Roberto Rossellini’s 1950 film exemplifies the fruitful creative tensions that can arise out of casting ordinary people alongside movie stars.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 10:41AMRichard Brody reviews the horror movie “Us,” written and directed by Jordan Peele and starring Lupita Nyong’o, Winston Duke, and Elisabeth Moss.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 09:00AMRichard Brody reviews “Bathtubs Over Broadway,” a documentary by Dava Whisenant that examines the industrial musical—plays produced by corporations for their employees to enjoy at nati…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 05:06AMRichard Brody writes about the four versions of the film “A Star is Born”—from 1937, 1954, 1976, and 2018—and recommends three for streaming, in addition to the 1932 film “What Pri…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 04:23PMRichard Brody reviews “A Star Is Born,” directed by Bradley Cooper and starring Cooper and Lady Gaga.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 04:57PMRichard Brody reviews “The Spy Who Dumped Me,” directed by Susanna Fogel and starring Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 07:05PMRichard Brody reviews “The Greatest Showman,” about the life of P. T. Barnum, directed by Michael Gracey and starring Hugh Jackman.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 05:45PMRichard Brody and Anthony Lane review films currently in theatres, including “Blade Runner 2049,” “The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected),” and more.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 02:14PMAnthony Lane and Richard Brody review films currently in theatres, including “Blade Runner 2049,” “The Florida Project,” “Faces Places,” and more.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 01:30PMAnthony Lane and Richard Brody review movies currently in theatres, including “Mother!,” “Battle of the Sexes,” and more.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 04:58PMRichard Brody and Anthony Lane review films currently in theatres, such as “It,” “The Unknown Girl,” “The Limehouse Golem,” and more.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 04:48PMAnthony Lane and Richard Brody review the movies currently in theatres, including “I Do . . . Until I Don’s,” “Marjorie Prime,” “Logan Lucky,” and more.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 05:58PMAnthony Lane and Richard Brody offer suggestions and reviews for movies in theatres this weekend, including “Logan Lucky” and “Beach Rats.”
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 04:30PMRichard Brody recommends five films to stream this weekend, such as “American Gigolo,” starring Richard Gere, which is available on HBO Go.
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 03:55PMThe attention paid to movie scores—particularly in concert halls, where they’re often played live to accompany screenings—doesn’t, for the most part, serve movies any better than mus…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 08:58AMThe director Damien Chazelle’s notion of artistic power isn’t merely inseparable from his notion of will power; it’s the very embodiment of it—louder, faster, and alone are his stand…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 06:30PM“Michael Moore in TrumpLand” isn’t quite the film that I expected it to be, and that’s all to the good. Moore is, of course, a genius of political satire, deploying his persona—as …
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 07:00PMMovies change over the years. Decades ago, I saw “Grey Gardens” as a story of a festering delusion of the American aristocracy and the closed circles of high society decaying into inanit…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 01:23PMNoah Baumbach, whose new film “While We’re Young” opens this weekend, has become the master of a genre unto himself: the personal counterfactual. In “Greenberg” and “Frances Ha,�…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 12:00PMThe current production of “Don Giovanni” at the Metropolitan Opera, running through March 6th, is the opera of the moment, a profoundly political and moral vision that’s as much of our…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 08:00AMI heartily agree with Manohla Dargis that there must be more female filmmakers, but her recent piece in the Times calling for changes to the industry buries the lead. Midway through, she …
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 02:49PMOperaphile alert: don’t miss the new production of Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro,” with its current cast and James Levine conducting, that will be at the Metropolitan Opera throug…
SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 07:00PM