Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne specialize in social realism, unwaveringly committed to their characters and craft, and Tori and Lokita is no exception.
Category: Film
Review: The Worst Ones
The line between fact and fiction always blurs when a camera is pointed at people, but in Lisa Akoka and Romane Gueret’s arresting new feature, it’s more like a game of three-card monte.
The Chicago Film Society fulfills tomorrow’s promises
“I am a forest, and a night of dark trees: but he who is not afraid of my darkness, will find banks full of roses under my cypresses.” —Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spake Zarathustra Just three minutes into Edward Owens’s Autre Fois J’ai Aimé Une Femme (1966), the screen goes dark. It stays that way for […]
Review: El Jardín
It effectively highlights Chicago’s labor union history, and the struggles of a neighborhood and Chicagoans in general feel authentic and full of heart, especially to this part of the city.
The Harper Theater is putting up a fight
It’s an impressive venue, but can it survive the COVID-19 fallout and seismic shifts in movie-viewing preferences?
Review: Country Gold
It’s a little late in the day for a Garth Brooks parody, but Mickey Reece’s Country Gold is fully aware of its own obsolescence.
Review: Shazam! Fury of the Gods
The first iteration contained some intriguing comedic explorations into what it means to have near-limitless power with a limited maturity level, and it seems like the creative team used up all their thoughts on it in the first go-round.
Review: John Wick 4
You would think that by John Wick 4 the franchise would be tired and out of tricks—and you would be dead wrong.
Celebrating a decade of critically acclaimed film
Chicago film lovers will get the chance to mark off a massive chunk of their movie lists at the tenth annual Chicago Critics Film Festival (CCFF).
Review: 65
65 is an old-fashioned B movie creature feature with a modern sci-fi feature budget.
Review: Inside
An art thief breaks into a New York City penthouse and is unable to get back out.
Review: Tetris
The real story is interesting enough without what seems like unnecessary sensationalism.
Review: Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
The Chris Pine-led adaption of the pen-and-paper fantasy progenitor is a joke-a-minute campaign of quips, jabs, and cheeky one-liners.
Review: Champions
Overall, Champions is endearing at times with some slow moments, but it’s a good movie if you’re a fan of the genre.