Marty Supreme (2025)
93%
EDIT
“One of the strong features of the plot of Marty Supreme is its proximity to parable and the absence of masses of money. ” –
London Review of Books
Jan 14, 2026
Full Review
Frankenstein (2025)
85%
EDIT
“Victor and his father are portrayed by Oscar Isaac and Charles Dance. They play, perfectly, the classic Oedipal parts of brilliant bullied child and impatient, self-admiring father.” –
London Review of Books
Dec 2, 2025
Full Review
Souleymane's Story (2024)
100%
EDIT
“Lojkine’s delicate play with our expectations is so finely handled that it’s best experienced directly rather than described.” –
London Review of Books
Nov 3, 2025
Full Review
Highest 2 Lowest (2025)
83%
EDIT
“Lee has made a quite different movie, marked by elegant allusions rather than debt.” –
London Review of Books
Oct 3, 2025
Full Review
The Naked Gun (2025)
87%
EDIT
“The film doesn’t have much of a plot because it’s too keen on its mishaps, many of them violent. But the bit of plot there is takes us, finally, to an interesting place.” –
London Review of Books
Sep 5, 2025
Full Review
28 Years Later (2025)
88%
EDIT
“Too academic as well as too sentimental perhaps, but Fiennes’s performance as the eerie doctor, creator of an intense, eccentric heart of resistance when resistance is always too late, helps to carry the day.” –
London Review of Books
Jul 18, 2025
Full Review
Riefenstahl (2024)
97%
EDIT
“The second part of Veiel’s film is a well-made but very straight biography. ” –
London Review of Books
Jun 6, 2025
Full Review
La Haine (1995)
96%
EDIT
“Great movies can be too steady, too serene, and this film is headed in a different direction.” –
London Review of Books
May 6, 2025
Full Review
Mickey 17 (2025)
78%
EDIT
“In Mickey 17 the chance of living again is linked to a form of slavery. The film itself ends with marks on a board rather than a photographed human scene, letters and numbers offered as a visual tribute to mortal singularity. ” –
London Review of Books
Apr 9, 2025
Full Review
I'm Still Here (2024)
97%
EDIT
“The carnival effect is definitely excessive, but Salles can hardly not know this or not want it... I'm also inclined to imagine that he is presenting, for all audiences, a symptom more than an escape. ” –
London Review of Books
Mar 7, 2025
Full Review
The Brutalist (2024)
93%
EDIT
“The general effect may create in us a nostalgia for the edgy coherence of the first part. There is, though, a refrain that echoes through the film. ” –
London Review of Books
Feb 7, 2025
Full Review
Anora (2024)
93%
EDIT
“What’s romantic here is a shared feeling of attachment, whatever its basis, and what’s comic is the absence of any sense of what is to come.” –
London Review of Books
Dec 4, 2024
Full Review
Megalopolis (2024)
46%
EDIT
“Much of the acting in the film stands clearly apart from the dizziness, and we need to credit both the director and the players for this. ” –
London Review of Books
Nov 3, 2024
Full Review
Only the River Flows (2023)
85%
EDIT
“Wei is not going to tell us, but he invites us to think that the answer to our question may lie neither in probable history nor in fantasy but in absurdist philosophy or certain modes of detective fiction.” –
London Review of Books
Oct 7, 2024
Full Review
The Dead Don't Hurt (2023)
86%
EDIT
“[Mortensen] gives us lots more pictures, but he won’t tell us what time period we’re inhabiting, or even whether we’re looking at the contents of a mind or a notional real world. The method is awkward but has many interesting effects.” –
London Review of Books
Jun 25, 2024
Full Review
La Chimera (2023)
95%
EDIT
“One more tomb awaits Arthur, and you need to see the movie to learn what happens there. Actually, even when you’ve seen it you won’t be quite sure, because several fascinating interpretations of the events are possible. Judge ye. ” –
London Review of Books
May 31, 2024
Full Review
The Delinquents (2023)
86%
EDIT
“Curiously absorbing and bewildering.” –
London Review of Books
May 2, 2024
Full Review
American Fiction (2023)
93%
EDIT
“The film keeps threatening to come apart, almost unable to juggle its sorrowful realism with its wild farce. It doesn’t come apart, though, and the survived threat is part of the unshakeable discomfort we feel, even when we are laughing.” –
London Review of Books
Mar 28, 2024
Full Review
The Zone of Interest (2023)
93%
EDIT
“Jonathan Glazer’s Zone of Interest seems stately at first, even stolid, and a bit too restrained to raise real questions. Once it’s over we realise that its discretion is part of a careful, risky plan.” –
London Review of Books
Feb 23, 2024
Full Review
Poor Things (2023)
92%
EDIT
“The ending has some fine surprises that twist the film’s earlier riddles into even stranger shapes.” –
London Review of Books
Jan 29, 2024
Full Review
Napoleon (2023)
58%
EDIT
“It’s clear, I think, that in spite of various attempts to make Napoleon work as a biopic, the film doesn’t have a bio. It has a general of genius, something like a sports figure who is alive only in games or tournaments.” –
London Review of Books
Dec 14, 2023
Full Review
Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)
93%
EDIT
“DiCaprio and De Niro carry the film through their impersonations of what they are not, their acting of an act, so to speak: the nice, if rough-edged guy, and the genial businessman, the toast of the town.” –
London Review of Books
Nov 16, 2023
Full Review
Past Lives (2023)
95%
EDIT
“This all sounds rather cryptic, and the film is mysterious. It is also lucid and precise, intimately devoted to its strange lyrical sorrow. It’s as if we are watching feelings in slow motion.” –
London Review of Books
Oct 19, 2023
Full Review
Afire (2023)
91%
EDIT
“There are drawbacks to such a view. There are moments when we can’t take any more hovering, and Petzold’s timing and tone can be awkward. But he is faithful to his scheme, and his new film, Afire, has a much lighter touch than any of his previous works.” –
London Review of Books
Sep 15, 2023
Full Review
Barbie (2023)
88%
EDIT
“The film gets a little lost at times, as if it had too many storylines to play with and won’t let any of them go... But there are many great jokes in the film.” –
London Review of Books
Sep 7, 2023
Full Review
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