
‘Ozzy: No Escape From Now’ Review: A Metal Legend’s Last Stand
It’s painful to watch Ozzy Osbourne struggle in this documentary, but his efforts to make one final onstage appearance are awe-inspiring.
It’s painful to watch Ozzy Osbourne struggle in this documentary, but his efforts to make one final onstage appearance are awe-inspiring.
Though Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman are the directors, inmates with smuggled phones are important collaborators.
After announcing his retirement from acting eight years ago, the performer returns in a drama directed by his son Ronan Day-Lewis.
Barry Avrich’s documentary revisits the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel from the perspective of one Israeli family.
Cillian Murphy plays a beleaguered teacher at an all-boys reform school in this exhausting movie on Netflix.
Dwayne Johnson shines, but the movie around him tells the wrong story.
His novel “1984” captured the tactics of totalitarianism back in 1949. A startling new documentary from Raoul Peck looks at Orwell’s life.
Nine librarians are profiled in Kim A. Snyder’s gripping documentary about censorship in public schools.
A young orphan becomes mesmerized by a volatile actress in this dark fairy tale.
Based on a memoir by Alysia Abbott, the movie chronicles gay liberation and the AIDS crisis from the perspective of a gay man’s daughter.
This assured horror movie is anchored by a star-making turn from a gorgeous retriever named Indy.
Jealousy reaches a violent fever pitch in a funny and sexy erotic thriller by Mercedes Bryce Morgan.
In this documentary, Maron is shown working through his feelings of grief onstage and off after the death of his partner.
Mark Wahlberg plays Parker, a taciturn thief who teams up with Zen (Rosa Salazar) for a big New York City heist.
This second installment in Renny Harlin’s slasher trilogy is hackneyed and silly.
The tour started by Sarah McLachlan is the subject of the film, which includes a who’s who of women making music in that era.
The latest drama from Tyler Perry Studios sets the Book of Ruth at a vineyard in Tennessee.
The director, at the height of his powers, delivers a startling, present-day American epic, with Leonardo DiCaprio as a washed-up radical and doting dad.
A movie star and a waitress meet cute in a Netflix “Notting Hill” knockoff starring Omar Sy.
This movie based on an interactive children’s Netflix series is not suitable for anyone over reading age.
This stone-cold wilderness thriller pits a woman on a mission against a merciless couple who are keeping a secret in their basement.
June Squibb stars in Scarlett Johansson’s sometimes moving but often uneven directorial debut.
This weepy romance succeeds through the undeniable chemistry between Brett Goldstein and Imogen Poots.
Ethan Hawke stars in a new FX show and “The Golden Bachelor” comes back for another season.
This documentary by Mike Figgis about Francis Ford Coppola’s “Megalopolis” is at once expansive and intimate, and sometimes very revealing.
The actor stars alongside America Ferrera in a high-tension drama from the director Paul Greengrass that revisits the deadly 2018 Camp Fire.
The anime movie, subtitled “Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle,” contains layers of lore and impressionistic backdrops.
A drama about the rise and fall and rise again of a founder of Tinder and Bumble suffers from some flimsiness.
Set in Finland, this film explores a season of grief and growth for a girl, her father and her grandmother.
The art of persuasion — and the painstaking preparation for a national competition — is the focus of this moving documentary about high-school students.
Based on a true story, this blandly inspirational tale follows a 59-year old man from Texas who rejoins his college football squad.
Lucas (Tom Blyth) has just had sex with Andrew (Russell Tovey), the man he was supposed to arrest in a sting operation.
This probing, troubling documentary looks at the sociological implications of the series “To Catch a Predator.”
The dark comedy follows a man who suffers an identity crisis after his work at a companion-for-hire agency extinguishes his own personality.
Six years in the making, this new documentary traces Ye’s life of fame and fall from grace.
In this thriller, a young quarterback is invited to train with a veteran player (Marlon Wayans) in his Texas compound. What could go wrong?
This fantastical odyssey, starring Colin Farrell and Margot Robbie, relies on the tart charm of Phoebe Waller-Bridge.
The movie peels back the layers of a headline story to find a complex tale, centuries in the making.
Paris, Texas, may not be the preferred locale for the art student Miranda Cosgrove, but she finds that it might bring her the right man.
Four decades after their big-screen hit, the rock legends David, Derek and Nigel have reunited for one final (really, truly) concert.
This horror feature envelops us with its technical atmospherics, but don’t dig too far beneath that surface.
Corey Hawkins and Willem Dafoe star in an overstuffed drama about a man haunted by the weight of history.
For a movie about motion, this Stephen King adaptation feels oddly static.
Paul Mescal and Josh O’Connor play lovers who embark on a folk song-recording mission in this demure New England drama.
Friends in high school navigate senior year in a futuristic Japan where a cataclysmic earthquake looms.
The film is the final installment in Dag Johan Haugerud’s trilogy about the sexual and romantic mores of Oslo’s inhabitants.
There’s truth in advertising as this well-loved saga of British entitlement rolls to a stop, on time and on point.
The documentary recounts a slapdash attempt in 2020 to overthrow the president of Venezuela, led by a former Green Beret.
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.