‘Abigail’ Review: Horror by Numbers

In this cheerfully unambitious vampire movie, a bloodsucker is shut up in an old mansion with some nitwit criminals. Will there will be gore? You bet. Source link

‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ Review: War, Undemanding

Principle II: Make It Repetitive This also is a principle in the list of what makes a good streaming movie. It’s hard to avoid distractions: dogs, doorbells, kitchen snacks, Instagram.…

‘Blood for Dust’ Review: Dire Straits

This drug-run thriller, starring Scoot McNairy, traffics in grim ponderousness. Source link

‘Stress Positions’ Review: It’s Giving Pandemonium

For “Stress Positions,” the writer-director Theda Hammel shows her hand when a character says, in a world-weary voice-over, that the madness we’re about to witness “happened so long ago.” The…

Tribeca Festival’s 2024 Lineup Features Films With the Brat Pack, Lily Gladstone

The 2024 Tribeca Festival will offer the world premieres of a Brat Pack documentary, a movie starring Lily Gladstone and films that trace the lives of the music world figures…

Denis Villeneuve Answers All Your ‘Dune: Part Two’ Questions

He explains why Lady Jessica’s face is so heavily tattooed, whether Paul considers himself the Messiah and what he thinks of those Javier Bardem memes. Source link

Participant, Maker of Films With Social Conscience, Calls It Quits

The company had critical and commercial hits over two decades but never made money consistently and faced a challenging entertainment landscape. Source link

How They Pulled Off the Ending to ‘Civil War’

This article contains spoilers for the film “Civil War.” When Alex Garland was writing the script for “Civil War,” he started with the ideas in the last moments. “In some…

The Beatles’ ‘Let It Be’ Film Will Stream After 54 Years on Disney+

Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s unloved — or misinterpreted? — 1970 documentary, the source for Peter Jackson’s “Get Back,” will stream on Disney+. Source link

‘Man’s Castle’: Free Love, Hard Times

A celebrant of redemptive love, Frank Borzage (1893-1962) was the most romantic of classic Hollywood directors and, however unconventionally, perhaps the most religious as well. “Man’s Castle” (1933) conflates an…