Tribeca Review: “New Wave”

When Elizabeth Ai set out to make her documentary New Wave, it was to strictly be a film about the music phenomenon that originated in Orange County, California in the 1980s. The city’s Little Saigon area saw a large influx of Vietnamese immigrants relocating due to the Vietnam War, and the trend capitalized on that […]

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Tribeca Review: “Pirópolis”

It begins with an image of staggering horror and beauty: flames and smoke engulfing a line of trees, the sounds of crackling and popping overtaking the natural landscape, signifying its rapid destruction. Director Nicolás Molina lingers on this shot for quite some time before cutting to a closer up look at the trees, then pulling […]

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Tribeca Review: “Black Table”

1994 saw the highest number of Black students enrolled in Yale in the university’s history. But that statistic didn’t necessarily indicate increased inclusivity on campus. Enrollment among Black students at Yale peaked in 1997. Many of those Black students chose to band together, sitting at a table in the school’s lavish grand hall that was […]

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Review: “Flipside”

Chris Wilcha begins his documentary Flipside at an art gallery, where photographer Herman Leonard is exhibiting some of his work. Leonard is most well-known for his stunning photographs of some of the greatest jazz musicians who ever lived, and gives the viewer a mini tour of images of Nat King Cole, Duke Ellington, and others. […]

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Review: “Backspot”

Sports movie tropes abound in D.W. Waterson’s feature directorial debut Backspot, but it’s in how those tropes are employed that the film creates and sustains interest. Perhaps its most notable trait is that it centers around a sport that for a long time largely hasn’t been considered as such, both on and off screen. Cheerleading […]

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Review: “Evil Does Not Exist”

Patience is not merely a virtue when it comes to viewing Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s work; it’s a demand, a requirement he places upon the audience when they enter in to one of his worlds, whether it’s the tentatively building intrigue of his Vertigo riff, Asako I & II, the drawn out car rides and conversations that […]

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Review: “I Saw the TV Glow”

When I was around preschool age, the TV show Might Morphin Power Rangers— which ran from 1993 to 1996— was huge in the circle of other kids I knew. My mom wouldn’t let me watch it, believing it was too scary. I was allowed, however, to watch Batman: The Animated Series, and that specific iteration […]

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