‘Dust Bunny’ Review: A World of Wonders, Familiar and Foreign
The movie, starring Sophie Sloan and Mads Mikkelsen, is a blast of visual delights.
The movie, starring Sophie Sloan and Mads Mikkelsen, is a blast of visual delights.
The Chinese director Bi Gan, who has become a lauded fixture on the festival circuit, conjures a boundary-pushing tale that evokes moviemaking itself.
This delightfully trashy entry in the seasonal subgenre follows a killer Santa with a heart, and a case of blood lust.
In a new documentary, the creator of the Pantone system explains how he standardized colors across the globe.
James L. Brooks returns with a lieutenant governor comedy that might leave you more confused than amused.
Alia Shawkat and Callum Turner fake it so real in this Army simulation exercise in the California desert.
Zooey Deschanel and Charlie Cox play a former couple who share a dog in this shaggy rom-com that fails its titular lead.
To tell the story of the demonstrations surrounding a World Trade Organization meeting, “WTO/99” assembled scenes shot by the participants themselves.
The bigger-budget follow-up to last year’s abysmal cult horror hit about haunted animatronic puppets is, at best, marginally scarier.
The director reunites with Toni Servillo, casting the astonishingly expressive actor as a fictional Italian president facing the end of his term.
The Tony-winning Broadway revival of the notorious Stephen Sondheim flop, starring Jonathan Groff, Daniel Radcliffe and Lindsay Mendez, gets a live stage recording for the big screen.
In this drama, Lucy Liu offers a compassionate and grim portrait of the lengths a mother will go to protect — and thwart — her teenage son.
Despite awareness of taboos, two girls in a Catholic school choir are drawn to each other in this feature debut by the Slovenian director Urska Djukic.
Noah Baumbach’s latest film has George Clooney playing the last of the old-school movie stars.
In Scandar Copti’s film, set in Haifa, Israel, secrets and deceptions strain relationships.
Clever sight gags jazz up this “Downton Abbey” sendup about a bookish aristocrat under pressure to marry her first cousin.
Two filmmaking brothers trade tales in a tonally singular documentary.
Kristen Stewart’s feature directing debut stars a riveting Imogen Poots in an uncomfortably visceral tale of abuse and addiction.
This flawed but endearing film stars Emma Corrin as a protective maid and features Charli XCX as a sister with a secret.
A new documentary contains zesty character studies of competing New York City tree vendors as they prepare for the holiday season.
The birds’ presence lends an otherworldly air to this nonfiction look at a family farm in a dying North Macedonian village.
Lyle Lovett, Bonnie Raitt, Kacey Musgraves and other luminaries perform Prine’s songs in this engaging concert film.
A grieving father struggles to care for his two children after the death of his wife. Even with its star, Benedict Cumberbatch, the movie never takes flight.
Was a freelance photographer intentionally left out of the famous Vietnam War photo of “Napalm Girl”?
The filmmaker Shih-Ching Tsou tells a sensitive story of a mother and her two daughters struggling to get by in Taiwan.
In this dazzling essay movie, the director Kahlil Joseph draws on an array of sources — news clips, old movies, family albums, an encyclopedia of ”Africana” — to create a thrilling whole.
Wagner Moura takes cover in this knockout from the filmmaker Kleber Mendonça Filho that is largely set in 1977 during Brazil’s miliary dictatorship.
A sequel to the 2016 hit, this movie about an animal metropolis takes on an even messier social allegory than the first one, while building out a wider (if bloated) universe.
This documentary looks back at a group of teenagers who, in the early 1990s, created a high school video project that ended up breaking real news.
Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal star in a heartbreaking adaptation of the best-selling novel.
Josh O’Connor leads a star-studded cast in the latest Benoit Blanc mystery — this one, about religious cults of personality.
Elizabeth Olsen plays a dead woman who must choose her forever partner in this silly afterlife rom-com.
Charlie Shackleton explains how he would have made a film had he won the rights to a book on a murderer. The result is a fascinating look at a whole genre.
Mark Wahlberg and Michelle Monaghan return in a better executed, equally goofball sequel about a family’s tangles with organized crime.
Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande return to Oz for the second part of Jon M. Chu’s maximalist adaptation of the Broadway musical.
Joel Edgerton stars in a gorgeous film based on Denis Johnson’s celebrated novella about a laborer in the Pacific Northwest.
A documentary tracks the highs and lows of the 1990s fitness guru, now a food delivery driver in Las Vegas.
In this sequel to the 2023 exploitation film, blood-splattered inanity becomes a delirium of popcorn fun.
Brendan Fraser is quietly endearing in this fish-out-of-water tale of an American actor in Tokyo who accepts some highly unusual assignments.
A documentary about Sara Shahverdi, the first woman elected to the council of her village in Iran, is propelled by her no-nonsense resourcefulness.
A documentary argues that the U.S. government needs to divulge what it knows about the phenomena formerly called U.F.O.s.
This understated Indian drama follows closeted gay man gingerly initiating a romance with an old friend.
In this look back at the singer Selena, the director Isabel Castro presents home video footage and photographs that have not been seen in other documentaries.
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.