Movie Review: Caught Stealing

Movie Review: Caught Stealing

  Throughout director Darren Aronofsky’s career, he’s established himself as a director who handles heavy subjects with a visceral vision. Movies like Requiem for a Dream, Black Swan, mother!, and The Whale deal with hard subjects like addiction and loneliness, and Aronofsky has never held back from the harshness of these subjects. His movies, to this point, have been well-made, but intense and at times shocking. Aronofsky’s newest film, Caught Stealing, is far and away…

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Movie Review: Nobody 2

Movie Review: Nobody 2

  2021’s Nobody was one of the biggest surprises of that year. In a post-pandemic cinematic experience, seeing funny-man Bob Odenkirk turn into John Wick for 90 minutes was more fun and entertaining than I ever expected. Nobody 2 fails to conjure up the same spark that the first film did. It does feature bone-cracking action and a slew of dead bodies, but the magic of seeing Odenkirk become a super assassin has vanished, despite…

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Movie Review: Highest 2 Lowest

Movie Review: Highest 2 Lowest

  Reviewing a remake is always tough. As much as we try to watch the film for what is present on the screen, it’s hard not to think about the original source material, similar to watching a movie based on a book you’ve read. We expect how the plot will unfold, we already know the basis of the characters, and we are aware of any twists that may take place. Spike Lee’s Highest 2 Lowest,…

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Movie Review: The Pickup

Movie Review: The Pickup

  We’ve all heard the saying, “two is plenty, three’s a crowd,” at some point in our lives. While it’s self-explanatory, the saying means that two people can enjoy each other’s company comfortably, but adding a third person can create awkwardness or tension. Watching Tim Story’s The Pickup, that old proverb kept running through my head. The film stars Eddie Murphy and Pete Davidson as two armored truck drivers whose truck is the target of…

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Movie Review: Weapons

Movie Review: Weapons

  Weapons has an incredible hook: one night, at 2:17 am, 17 kids from the same class woke up, ran out of their houses, and seemingly disappeared into the night. Nobody knows where they went, nobody knows why they ran out of the house, and nobody can find them. It’s hard not to be hooked by such a simple yet chilling premise for a film. But with that comes the pressure of executing a story…

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From the Collection: Carnal Knowledge

From the Collection: Carnal Knowledge

Mike Nichols’ 1971 drama Carnal Knowledge has been added to the Criterion Collection. Amid the sexual revolution and social upheaval of the early 1970s, acclaimed director Mike Nichols delivered a zeitgeist-defining examination of American mores. Sharply written by Jules Feiffer, this acerbic drama flashes through more than twenty years in the lives of two college buddies (Jack Nicholson and Art Garfunkel) whose casual chauvinism is all fun and games—until it’s not. As the women who suffer and…

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