• Episodes
  • Festival Coverage
  • Video Essays
  • Writing
Menu

Cinematary

where film criticism goes to die
  • Episodes
  • Festival Coverage
  • Video Essays
  • Writing

Jeff Bridges, Rachel McAdams, and Mackenzie Foy star in director Mark Osborne's The Little Prince

Jeff Bridges, Rachel McAdams, and Mackenzie Foy star in director Mark Osborne's The Little Prince

The Little Prince (2016) by Mark Osborne

August 6, 2016

Review by Andrew Swafford

This adaptation of The Little Prince, for all its beauty and intellect, is flawed in such a deep and fundamental way that the entire narrative fails--it attempts to deconstruct The Little Prince without constructing it first.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg star in Cafe Society

Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg star in Cafe Society

Café Society (2016) by Woody Allen

August 4, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

Jesse Eisenberg fields a strong performance in the lead role, even if overshadowed by the stellar work of Berlin, Stott, and Stoll, and for the most part, Cafe Society is as delicious as the wining and dining being done on screen.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Matt Damon stars in Jason Bourne

Matt Damon stars in Jason Bourne

Jason Bourne (2016) by Paul Greengrass

August 2, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

In a world post Blackhat and Mr. Robot, Jason Bourne feels like the average person’s understanding of modern technology with none of the eye-opening moments that the franchise has been known to illuminate on.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
John Cho, Anton Yelchin, Karl Urban, Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, and Simon Pegg star in Star Trek Beyond.

John Cho, Anton Yelchin, Karl Urban, Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, and Simon Pegg star in Star Trek Beyond.

Star Trek Beyond (2016) by Justin Lin

July 26, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

It isn’t a game-changer for either the franchise or blockbusters as a whole, but Star Trek Beyond is a welcome reminder that characters and story matter for blockbusters, and that doesn’t always mean that bigger is better.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Just a few of the male teenage athletes that get tickled in the debut documentary by David Farrier and Dylan Reeve

Just a few of the male teenage athletes that get tickled in the debut documentary by David Farrier and Dylan Reeve

Tickled (2016) by David Farrier and Dylan Reeve

July 24, 2016

Review by Andrew Swafford

There’s plenty of substance in the first hour of Tickled that can be extrapolated upon and mulled over by viewers, but the ending seems to show the filmmakers cramming huge ideas into a tiny box.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Colin Farrell and Gong Li set sail in director Michael Mann's Miami Vice

Colin Farrell and Gong Li set sail in director Michael Mann's Miami Vice

Miami Vice (2006) by Michael Mann

July 19, 2016

Retro Review by Nadine Smith

As with so many of the greatest movies, Miami Vice only exists while you’re watching it, like a trick of the light.

Read More
In Retro Reviews
Comment
Bryan Cranston and John Leguizamo in The Infiltrator

Bryan Cranston and John Leguizamo in The Infiltrator

The Infiltrator (2016) by Brad Furman

July 19, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

The technical craft and engaging writing of some of the better works of Scorsese are lacking from The Infiltrator, but the film makes up for that with a strong performance by Cranston and an exploration into the work of an actor and the two-faced mentality that has to be taken to succeed.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Vithaya Pansringarm and Ryan Gosling star in director Nicholas Winding Refn's Only God Forgives

Vithaya Pansringarm and Ryan Gosling star in director Nicholas Winding Refn's Only God Forgives

Only God Forgives (2013) by Nicholas Winding Refn

July 18, 2016

Retro Review by Andrew Swafford

Refn’s follow up to 2011’s surprise smash hit Drive indulges the filmmaker’s most exploitation-driven power fantasies while challenging them with a sense of justice that makes each violent act truly mean something.

Read More
In Retro Reviews
Comment
Blake Lively stars in The Shallows

Blake Lively stars in The Shallows

The Shallows (2016) by Jaume Collet-Serra

July 14, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

The Shallows lacks the characters and craft that made Jaws such an iconic film, but that’s also because it never wants to be categorized in the same field. In its own rights, it is a highly successful summer pop entertainment thriller that contains all the elements you would want out of a summer day at the movies — beautiful woman, majestic scenery, and a giant shark getting in the way of both.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Ruby Barnhill and Mark Rylance star in The BFG

Ruby Barnhill and Mark Rylance star in The BFG

The BFG (2016) by Steven Spielberg

July 9, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

The BFG is not near the upper echelon of Spielberg’s work, but it is yet another recent reminder of how talented he is as a director. It has echoes of the past and allows for more playful moments near the end — creating both one of the more enjoyable family films of the year and one that will surely be re-evaluated in later years as a hidden gem of the director’s canon.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Shefali Shetty, Vasundhara Das, and Tillotama Shome star in director Mira Nair's Monsoon Wedding

Shefali Shetty, Vasundhara Das, and Tillotama Shome star in director Mira Nair's Monsoon Wedding

Monsoon Wedding (2001) by Mira Nair

July 7, 2016

Retro Review by Andrew Swafford

Mira Nair’s film about a traditional Hindu arranged marriage in contemporary India is not so much about the event’s potential stressors, despite their constant presence.  Rather, the film is a celebration of all the ways that people come together: as couples, as families, and as cultures.  

Read More
In Retro Reviews
1 Comment
Paul Dano and Daniel Radcliffe star in Swiss Army Man

Paul Dano and Daniel Radcliffe star in Swiss Army Man

Swiss Army Man (2016) by Daniels

July 3, 2016

Review by Jessica Carr

Swiss Army Man has the ability to make the viewer laugh and cry simultaneously. Underneath the absolutely ridiculous plot, lies a heartfelt message about accepting the truths of life while also learning to accept your own truths.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart star in Central Intelligence

Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart star in Central Intelligence

Central Intelligence (2016) by Rawson Marshall Thurber

July 3, 2016

Review by Lydia Creech

Central Intelligence may not display the same level of craft or acerbic verbal wit that The Nice Guys does, but it is the perfect light summer fun.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Tippi Hedren and Rod Taylor star in director Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds

Tippi Hedren and Rod Taylor star in director Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds

The Birds (1963) by Alfred Hitchcock

June 29, 2016

Retro Review by Andrew Swafford

While it may not be his absolute masterpiece, Hitchcock manipulates his audience’s expectations to maximum effect in this sometimes-maligned movie, which demonstrates that the master of suspense was also the master of genre-hopping within a single film.

Read More
In Retro Reviews
2 Comments
Directors Noah Baumbach and Jake Paltrow center their documentary, De Palma, around a single-shot interview with the esteemed filmmaker.

Directors Noah Baumbach and Jake Paltrow center their documentary, De Palma, around a single-shot interview with the esteemed filmmaker.

De Palma (2016) by Noah Baumbach & Jake Paltrow

June 29, 2016

Review by Nadine Smith

Though Baumbach and Paltrow seem hesitant to encourage De Palma to dig deep into his art, I commend their choice to let De Palma speak for himself instead of leaning on the opinions of others.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Elle Fanning stars in director Nicolas Winding Refn's The Neon Demon

Elle Fanning stars in director Nicolas Winding Refn's The Neon Demon

The Neon Demon (2016) by Nicolas Winding Refn

June 27, 2016

Review by Lydia Creech

It’s not the what or how of The Neon Demon that bothers me, it’s the why. I’m not sure what insight Refn has to say with this film, nor that Refn needed to be the one to say it.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Travis Fimmel and Paula Patton star in director Duncan Jones' Warcraft

Travis Fimmel and Paula Patton star in director Duncan Jones' Warcraft

Warcraft (2016) by Duncan Jones

June 19, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

The film has its holes, and the plot seeps with cliche, but there is something admirable about Warcraft and the work by Duncan Jones. The film is weird and wild, but it comes from a place of pure adventure and creativity and that isn’t something we should dispel — video game or not.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Wu Jing and Tony Jaa star in director Cheang Pou-soi's film SPL 2: A Time for Consequences

Wu Jing and Tony Jaa star in director Cheang Pou-soi's film SPL 2: A Time for Consequences

SPL 2: A Time for Consequences (2016) by Cheang Pou-soi

June 17, 2016

Review by Nadine Smith

Like the best action movies, SPL 2: A Time for Consequences is a surficial melodrama in visual communion with its subtext. It isn’t about the disruptive power of violence, but about bodies jointed in impact and contact, united in their movement through space.

Read More
In New Reviews
3 Comments
Ellen DeGeneres voices Dory and Ed O'Neill voices Hank in Andrew Stanton and Angus MacLane's Finding Dory

Ellen DeGeneres voices Dory and Ed O'Neill voices Hank in Andrew Stanton and Angus MacLane's Finding Dory

Finding Dory (2016) by Andrew Stanton and Angus MacLane

June 16, 2016

Review by Zach Dennis

Finding Dory does a lot of things in a lazy manner, but it succeeds in its small attempt to reckon with mental health and stigma around it. It also helps that Dory’s parents build off the rich tradition of these films coming to terms with what a parent means, and may be one of the best cinematic examples of parents with a child with disabilities.

Read More
In New Reviews
Comment
Ellen DeGeneres voices Dory and Albert Brooks voices Marlin in Andrew Stanton's Finding Nemo

Ellen DeGeneres voices Dory and Albert Brooks voices Marlin in Andrew Stanton's Finding Nemo

Finding Nemo (2003) by Andrew Stanton

June 15, 2016

Retro Review by Zach Dennis

Finding Nemo may not sit in the annals of Pixar as one of their top tier works, but the reason it resonated with so many people is this central message of parenthood and responsibility. It is something we all struggle with — whether we have kids or not — and Nemo accentuated that better than a lot of other films.

Read More
In Retro Reviews
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Powered by Squarespace