2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: If These Walls Could Sing

2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: If These Walls Could Sing

  If These Walls Could Sing, the new music documentary from Mary McCartney, daughter of Beatles’ legend Paul McCartney, looks at the legendary Abbey Road recording studio in London and the history behind it. With artists like The Beatles, Pink Floyd, and many others have recorded in this studio over the years, the documentary only scratches the surface of the studio’s history and acts as something just above a Wikipedia entry. A large chunk of…

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2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: The Killing of a Journalist

2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: The Killing of a Journalist

  Following in the footsteps of recent documentaries Collective and Navalny, The Killing of a Journalist is another startling and powerful documentary about the death of a journalist and the government conspiracy behind it. The Killing of a Journalist looks at the story of investigative journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancée Martina Kusnirova, who were brutally murdered in Slovakia in 2018. Using evidence uncovered by Kuciak’s colleagues, the film looks at the mob-style hit on…

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2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: Vicenta B

2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: Vicenta B

  Vicenta B is the reason why I love film festivals. The film isn’t a modern masterpiece or anything, but it is a film that I am glad I was able to see. It took me to a world I knew nothing about, embedding itself in the culture and giving us interesting characters that are well-written. It also comes from a filmmaker who is on the rise with a bright future. This is why film festivals…

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2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: Sick

2022 Chicago International Film Festival Movie Review: Sick

  John Hyams’s Sick is interesting because it uses the COVID-19 pandemic as a major part of the plot. There have been movies that have mentioned COVID or have featured scenes where characters are wearing masks, but Sick makes COVID a key element of the plot. Not only is it the framing device of the film, but it plays a key part in the events that take place throughout the movie and it does so…

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Movie Review: Hocus Pocus 2

Movie Review: Hocus Pocus 2

  It seems a virgin at Disney lit the Black Flame Candle because the Sanderson sisters are back! Whiney, Sarah, and Mary have returned to lure children and stay young forever in Hocus Pocus 2, an entertaining and worthy sequel to the 1993 childhood classic. It’s been 29 years since Max, Danny, and Allison lit the Black Flame Candle and resurrected the trio of 17th-century witches, and stopped them from causing mayhem throughout the town…

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Movie Review: The Invitation

Movie Review: The Invitation

  August has the reputation of being a slow month for theatrical movies. Occasionally you’ll get a Guardians of the Galaxy or an awards player like The Help or Straight Outta Compton, but August usually acts as a cinematic transition month, where the summer movies begin to fade and the fall movies begin to ramp up for festivals and an awards push. With August being a slower month, it is very easy to lose interest…

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Movie Review: Bodies Bodies Bodies

Movie Review: Bodies Bodies Bodies

  Halina Reijn’s Bodies Bodies Bodies starts off like it will be a movie about a party amongst friends during a hurricane. The party is being hosted by David (Pete Davidson) at his parent’s huge mansion. Attending the party is David’s girlfriend Emma (Chase Sui Wonders), Jordan (Myha’la Herrold), Alice (Rachel Sennott), Greg (Lee Pace), a guy Alice has only known for a few weeks through Tinder who David is intimidated by, Sophie (Amandla Stenberg),…

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Movie Review: Bullet Train

Movie Review: Bullet Train

  David Leitch’s Bullet Train is a movie with a lot of characters. To start, there’s Ladybug (Brad Pitt), an assassin who, despite his nickname, is having a terrible streak of luck that only seems to be getting worse for him. There’s Tangerine (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Lemon (Brian Tyree Henry), gun-for-hire brothers who will do any dirty job that they are asked to do. Then there is Prince (Joey King), a seemingly nice and innocent-looking…

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Movie Review: Nope

Movie Review: Nope

  Jordan Peele’s Nope is the director’s biggest film to date and arguably his most impressive, which is a lot to say seeing as his debut film, the Oscar-winning Get Out, has become a cultural touchstone, and his follow-up, Us, features one of the great performances of the last ten years from Lupita Nyong’o. Where Get Out and Us felt smaller in terms of their scale but huge with their themes, Nope is a perfect…

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Movie Review: The Blind Man Who Did Not Want to See Titanic

Movie Review: The Blind Man Who Did Not Want to See Titanic

  The Blind Man Who Did Not Want to See Titanic is one of the most unique and interesting movies of 2022. It is a captivating experience putting us front and center into the experience of a blind and handicapped man who goes on a journey to meet the person he loves in person for the first time. It is a smart, sweet, tense, raw, and beautiful film. Jakko (Petri Poikolainen) is blind and paralyzed…

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