
‘American Pain’ Review: When the Pills and the Money Kept On Flowing
Darren Foster’s documentary offers an energetic profile of twin brothers who operated a slick drug trafficking operation in South Florida.
Darren Foster’s documentary offers an energetic profile of twin brothers who operated a slick drug trafficking operation in South Florida.
School bullying rattles the life of a closeted lesbian teacher in this accomplished period drama.
In a new film from the director of “Martin Eden,” pastoral interludes of domestic life in the wake of World War I alternate with views of the world beyond.
A Jewish Frenchman posing as a Persian eludes death by teaching a fictional form of the Persian language to a Nazi commandant in this improbable Holocaust drama.
A teenage girl handles her grief in an enterprising way in this horror film from Bomani J. Story.
In this moody epistolary film, a woman in Paris works through a close friend’s death with the help of video correspondences.
In this documentary, the artist Natalia Almada explores both the terrors and wonders of technological progress.
Things start out fun with this prequel, but frantic plot mechanics might steer your interest into a ditch.
A group of World War II veterans unwisely perform a séance in this ambitious yet airless supernatural thriller.
The director Hong Sung-eun’s debut feature is a quietly tragic tale of alienation and the ennui of modern life.
The actor Eva Longoria’s feature directing debut is a fictionalized account of the birth of a spicy, profitable snack.
Ben Kingsley plays Salvador Dalí, the man and the mustachioed myth, as he contends with his demanding wife and the far more voracious art world.
Anton Corbijn’s documentary shares anecdotes from the British design studio that devised some of the most famous album covers of the 1970s.
In a new documentary, Robert Englund wants you to know he’s more than the face of Freddy Krueger.
The catalog was more than a place to peruse the latest fashions. It reshaped society’s definitions of masculinity.
The 2021 “short squeeze” of GameStop was a rare victory for the little guy. This documentary explains why the house — Wall Street wealth, that is — almost always wins.
While hard to justify, this fictionalized portrayal of a young LeBron James and his high school team’s rise is buoyed by five young actors.
Celine Song’s film debut, starring Greta Lee, follows two childhood friends who share a wistful kind of love across two decades and two continents.
This charming sequel to the 2018 animated movie expands the multiverse concept, without shamelessly capitalizing on fan service.
A bereaved family is plagued by a supernatural killer in this frustratingly coy horror movie.
The French filmmaker Cédric Klapisch’s feel-good dance film follows a professional ballerina returning to the stage after an ankle injury.
A documentary explores how “The Wizard of Oz” figures into the director David Lynch’s surreal filmography.
In this film directed by Abel Ferrara, Shia LaBeouf gives viewers a contemporary version of the saint — that is, one who curses a blue streak.
Death and desire are bunk mates in this coming-of-age drama set around a lake cabin in Quebec.
A New York-based filmmaker wades into the deep waters of his Gullah Geechee heritage and South Carolina roots.
An Israeli’s guilt over an act of police brutality he indirectly caused is the crux of this drama from Idan Haguel.
A new docudrama starring Sydney Sweeney as Reality Winner is gripping, even as it strips a true story of its political context.
In a movie extrapolated from one of his stand-up bits, Bert Kreischer is dragged to Russia to face a gory but still comedic reckoning.
The director Nicole Holofcener’s characters are known for their brazen honesty. But it’s dishonesty that drives her new film, starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
A docudrama follows a family fighting to stay together and avoid exile to a leprosy colony, but fails to carry an emotional punch.
A single mother fights for her place in a dystopian high rise in this unfocused satire.
Or, at least, he kinda-sorta tries to rebel in this romantic, futuristic fable from the Portuguese director João Pedro Rodrigues.
Kira Kovalenko’s moody drama centers on a young woman trapped under her father’s thumb in the North Caucasus region of Russia.
The Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam becomes a somewhat flimsy case study for fine-art diversity and inclusion conversations in this documentary.
The traumatized teen is back to finalize even more fascists in this comically bloody sequel.
This charming documentary aims to peek under the smile of a groundbreaking television star.
Gerard Butler plays an undercover C.I.A. agent hunted by various foes in an underwhelming action film devoid of any suspense or, well, action.
The comedian Sebastian Maniscalco enlists his “Irishman” colleague in this labored comedy, where gags fall flat.
A gynecologist and her patient form a horrifyingly twisted connection in this batty, bloody Argentine melodrama.
This thriller, about a mysterious woman’s obsession with online influencers, treats social media as a breeding ground for fear and obsession
Disney’s live-action remake, with Halle Bailey starring as Ariel and a diverse cast, is a dutiful corrective with noble intentions and little fun.
A reporter investigates cases in which sexual assault survivors were arrested on charges of false reporting in this cogent documentary.
Twenty-two years and nine sequels in, the “Fast and Furious” franchise is finding it hard to keep the thrill alive.
Monument Valley embodies the Old West. But the fantasies presented in Westerns obscure its darker history and the lives of the Navajo people who inhabit it.
This story of a small-town family impacted by addiction succeeds in humanizing its characters but falters when it tries to include a coming-of-age tale.
The director’s latest movie completes a trilogy about men in search of grace in a brutal world — usually by way of women, but thankfully they are vivid, too.
A traumatized woman returns home from eastern Ukraine after being held captive by Russian separatists.
This quiet documentary observes three unhoused women from different generations who live among the remains of an unfinished museum in Belgrade.
This refreshingly grounded French crime procedural portrays what happens when a brutal murder case eludes the diligent efforts of a by-the-book investigator.
Even the trash talk in a remake of the 1992 street ball comedy has no spark, despite the best efforts of Sinqua Walls and Jack Harlow.
Kavich Neang’s lush feature tells a largely autobiographical tale of growing up in a building whose often painful history is a microcosm of his country’s.
The director Ryan Stevens Harris brings a young girl’s subconscious to eerie life in this unnerving feature.
A wealthy heir and his longtime employee vie for control over their uncommon relationship in this twisty duet.
This lyrical debut feature from Francisca Alegría is a slow-burning parable about our relationship to each other and to the living world.
A wealthy heir and his longtime employee vie for control over their uncommon relationship in this twisty duet.
A veteran cast attempts to fend off a deluge of clichés in this cheap-looking, pleasingly scrappy war film.
The chronicler of the post-9/11 New York social whirl who is at the center of this documentary was no Manhattan insider but rather a student in Illinois.
The tumultuous life and death of the model, actress and tabloid superstar is related with little insight in this facile Netflix documentary.
Steeped in a distinctly American nostalgia, this beautifully peculiar debut feature has a Lynchian quality.
Alice Braga plays a psychic and Affleck a cop in this action-packed Robert Rodriguez picture that gets a little overly ambitious.
This Disney film is surprisingly nimble at incorporating an emotional core into its sci-fi adventure.
At the heart of this action-thriller, an expert killer, played by Jennifer Lopez, must rescue her daughter at all costs.
Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburgen take a trip to Italy and don’t read as much in this comedy sequel.
Eliza Scanlen plays a pious teenager who begins an affair with her youth pastor in this tender coming-of-age drama.
Loosely based on the transgender director Emanuele Crialese’s transition, this Italian period drama is a sun-dappled nostalgia trip bristling with Oedipal tension.
The baseball player, known for his quirky malapropisms, was perpetually underestimated. But a new documentary proves he was a phenomenal talent.
The “Back to the Future” star time-travels through his career in this documentary, charting his experiences learning to live with Parkinson’s disease.
Unfortunately, this documentary about the W.N.B.A. and the New York Liberty hits the rim and then bounces out — it’s only close to good.
Trace Lysette and Patricia Clarkson star in this subtle chamber drama.
The struggle to sell a revolutionary gizmo fractures a friendship in this lively, bittersweet comedy.
A hapless man who barely speaks becomes a movie star in Charlie Day’s scattershot Hollywood satire.
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.