Review by Andrew Swafford
If Cats Disappeared From the World is ridiculous and amusing enough, but it’s also surprisingly powerful, and is able to communicate its ideas and emotions solely through cinematic style.
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Takeru Satoh and Aoi Miyazaki star in director Akira Nagai's If Cat's Disappeared From the World
Review by Andrew Swafford
If Cats Disappeared From the World is ridiculous and amusing enough, but it’s also surprisingly powerful, and is able to communicate its ideas and emotions solely through cinematic style.
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Chloe Sevigny and Kate Beckinsale in director Whit Sillman's Love & Friendship
Review by Zach Dennis
Love & Friendship is an invigorating flower that blooms into yet an even more pronounced and remarkable work of cinema. The technical and creative craft involved seem something foreign yet utterly comfortable and the acting is both dignified and dirty at the same times.
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San Claflin and Emilia Clarke star in director Thea Sharrock's Me Before You
Review by Jessica Carr
Me Before You transcends most of the recent romance films in that it allows the human element to shine through rather than just focusing on two attractive people supposedly falling in love.
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Paprika dreams of flying. Paprika is written and directed by Satoshi Kon.
Retro Review by Lydia Creech
More than anything else, Paprika is an assault on the senses. It is colorful, frenetic, and weird in the best way.
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Anne Hathaway, Johnny Depp, and Mia Wasikowska star in dirctor James Bobin's Alice Through the Looking Glass
Review by Zach Dennis
Alice Through the Looking Glass is a half-baked, snoozer of a movie that asks you why you hate yourself rather than anything constructive over the course of its two hour runtime.
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Ralph Fiennes and Tilda Swinton star in director Luca Guardagnino's A Bigger Splash
Review by Zach Dennis
A Bigger Splash is fun for the first two acts, but as the storm comes and the limits are pushed over the edge, we are left with a conclusion that feels more finite and unearned rather than something truly realized.
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Zac Efron and Chloë Grace Moretz star in director Nicholas Stoller's Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising
Alternate take by Andrew Swafford
(Read original review by Zach Dennis here)
Not only does Neighbors 2 not develop or connect any of its ideas about gender in the Greek system, but it unfortunately takes many ugly and unwarranted passes at other sensitive social issues as well, lacking any of the tact or nuance needed to make insightful humor out of some of our world's most depressing realities.
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Cara Gallo, Ike Barinholtz, Zac Efron, Seth Rogen, and Rose Byrne star in writer/director Nicholas Stoller's 'Neighbors 2'
Review by Zach Dennis
Neighbors 2 has its silly studio comedy tendencies, but it also is a comedy that is interested in much more than just making you laugh at a dick joke. It is a small examination at the growth in life and the in between nature that comes from growing out of the comfortable roles of college or no children or easy job and challenges both the characters and you to examine yourself and whether this is space you are supposed to be in.
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Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe star in writer/director Shane Black’s ‘The Nice Guys’
Review by Zach Dennis
The Nice Guys is a movie we need more of — pure, unadulterated fun that plays within its lines with expertise and precision.
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Ferdia Walsh-Peelo and Lucy Boynton lead the cast of writer/director John Carney’s ‘Sing Street’
Review by Zach Dennis
Again aided by a stellar soundtrack, Sing Street still wears some of the beats you’ve seen in most coming-of-age or Carney films before, but the storytelling by the director provides the film with a freshness that is joyously unexplainable. It is the definition of a feel-good movie, one that you’ll be smiling about outside of the theater upon exit.
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Tracy Camilla Johns stars in director Spike Lee's She's Gotta Have It
Retro Review by Andrew Swafford
She’s Gotta Have It is a raw and messy masterpiece that features a non-conventional storytelling structure, sensual cinematography, and an overall perspective on sexual politics that still feels like a shock to the system thirty years later.
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Anthony Mackie, Paul Rudd, Jeremy Renner, Chris Evans, Elizabeth Olson, and Sebastian Stan star in the Russo Brothers' Captain America: Civil War
Review by Zach Dennis
Marvel has spent years working to this point where their heroes will thread the line between good and evil — leading to a fissure in the group. Civll War does reach that breaking point, and does so rather quickly, but also shows the true flaws in Marvel’s grander system.
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Sheila Vand stars in director Ana Lily Amirpour's A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night
Retro Review by Jessica Carr
The black and white film follows an isolated vampire (the girl) as she stalks and preys on male victims in an imaginary Iranian town called Bad City. Things look gloom and doom in Bad City until the girl meets the dreamy and very James Dean-esque Arash. Iranian-American director Ana Lily Amirpour places an emphasis on a combination of music, images, and body language to set the tone for this atmospheric film.
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Jordan Peele, Keegan-Michael Key, and THIS KITTEN star in director Peter Atencio's Keanu
Review by Zach Dennis
Key and Peele show a great ability to deliver five-to-six minute segments that excel at being both poignant and funny, but they don’t seem to sustain longer than how long a typical sketch would. At the very least, see it for the cute kitten though.
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Maya Deren writes, directs, edits, and stars in the short film At Land
Retro Review by Dylan Moore
Deren’s techniques remain interesting and impacting when most of the movies and television we all probably watch is set in a capital-R Real world that uses match on action and eyeline match to build a straightforward geography and narrative.
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Imogen Poots, Joe Cole, Callum Turner, Alia Shawkat, and Anton Yelchin star in director Jeremy Saulnier's Green Room
Review by Nadine Smith
Green Room's antagonists flirt with cartoon and caricature. And cartoons and caricatures can be dismissed. I don’t doubt that people like this really do exist, and I don’t mean to minimize the threat they pose, but I think Green Room needs to take more responsibility for its treatment of a complicated subject.
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Hungarian filmmaker Marcell Jankovics writes, directs, and animates Fehérlófia
Retro Review by Andrew Swafford
On a plot level, Fehérlófia couldn't be more well-worn and clichéd. We have beat this horse to death. However, Jankovics's mare couldn't be more alive.
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Glen Powell, Wyatt Russell, Blake Jenner, J. Quinton Johnson, and Temple Baker star in director Richard Linklater's Everybody Wants Some!!
Review by Zach Dennis
This film, and Richard Linklater in general, forces us not only to reckon with the annals of life and time, but also the fact that that in the end, even if we don’t completely feel like we fit into the mold he has constructed, we, like everyone else, want some too.
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Neel Sethi stars in director John Favreau's The Jungle Book
Review by Zach Dennis
Even with the weaker performance by its star, The Jungle Book swings to new heights and ones that I wouldn’t have expected a Disney retread to do.
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Mike Brune stars in dirctor Adam Pinney's The Arbalest
Review by Andrew Swafford
As one of only a handful of people who has seen this award-winning and headline-grabbing title, I have to live my truth here—The Arbalest is a load of hooey.
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