A Songwriter for Earth, Wind & Fire and ‘Friends’? That’s Just the Start.
“The World According to Allee Willis” shines a light on a musical artist whose creative spirit wasn’t limited to one genre or even to music.
“The World According to Allee Willis” shines a light on a musical artist whose creative spirit wasn’t limited to one genre or even to music.
In Payal Kapadia’s extraordinary drama, three women in Mumbai search for connections amid the city’s vibrant and darkly alienating churn.
A new documentary traces Humphrey Bogart’s development from stage actor to the embodiment of brooding cinematic cool.
Starring Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans, this Christmas offering has the courage to ask: What if the Santa Claus story was like a Marvel movie?
Nothing really makes sense in this homage to ’90s cable thrillers, but that’s sort of the point.
The star of Jacques Audiard’s showy new musical about a trans Mexican drug lord, Karla Sofía Gascón, adds soul to the melodrama. Zoe Saldaña also shines.
A hunky snowman comes to life in this Netflix holiday rom-com that strikes a certain muscle tone.
The boy band stories in Tamra Davis’s documentary rarely intersect in a way that builds a meaningful or compelling perspective.
Trafficking in irreverence, the film follows a pair of stepsiblings with sexual tension.
In the finale of Wang Bing’s nonfiction trilogy, garment-factory workers return to their families and wrestle with the questions all young people do.
Pierce Brosnan plays a man who sneaks out of his retirement home to attend the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings in this charming, but corny drama.
A bereaved young woman faces terrible choices in this dreamily uncertain blend of science fiction and moral philosophy.
Tyler Taormina’s third theatrical feature is a lightly nostalgic ensemble piece set on Long Island.
Cillian Murphy of “Oppenheimer” fame plays an Irishman interrogating a system of abuse and forced labor, despite everyone’s warnings to look the other way.
In wily, vamping style, the actor plays a friendly neighbor to two missionaries before turning his home into a horror-filled slaughterhouse.
The film, based on a 1972 children’s book by Barbara Robinson, tells the story of an unlikely group of kids stunning a small town for the holidays.
Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski star in a film about a preteen girl who longs for a stability she’s never experienced.
Humans flee monsters who refuse to surpass 8,000 feet in altitude in this “Quiet Place” copycat.
This Netflix Christmas rom-com inexplicably wants to remind viewers that the group Pentatonix still exists.
In this grave adaptation of Juan Rulfo’s surreal novel, the living pray for salvation and the dead murmur regrets, but the filmmaking is oddly orthodox.
“Martha,” from R.J. Cutler, argues that she was ahead of her time. But though she sits for a lengthy interview, this isn’t hagiography.
In his latest (and perhaps last) movie as a director, Eastwood casts a skeptical eye at the criminal justice system in a mystery starring Nicholas Hoult.
In this delicate drama set in Utah, three individuals deal with survivor’s guilt a year after a school shooting takes the life of a loved one.
Steve McQueen’s World War II drama may appear conventional on the surface, but don’t miss what it’s really doing.
This bowling comedy, co-directed by the standup comedian Yassir Lester and his brother Isaiah, has absurdity to spare.
Sav Rodgers sets out to define the legacy of Kevin Smith’s “Chasing Amy” in this documentary, which is elevated by one instructive interview.
Liam Neeson plays a regretful gangster with a serious medical condition in this drab, downbeat action movie.
A passionate and propulsive documentary about the assassination of Patrice Lumumba spins its web in many directions.
In Wang Bing’s riveting new documentary about Chinese garment workers, a generation asks: What good is money when you have no rights?
Jesse Eisenberg directs and stars in a melancholic yet funny exploration of Jewish loss and belonging, with an outstanding Kieran Culkin.
The true story of a 12-year-old’s survival in a vast mountain wilderness for nine days in the 1930s.
Tom Hanks and Robin Wright reunite onscreen for a drama that showcases generations of existence.
Richard Kroehling’s documentary presents a mixture of poets’ responses to the Holocaust and argues for the importance of the form in addressing trauma.
Mati Diop examines the fate of 26 treasures — sometimes from their point of view — looted from Benin in 1892.
This film, based on Robert Harris’s 2016 thriller of the same title, centers on a British cardinal (a sensational Ralph Fiennes), and a campaign for a new pope.
At 75, Springsteen is doggedly committed to live performance. This documentary chronicles how he keeps up on tour, and why.
A richly detailed essay film imagines Hitchcock commenting on his own oeuvre over a mesmerizing daisy chain of clips.
Daisy Ridley plays a time bomb with a simmering fuse in this slow yet gripping adultery thriller.
This drama by Alonso Ruizpalacios takes a bitter look at the American dream from the perspective of the workers at a fast-paced diner.
An aspiring Broadway musical star (Melissa Barrera) taps into her inner anger with some help from the creature who lives in her closet.
An unconventional documentary tells the story of a Norwegian gamer — and of how we live life on the internet.
Playing both Eddie Brock and the alien parasite who possesses him, Tom Hardy gives another roiling one-man-band of a performance in this third installment of the franchise.
An animated tragicomedy for adults tells the story of a woman breaking out of her shell.
In a new documentary, Shiori Ito recounts her yearslong crusade for justice in Japan after accusing a powerful journalist of rape.
The beauty of a game of Werewolf lies in the treachery. In this film adaptation, the director focuses on mild comedy and tedious action instead.
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.