Theatrical Reviews

Reviews of selected general release films

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Ioana Uricaru's LEMONADE is a reflection of our strife and a triumph for the power of great cinema

In the best of circumstances, a film will create a language for itself. An internal yearning in the artists involved, from the writer and director to the actors on screen, pushes for expression using the medium to its best advantages. It’s an exceedingly rare thing which requires not only honesty and careful creativity, but also a great deal of courage. From before the first shot appeared on screen, it was already clear: first-time feature Romanian director Ioana Uricaru had forged such a language.

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Bill Oliver's feature debut JONATHAN is a sci-fi mind game that scores and shows real promise for the new director's next projects

Bill Oliver’s first feature film Jonathan arrives into a sort of renaissance moment for sci-fi anthology tales. Employing near-future brain science tropes reminiscent in some ways of last year’s Get Out, fans of the British Netflix series Black Mirror will be able to jump right into this literal mind game of a movie.

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Stephanie Wang-Breal’s documentary BLOWIN' UP about the real heroic efforts to give sex workers a shot at a different life delivers some emotional gut punches

By the end of the film, some of the life changes the attorneys go through are disruptive enough, the audience is left wondering if their good work will be undone by their own circumstances. It was hard to not to cry, and even feel ashamed. After all, we’re all part of the system of cruelty, injustice and vengeance which works harder to take down street-level ladies while their abusive masters most often live well.

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Stephanie Wang-Breal’s documentary BLOWIN’ UP about the real heroic efforts to give sex workers a shot at a different life delivers some emotional gut punches

By the end of the film, some of the life changes the attorneys go through are disruptive enough, the audience is left wondering if their good work will be undone by their own circumstances. It was hard to not to cry, and even feel ashamed. After all, we’re all part of the system of cruelty, injustice and vengeance which works harder to take down street-level ladies while their abusive masters most often live well.

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Marco Proserpio's THE MAN WHO STOLE BANKSY may have more lasting impact than some of the short-lived street art it’s talking about

perhaps that’s Proserpio’s ultimate achievement here. He gets us to think about what it is we do, what it is we love, and what it is that motivates us, all in the microcosm of one humble Banksy work. It’s fair to say, this documentary may have more lasting impact than some of the short-lived street art it’s talking about.

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Marco Proserpio’s THE MAN WHO STOLE BANKSY may have more lasting impact than some of the short-lived street art it’s talking about

perhaps that’s Proserpio’s ultimate achievement here. He gets us to think about what it is we do, what it is we love, and what it is that motivates us, all in the microcosm of one humble Banksy work. It’s fair to say, this documentary may have more lasting impact than some of the short-lived street art it’s talking about.

TRIBECA 2018 REVIEWS: Dominique Rocher’s THE NIGHT EATS THE WORLD discovers a new horror about surviving a zombie apocalypse

The Night Eats the World explores a new dimension in one of the most trod-upon genres of the last 20 years, and finds a genuinely new corner to explore. For this super-jaded horror movie fan, it was a welcome and refreshing experience. And the very final frame of the film rounds out the story’s theme in one very potent image of visual information (quietly, of course). It’s recommended not only for ghoul-loving gore-hounds, but for any audience who enjoys a decent bit of introspective drama.