Sinners and One Battle After Another duke it out for Best Picture as Conan O’Brien hosts from Dolby Theatre
Sandra Hall told sinners “An intelligent film that quickly turns into a semi-comical gorefest, the impact of which is magnified all the more.” [Ryan] Cooglar’s decision to shoot with IMAX cameras.”
Frankenstein
Okay, headline Review by Jake Wilson says it all (sorry Jacob Elordi): “We already have a good Frankenstein movie. We don’t need this”.
hamnet
Stephanie Bunbury described the film as “paradoxically exhilarating”. feature – “An affirmation of humanity that culminates in the aftermath of Hamnet’s death.”
Emotional Value
″Even though it is original, personal and local, Emotional Value “It fascinated even viewers who might have difficulty locating Norway on a map,” he said. Stephanie Bunbury writes.
bugonia
Sandra Hall had these choice words for bugonia:”The director’s last film tells us [Yorgos] Lanthimos was released. The madness is limitless, the mood swings are extreme, and the result is an elaborate and admittedly hilarious practical joke that makes the whole thing ridiculous.
F1
“The aim is to give us an overview of the event, rather than putting us into a single perspective, demonstrating a high level of sensitivity and focusing on the sporting demands of not only the drivers but everyone involved.” Jake Wilson writes.
Marty Supreme
Jake Wilson says“One might object to a film about a table tennis player as follows: Marty Supreme It doesn’t include that much table tennis. Still, set-piece matches bring home the relevance of the central metaphor: Marty is quick on his feet, knows all the angles, and is always ready to pivot rather than give up when backed into a corner.
Secret agent
“What interests writer-director Kleber Mendonça Filho is not the politics of the regime. He is trying to present a picture of a world where corruption is the agenda of the day, an inevitable danger that shapes the lives of people across the country.” Sandra Hall writes.
Train Dreams
Compliments from Craig Mathieson Train DreamLead Australian actor Joel Edgerton says: “His defining characteristic on screen is his attentiveness. His characters understand everything, and he and Robert [Grainier]“This becomes an overwhelming task that always has a deeply felt immediacy.”
