlightening, troubling documentary chronicles life (and death) among residents in a long-term care facility during the heights of the pandemic.

‘Broadway Rising’ Review: Surviving the Pandemic
Weekend, December 27

Stakeholders including Patti LuPone and Lynn Nottage share their real-time reactions to New York theater’s shutdown and reopening in Amy Rice’s documentary.

‘Bad Axe’ Review: A Pandemic Family Portrait
Weekend, November 17

The filmmaker David Siev chronicles his family’s struggle to keep their Michigan restaurant afloat through the pandemic in this hermetic documentary.