In their new picture Hilma, Lena Olin and Tora Hallström play cross-generational versions of pioneering Swedish abstract artist and mystic Hilma af Klint, a quintessential woman out of time whose groundbreaking works were dismissed by the early 20th century patriarchal artistic establishment. A modern,…
Read MoreA Working Artist Shows Up for Her Passion: Kelly Reichardt on Gentle New Character Study Balancing Life, Creative Demands
Filmmaker Kelly Reichardt—whose three-decade career as an independent filmmaker specializing in spare, minimalist excursions—is an artist freed from American commercial sensibilities; a nonconformist favoring nuance over plot and ambiguity over resolution. In pictures like Wendy and Lucy, about a young homeless woman searching for…
Read MoreShowing Up: Michelle Williams is a Working Artist in Kelly Reichardt’s Latest, an Ode to Independent Creators
Kelly Reichardt’s quietly appealing consideration of the life—and life’s work—of an independent artist forms the basis of her new picture, Showing Up, featuring a lovely performance from Michelle Williams as a sculptress navigating the day-to-day while preparing for a gallery opening of her latest…
Read MoreImmigrant Youth in Peril: The Dardennes’ Tori and Lokita Charts Harrowing Undocumented Exploitation
Two-time Cannes winning Belgian filmmaking brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne are firmly renowned, with legendary predecessor Ken Loach, as international cinema’s foremost chroniclers of social realist hard knocks. Their pictures—frequently about hardscrabble disenfranchisement, ethical quandaries in the face of limited options and social hierarchies…
Read MoreAir + Jordan: How Nike’s Hoop Dream Changed Athletes, Sports Marketing and America (or Something Like That)
As a commercial entertainment, Ben Affleck’s Air, charting Nike’s quest to sign rookie-on-the-rise Michael Jordan as its brand ambassador, is polished, serviceably entertaining and, on occasion, better. Whether its story, about how the former market laggard created the axis-shifting Air Jordan, is as substantial as…
Read MoreTheater Review: Young Chicagoans Bond During Lockdown in Thoughtful When All Of This Is Over
Art and culture take their time essaying perspectives on the past—if the 70s offered a revival of 50s nostalgia (perhaps because the social unrest of the 60s left some longing for the “innocence” of an earlier era), the 80s were a conservative rebuff to…
Read MoreA Thousand and One: Change is Gonna Come to a Sensational Teyana Taylor in Sundance Winner
A mother and son forge a life in Harlem amidst an ever-changing city in the gritty, moving Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner A Thousand and One, a movie about strugglers, strivers, hard won family love and the spoils of urban gentrification. It is also…
Read MoreAs a document of a successful artistic union between director and muse, Zach Braff’s A Good Person is an ode to a luminous movie star who has clearly fascinated the talented writer-director, and one who fascinates us. That star is the estimable Florence Pugh—a hot…
Read MoreA Good Person Writer-Director Zach Braff Tells Truths of Addiction, Friendship in Moving New Film
On his fourth directorial outing, actor-writer-filmmaker Zach Braff has crafted a remarkable portrait of friendship and healing between a pair of very unlikely characters, played by an equally unlikely—and very winning—Florence Pugh and Morgan Freeman. In A Good Person, Pugh is a New Jersey…
Read MoreA burglar specializing in high-end art theft finds himself trapped Inside a Manhattan penthouse in an effective, minimalist meditation on notions of creation and isolation set amidst a brutalist gallery of modern art works. The picture’s opening narration offers a twist on the age-old…
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