Hugh Gibson’s 2016 documentary is a sensitive and important portrait of addicts in Toronto.
By Thomas Hobbs
This forgotten 2001 horror set in an abandoned asylum offers a pertinent look at a modern issue.
By Nathan Smith
There’s a sly satiric message at the heart of Joe Dante’s 1998 tale of action figures running amuck.
By Ethan Warren
How do these psychedelic fantasias, starring The Beatles and The Monkees respectively, hold up today?
The British actor casts a gaunt, morbid, uncompromisingly human figure in Mike Leigh’s nocturnal London odyssey.
By Adam Scovell
Howard Hawks’ screwball is one of the first truly great sound comedies.
The unresolved conclusion to Peter Weir’s film is much more satisfying than the posthumously published final chapter.
By Kaite Welsh
All hail the lusty, bitchy antiheroine of Clive Barker’s visceral 1987 body horror.
Jim Carrey’s portrayal of a man trapped in his own reality TV show remains as captivating as ever.
As a Desi girl coming of age in the early 2000s, Gurinder Chadha’s film has a profound impact on me.
A new Blu-ray box set offers occasion to celebrate this horseriding, bullfighting artisan of the western.
By Adam Scovell
A curiosity in the everyday powers Agnès Varda’s masterful second feature.
By David Opie
With a long-awaited sequel on the way, we revisit the Chiodo brothers’ classic low-budget horror from 1988.
Daniel Clowes’ story of teenage apathy stirred in me a desire to break away and be alone.
By Alex Flood
Is Indy’s fourth outing really as bad as everyone remembers?
Now is the time to see the challenging and moving work of this little-known German auteur.
As beleaguered detective Dave Toschi, Ruffalo turns in arguably the finest turn of his career to date.