All That Breathes
As environmental toxicity and civil unrest escalate, the relationship between this family and the neglected, eco-essential kites forms a poetic chronicle of the city’s collapsing ecology and deepening social fault lines.
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As environmental toxicity and civil unrest escalate, the relationship between this family and the neglected, eco-essential kites forms a poetic chronicle of the city’s collapsing ecology and deepening social fault lines.
In his triumphant return to feature filmmaking, virtuoso South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook delivers a breathlessly involving thriller that doubles as a kind of twisted romantic comedy.
Join Reverse Shot editors and critics for a live online event announcing Reverse Shot's Best of 2022 film list.
Katia and Maurice Krafft loved two things—each other and volcanoes. For two decades, the daring French volcanologist couple roamed the planet, chasing eruptions and documenting their discoveries. Free members screening of Sara Dosa's documentary on 1/11.
On 1/7 & 1/13, see one of the most underappreciated films of 2022 from American cinema’s deftest memory maker, Richard Linklater.
On Friday 1/13, see S. S. Rajamouli's epic adventure set in 1920s India—one of the international movie sensations of the year.
Jane Schoenbrun’s feature debut uses the textures and trappings of the horror genre to descend into a striking depiction of a particularly 21st-century loneliness.
Marcel is an adorable one-inch-tall shell who ekes out a colorful existence with his grandmother Connie and their pet lint, Alan. Marcel the Shell with Shoes On plays so successfully as a documentary that you might catch yourself believing it’s true.
On January 14, see one of the most profound and inspiring works of nonfiction in recent memory, a vibrant portrait of life in its loving, generous documentation of death, with director Ondi Timoner and Rabbi Rachel Timoner in person!
Claire Denis has never made a film so sharply straight and to the point as this, her wintriest and weariest work, starring Juliette Binoche and Vincent Lindon.
Stan Brakhage made almost 400 films over 51 years, varying in lengths from nine seconds to four and a quarter hours. His finest films are not his best known, according to Fred Camper, who curated this selection screening 1/14.
Claire Denis’s distinctively Denisian take on the erotic political thriller stars Qualley as a marooned American journalist and Alwyn as the shifty English dealmaker with whom she becomes entangled in ethically unstable Nicaragua.
Available once again, only on 16mm per Camper’s wishes, these films demonstrate that Camper is not only one of our most invaluable film critics but also a formidable artist. Screening 1/14.