Tegan and Sara and Their Catfishing Horror Story
“Fanatical,” an eye-popping film directed by Erin Lee Carr, details the bizarre 16-year ordeal that the duo and their fans endured.
“Fanatical,” an eye-popping film directed by Erin Lee Carr, details the bizarre 16-year ordeal that the duo and their fans endured.
The dark side of college fraternity life comes to light in this harrowing, well-acted campus drama.
Anna Kendrick’s ably directed drama about a real-life serial killer focuses on his victims instead.
As this documentary by Brett Story and Stephen Maing chronicles, the efforts to unionize a warehouse in New York were successful — but also a grind.
Cate Blanchett stars as a lusty, preening stateswomen in a geopolitical satire from the experimental filmmaker Guy Maddin.
In the forests of northeast India, an ecologist tracking moths creates a tiny oasis of light in the darkness.
Written and directed by Marco Calvani, this film follows a gay Brazilian man working under the table one summer in Provincetown, Mass.
An art gallery owner (Michael Keaton) gets a shock when his second wife (Laura Benanti) goes to rehab and he has to take care of their twins.
For his first film, the artist Titus Kaphar delivers an unsentimental and autobiographical gem.
This overstuffed movie fails to wrap up its myriad professional and domestic dramas, despite a few moments of promise.
Moke (Josh Brolin) is a reformed thief who gets roped into one last job with his twin brother, Jady (Peter Dinklage).
In this sequel, the pop sensation Skye Riley (Naomi Scott) is preparing to begin her comeback tour a year after a brutal car accident.
Mikey Madison gives a career-making performance in a Palme d’Or-winning film about the romance between a sex worker and a rich scion.
The film captures the arduous work of South Korean haenyeo, who harvest seafood without diving gear, and whose traditions may be ending.
Laura Dern and Liam Hemsworth star in a muddled romance without much to say.
The latest documentary from Errol Morris looks at the Trump administration’s practice of taking children from their parents at the southern border.
In this ribald fictional telling of a young Trump’s rise, the man responsible is the lawyer Roy Cohn, played to sleazy perfection by Jeremy Strong.
A brisk documentary by Barnaby Thompson counters that the tuxedo-wearing playwright hid his insecurities under a platinum-plated veneer.
The deaths remain grisly, but the pacing uneven in this new installment in Damien Leone’s horror franchise.
Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield star in this weepie romance that tries to be modern by unfolding over three intersecting timelines.
The producer and musician gets the biographical documentary treatment — with an unexpected twist.
This remake of a hit Thai film about college admissions, starring Callina Liang, adds an element of racial politics to its heist story.
John Lennon and Yoko Ono invade middle-American living rooms in this cute but shallow documentary.
To the extent this documentary about Lyle and Erik Menendez has appeal, it is of the tabloid variety.
Out this week, a period possession movie starring Sarah Paulson, a chef-driven supernatural thriller starring Ariana DeBose and more.
“Food and Country” argues that our food production systems don’t work and offers potential solutions.
Todd Phillips’s “Joker” sequel stars Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga who sing and dance like crazy kids, but the movie is seriously un-fun.
In this travel documentary, two parents take their children on a spectacular world tour before a rare genetic condition may cause blindness.
The French absurdist director Quentin Dupieux did not make a biopic of Salvador Dalí — he adopted the Surrealist painter’s approach to deliver a particularly loopy tale.
A boy starts a new school and gets a history lesson from his grandmother, played by Helen Mirren.
Saoirse Ronan gives another stunning performance in a story about an alcoholic in search of healing.
A limp body-swapping comedy doesn’t really know what makes its subgenre so funny.
In leaked phone calls home, Russian soldiers grapple with the war they’re waging. This new documentary sets the calls’ swagger and anguish against images of the invasion’s devastation.
The emotional core of this crowd-pleasing documentary concerns a couple who cannot marry without jeopardizing their disability benefits.
Will Ferrell and Harper Steele, a former “Saturday Night Live” writer, use a road trip to navigate their relationship now that she is out as a trans woman.
The director’s latest is a great-man story about an architect, played by Adam Driver, driven by ideals and big plans. It’s a personal statement on an epic scale.
Chris Sanders’s movie about a robotic assistant and the gosling she raises is defined by dazzling visuals and frank ideas about the circle of life.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a detective running from his past in a murder mystery that is mostly a stiff slog to get through.
A physicist becomes embroiled in a conspiracy throughout this German meta-thriller. Shot in black-and-white, the film pays homage to Hollywood classics.
This inspirational sports movie follows a high school basketball team in New Mexico with deep Native American heritage.
Kate Winslet embodies the tenacity of the photographer Lee Miller, who documented World War II for British Vogue.
A taut and thrilling thriller about sleep issues is also a clever drama about early marriage.
When it debuted 50 years ago, “S.N.L.” was chaotic, rangy, even offensive. But nothing’s wild or crazy in Jason Reitman’s fictional reimagining of its first episode.
A lackluster prequel to the 1968 horror classic “Rosemary’s Baby” doesn’t have much to add.
In this documentary by Yariv Mozer, Israelis who attended the Nova music festival near the Gaza border describe how they survived the attack last year.
This documentary chronicles the reboot and reopening in Las Vegas of the acrobatic show “O,” which shutdown during the pandemic.
This enlightening, troubling documentary chronicles life (and death) among residents in a long-term care facility during the heights of the pandemic.
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.
The filmmaker David Siev chronicles his family’s struggle to keep their Michigan restaurant afloat through the pandemic in this hermetic documentary.