In ‘Our Land,’ an Eminent Filmmaker Turns Her Camera on a Killing
Technology, history and human lives intersect in Lucrecia Martel’s examination of the death of an Indigenous leader in Argentina.
Technology, history and human lives intersect in Lucrecia Martel’s examination of the death of an Indigenous leader in Argentina.
Michael B. Jordan voices a woodland creature who swaps species with a bird in this middling animated movie on Netflix.
In RZA’s new movie, Unique (Shameik Moore) realizes Black residents in town are being hunted by white men. Despite the premise, the film lacks intensity.
The filmmaker Arnaud Desplechin directed this off-kilter drama about a French pianist and the life he left behind.
Based on a popular anime series, the film, subtitled “Tears of the Azure Sea,” is a satisfactory stand-alone fantasy adventure set on an island resort.
Adam Scott is perfection as a damaged writer battling an ancient witch and his own demons in this hugely enjoyable chiller.
In this sequel, Andy (Anne Hathaway) and Miranda (Meryl Streep) encounter a series of crises that set the stage for a larger, existential catastrophe.
The action director Renny Harlin combines two different kinds of disaster movies, with lots of gory shark scenes.
A confusing adaptation of Orwell’s political novel seems blissfully detached from its source’s clarity.
This tragicomedy from Lloyd Eyre-Morgan and Neil Ely balances a mordantly funny deconstruction of romance with the harsher realities of gay life.
“Bernstein’s Wall,” directed by Douglas Tirola, focuses on the composer and conductor’s belief that art can be an uplifting and uniting force.
Taron Egerton descends into full-tilt madness as a killer hunting Charlize Theron in this Netflix thriller set in southeastern Australia.
A pair of neighbors start sleeping with local handymen in this featherweight sex comedy, set in Montreal.
In this film of structural surprises, based on two works by the late manga artist Yoshiharu Tsuge, lives converge on the beach and in a wintry village.
Jason Segel and Samara Weaving star in this gory home-invasion comedy directed by one of the members of the Lonely Island, Jorma Taccone.
The British actor Robert Aramayo rises above the clichés in a biographical drama about a man living with Tourette’s syndrome.
Great performances can’t quite save a delicate family road drama with a baffling ending.
An action-adventure film set in seventh-century Arabia features many fighting men, but the warrior of the title turns out to be the British-Saudi actress Aiysha Hart.
A high-wattage cast led by Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Sam Worthington helps smooth this amiably absurd heist thriller.
A biographical film produced by the estate of Michael Jackson flattens its subject to scrub his reputation.
“Everyone Is Lying to You for Money,” directed by Ben McKenzie, gives a solid introduction to virtual currency, and its traps.
The movie revives one of cinema’s unforgettable monsters with a macabre makeover, but it spins out in the attempt.
The actress plays a pop star who reunites with Michaela Coel’s fashion designer. But the spectacle you see onscreen is far more engaging than the dialogue.
Bob Odenkirk plays a sheriff who uncovers a dangerous secret in this hyper-violent, small-town crime caper.
A girlfriend’s pregnancy upends the life of a young man in the Bronx in this first feature by Joel Alfonso Vargas that unspools with sedulous care.
Charli XCX stars in this drama about a young woman who can’t quite tell the difference between freedom and fleeing.
In the director Tarik Saleh’s latest feature on contemporary Egypt, a movie star is made to appear in a propaganda film.
Sophy Romvari’s superb debut feature blends memory, documentary and fiction to process a family wound.
In this World War II-era coming-of-age drama, a young boy living on a remote German island questions his parents for the first time.
Two condom salesmen, Mark Wahlberg and Paul Walter Hauser, embark on a bawdy, digressive picaresque in Peter Farrelly’s defiantly lowbrow film.
“Steal This Story, Please!” chronicles the life and career of the “Democracy Now!” host as it argues against corporate ownership of the news media.
Tokyo’s subway stations sparkle, and the rules are many and clearly posted. But for one man, just getting to work is hell.
Halle Bailey and Regé-Jean Page star in this fumbling romantic comedy, complete with vineyard romping, barrel racing and a sexy serenade.
A struggling documentarian sublimates his hurt over his roommate’s new girlfriend into his fixation on losing airline perks.
Keanu Reeves plays an actor covering up a sordid past in this misguided film directed by Jonah Hill.
The writer-director Nate Parker focuses on the societal costs of imprisonment in this drama starring David Oyelowo as a Queens dad who goes upstate on a family trip.
This version reimagines Shakespeare’s play for the screen with an appealing dynamism, set within a well-to-do South Asian family in London.
In this documentary, Igor Bezinovic casts nonactors to restage major episodes from when an Italian poet turned strongman ruled a city in what became Croatia.
Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel are terrific in Steven Soderbergh’s sharp-eyed take on art and money.
A meta-remake of the 1978 horror cult classic is more about how we watch than what we watch.
A young woman struggles with the pitfalls of an extremely online life in this confident and meandering debut feature.
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.