In ‘Seeds,’ Farms and a Way of Life Hang in the Balance
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 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.
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.
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 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.
This detour-heavy film moves across time periods to follow girlhood mischief, desire and abuse on a German farm.
Benjamin Flaherty discovered some disturbing tendencies in the addiction recovery industry. His documentary is upsetting and revelatory.
Speaking in French (but cursing in English), the actress plays an American psychiatrist abroad who stumbles into unexpected intrigue.
Rival gangs in Los Angeles join forces when a bloodsucking unit of the police department invades their community.
A filmmaker who can’t secure an interview with the A.I. executive turns to technology for a solution.
By condensing the logic of the action, this anime adaptation of Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s light novel undermines the story’s excitement.
The latest installment in the zombie saga is all about evil and good, and whether any of it exists.
This blood-splattered survival film about a rabies-infected chimpanzee is powered by unabashedly simple pleasures.
Love grows between a restless travel writer and a contented homebody in this occasionally cute, instantly forgettable romantic comedy.
Gael García Bernal plays the explorer Ferdinand Magellan in Lav Diaz’s portrait of a brutal adventurer and his travels across the globe.
Gerard Butler returns for more earthshaking action in this crowd-pleasing postapocalyptic thriller.
The Dardenne brothers’ latest film is a tender portrait of four teenage moms in a Belgian maternity shelter.
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.
The actors Udo Kier and David Hayman square off in this domestic drama where a man is convinced that his neighbor is Adolf Hitler.
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.
Dramatizing an odd news item from 1977, Gus Van Sant’s crime film isn’t crazy enough.
The Palestinian American director Cherien Dabis offers eloquent context with her generational drama about Palestinian men.
Daisy Ridley plays a woman who hopes her husband will spring back to life after a tragedy annihilates the population of Tasmania.
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 actor stars along side Kate Mara in a psychological thriller that goes deep into the Black Arts archives.
Park Chan-wook, the director of “Oldboy” and “The Handmaiden,” brings comedic flair to the cruel tale of an employee pushed to the brink.
The actor stars as a magnetic, striving table-tennis champ in Josh Safdie’s new movie, one of the most exciting movies of the year.
In an extraordinary performance, Amanda Seyfried plays the founder of the Shakers in a singular film.
As England goes to war, a provincial choir master played by Ralph Fiennes is challenged to find available voices in this poignant drama set in 1916.
Craig Brewer’s toe-tapping weepie about the triumphs and tragedies of a Neil Diamond tribute band is exactly the movie we need right now.
The movie gets at least one thing right: Rebooting the shlocky, widely-panned creature-feature, starring Jack Black and Paul Rudd, is a goofy idea.
A stunner of a debut film follows a group of boys at a water polo camp, where an outsider is just trying to fit in.
Jim Jarmusch’s uneven triptych, a prizewinner at Venice, saves its best segment for last.
Kate Winslet directs a formulaic script by her son, Joe Anders, about a dying matriarch and her quarreling adult children.
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.