
‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Review: The Shadow Cast by Blinding Lights
A filmic companion to the Weeknd’s latest album, this meta psychological thriller is all style and no substance.
A filmic companion to the Weeknd’s latest album, this meta psychological thriller is all style and no substance.
A housewife’s domestic distresses take a horrifying turn in this dark comedy set in the slums of Mumbai.
A young military man asks a woman to dance, but they’re in for a bumpy ride in this story adapted from a novel by Stefan Zweig.
Yoko Yamanaka’s film is a brilliantly observed portrait of a young woman simmering with frustrations and coming to terms with her relationships and place in the world.
The documentary recalls the 1988 protests that erupted at Gallaudet University when trustees rejected deaf candidates to lead it.
A poetic drama weaves together the lives of Norwegians as they pursue connection in their own ways.
The sixth installment in the horror franchise might be the most self-consciously silly of the bunch — and it’s all the better for it.
In Roberto Minervini’s intimate and impressionistic drama, a group of Civil War scouts faces the harsh realities of the uncharted Montana territory.
For the eighth installment of this stunt-spectacular franchise, the star returns to fight off A.I. planetary domination, the bends, gravity and maybe mortality itself.
This film by Jon Kasbe and Crystal Moselle skirts gimmicks to examine a creator’s drive to build a humanoid device powered by artificial intelligence.
Vince Vaughn plays a restaurant owner who hires Italian grandmothers to cook for him in this corn-filled gabagool.
Jillian Bell’s feature directorial debut centers on a nerdy teenager who hires a stripper for a sexual education, but the movie favors modesty over vulgarity.
This movie musical adaptation of Shakespeare’s star-crossed lovers is no “& Juliet” — that is, it’s no fun.
In this underbaked slasher film, killer bozos terrorize teens in the American heartland.
The movie offers full-on immersion, or perhaps submersion, in the singer-songwriter’s musical world.
Patricia Clarkson plays the equal pay activist Lilly Ledbetter in this misty-eyed drama.
Tim Robinson and Paul Rudd star in the kind of comedy you watch from behind your hands.
Josh Hartnett plays a rugged mercenary in an airborne action movie that struggles to stay on course.
The Chinese director shot two decades of footage for his new film, which captures his country in tumult and one woman living through it.
Part spoof and part serious, the film is about mythmaking as much as it is about music. The result is delightfully destabilizing.
During every scene of this western, I couldn’t stop thinking about the film’s cinematographer, Halyna Hutchins, who was killed on set in an entirely preventable tragedy.
Two midlife losers reckon with past mistakes on a despairing and oddly haunting trip into the woods and out of their heads.
The Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya is the subject of a film that honors her bravery.
Nicolas Cage plays the title role in this punishing beach drama, where an aggressive group of surfers advise him the spot is for “locals only.”
A writer rethinks queer history through Abraham Lincoln’s political ambitions, but needs a few present-day edits.
A washed-up photographer finds himself embroiled in an eerie mystery in Joshua Erkman’s strange, singular thriller.
Durga Chew-Bose boldly reimagines a work once adapted by Otto Preminger in her beguiling first film set on the French Riviera.
The sequel to the deranged 2018 comedy finds Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick feuding in the Italian sun.
In Hala Matar’s stylish if somewhat vacant drama, flair trumps grief.
The actress is the main attraction in Marvel’s latest, about a group of ragtag super-types who join forces to (spoiler alert!) save the world.
This surprisingly entertaining film examines the 1975 fiscal crisis that nearly led the city to bankruptcy. The movie’s conclusions remain relevant today.
Tom Hardy is a crooked cop looking to make amends in Gareth Evans’s action-packed film.
This British black comedy, starring Indira Varma, centers on a group of wealthy middle-aged friends with fraught histories.
Based on a video game, this movie is done in by mediocre monsters and muddled time loops.
Amalia Ulman’s playful second feature follows an American television crew that lands in rural Argentina.
The comedy duo celebrates a partnership that they just can’t quit in this celebratory documentary.
Daisy Edgar-Jones and Jacob Elordi lead a melancholic drama about love and longing in the 1950s.
A gorgeously intimate debut feature explores the lives of Chinese immigrants in a massage parlor in Queens.
In this, her second feature, the Georgian filmmaker Dea Kulumbegashvili takes on the risks faced by an obstetrician who performs kitchen-table abortions.
Affleck returns as a brilliant C.P.A. who moonlights as a mysterious, gun-toting fixer and gets help from his little bro, played by Jon Bernthal.
In this heartfelt wildlife documentary, a volunteer conservationist and an endangered critter develop a parent-child connection.
The film “1-800-ON-HER-OWN” follows the fiercely independent artist as she tries a career first: writing a song with another artist.
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.