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In ‘Swan Song,’ a Ballet Company Confronts a Painful Legacy
The film follows a National Ballet of Canada production of “Swan Lake” as dancers and others deal with long-simmering issues of racism and sexism.
The film follows a National Ballet of Canada production of “Swan Lake” as dancers and others deal with long-simmering issues of racism and sexism.
In this Chinese police procedural, directed by Wei Shujun, solutions are murkier than they first appear.
Based on the life of an Iranian German drug dealer and rapper, Fatih Akin’s interminable drama feels uncomfortably partial to its violent subject.
This raunchy comedy features Bette Midler, Susan Sarandon, Sheryl Lee Ralph and Megan Mullally on a bachelorette weekend.
This documentary chronicles the reboot and reopening in Las Vegas of the acrobatic show “O,” which shutdown during the pandemic.
A vibrant coming-of-age story about an awkward teenager in California in 2008 is also a love letter to the director’s mother.
The wisecracking semi-hero is back, but now he’s part of a bigger universe.
“Skywalkers” and “Mountain Queen” are strong entries in a genre with great appeal to viewers who themselves might prefer to be sitting.
Harry Connick Jr. stars as a cranky rocker who returns to Cyprus, the home of the love who inspired a signature hit.
An obnoxious inventor wreaks havoc on an upstate honeymoon in Chris Skotchdopole’s tepid psychological thriller.
This muddled film, based on a true story, chronicles the origins of the French champagne house Veuve Clicquot.
This documentary about the work of Robert Putnam, who wrote “Bowling Alone,” argues that Americans can save democracy by becoming joiners.
A haunted house, a blind psychic and a suspicious death fuel this flawed yet fun supernatural thriller.
In a frustrating documentary, the journalist Ibrahim Nash’at shows the Taliban after American troops left Afghanistan.
In Levan Akin’s fascinating drama, two strangers connect in Istanbul.
Glen Powell and Daisy Edgar-Jones lead a stand-alone sequel to the 1996 hit — and times sure have changed.
A skillfully directed Japanese mystery dips into the strangeness of dementia for those who stand by and watch.
The sequel stars a teenage Sophie (Chloe Coleman), who goes on a school trip to Italy with J.J. (Dave Bautista) as her burly chaperone.
“Made in England” is an essay film about the artists whose passion and cinematography deeply influenced the American director.
This documentary follows a renowned Inuit activist over seven years, making sense of the ways in which racism and impoverishment can abrade one’s sense of self.
An Icelandic widower revisits London, the site of his first romance, in this film from Baltasar Kormakur.
Cara Mones and Caroline Suh’s earnest and frustrating documentary, produced by The New York Times, has a bitter punchline.
Greg Berlanti’s movie, starring Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum as only mildly mismatched lovers, is set against the backdrop of the Apollo 11 landing.
KiKi Layne stars as a struggling musician who meets a rakish Scottish singer (Thomas Doherty) while on the road.
Guy Pearce plays a minister who arrives in New Zealand and finds his allegiances change in this antipodean western set in the 19th century.
A deep-tissue turn by Colman Domingo and a breakout performance by Clarence Maclin lift this moving drama about a prison theater program.
Nicolas Cage plays the cheery evil entity behind multiple murders in this weakly plotted, strongly styled chiller.
A new documentary about the groundbreaking artist Brian Eno breaks its own ground, too.
“Spermworld,” “Onlookers” and “32 Sounds” are worth watching for the different ways they allow us to see the world.
A stubborn matriarch played by Ellen Burstyn lodges in a furniture store and wages emotional warfare with her adult children.
This poignant animated film casts the world of imaginary friends as an arena to reckon with emotional turmoil and loss of innocence.
What begins as a romantic rescue becomes a blood bath when bandits on a train attack and rob passengers and our Romeo cracks multiple heads in return.
Mia Goth returns to Ti West’s horrorverse as an actress fleeing a mysterious stalker and a traumatic past.
The crew is back, but this time around they need to lie low. Sort of.
In a lightweight comedy, the actress plays a bartender who dreams of becoming an astronaut. One problem: She has no qualifications for the job.
An indie comedy set in an Airbnb leans into the ways we distance ourselves from one another.
Eddie Murphy struggles to revive the moribund action-comedy franchise.
When Zara (Joey King) realizes that her mom (Nicole Kidman) is dating her boss (Zac Efron), she tries to split them up.
The chills are more effective than the thrills in this prequel to the “A Quiet Place” franchise.
In the first of a projected four-film cycle, Kevin Costner revisits the western genre and U.S. history in a big, busy drama.
Few directors get as deeply under the skin as Catherine Breillat, a longtime provocateur who tests the limits of what the world thinks women should do and say and be.
In Penny Lane’s newest film, she turns the camera on herself to document her experience donating a kidney to a stranger.
An endangered French aristocrat is stranded with a benighted rural family in this tragicomic fairy tale.
An ethereal, experimental new drama retells the story of the mythical Greek hero.
Jake Paltrow’s film braids three fictional stories around the 1962 execution of Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi official and war criminal.
This debut feature about a missing woman on an Oklahoma reservation is an imperfect but palpably emotional portrait of desperation and hard-won hope.
Sean Penn and Dakota Johnson outclass a humdrum script as two people who talk — and talk — in a New York City taxicab.
It’s clear that Rita’s life in rural Argentina could use a bit of magic. But her willingness to bend the truth to achieve it heralds disaster.
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.