Review: “The Mastermind”

He looks at the art, but he isn’t really looking at it. As he slowly slopes around the museum galleries, one of his young sons chattering animatedly in the otherwise silent place as the guard snoozes in his chair nearby, it’s clear from his furtive glances that he’s searching for something. Eventually, he sets his […]

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Review: “Trains”

Trains opens with a quote by Franz Kafka: “There is plenty of hope, an infinite amount of hope…but not for us.” Those are characteristically bitter words from the Jewish Czech writer, attributed to a conversation between Kafka and his writer friend Max Bond when the latter asked the former his thoughts on hope outside the […]

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Review: “Chain Reactions”

What more can you say about a movie so iconic that there’s seemingly nothing new to be said? That sentiment doesn’t deter Alexandre O. Philippe, whose essay films encompass cinematic topics ranging from the obvious (David Lynch’s obsession with The Wizard of Oz, Kim Novak’s role in Vertigo) to the niche (the iconography of Monument […]

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Review: “Megadoc”

“I built my career following Francis,” George Lucas states in new interviews conducted by Mike Figgis for his documentary Megadoc, a fly-on-the-wall chronicle of director Francis Ford Coppola’s epic Megalopolis, his decades-gestating, self-financed dream project that— following a lengthy and fraught production— finally premiered at Cannes last year to largely critical pans and mass confusion. […]

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Review: “A Christmas Party”

We’ve all been there before, regardless of what precisely we celebrate or believe in: the family holiday party. The tense reunions, the awkward introductions of new partners, the petty squabbles over everything from politics to what’s for dinner. And we’ve all seen it depicted on screen countless times, too. So it’s a testament to Alexander […]

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TIFF 2025: “Aki”

You won’t hear a word of spoken dialogue in Darlene Naponse’s Aki, an observational documentary depicting life in the indigenous Atikameksheng Anishnawbek territory of Northern Ontario. But the movie is far from silent. Naponse— a native of the region— uses her connection with the community to craft a sonically and visually rich story of the […]

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