Zootopia 2 Review

Zootopia 2

  • Director: Jared Bush, Byron Howard
  • Writer: Jared Bush
  • Starring: Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Ke Huy Quan, Fortune Feimster, Andy Samberg, David Strathairn, Idris Elba, Shakira, Patrick Warburton, Quinta Brunson

Grade: B+

Zootopia was easily one of Disney’s biggest hits of the 2010s. Grossing over a billion dollars at the box office and winning the Oscar for Best Animated Feature over critically acclaimed films such as Moana and Kubo and the Two Strings (with both earning more Oscar nominations than Zootopia), it’s hard to find a bigger success than the 2016 Disney crime film. Because of that, Zootopia 2 had a lot of pressure on it to succeed, but somehow, the film manages to live up to expectations.

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Eternity Review

Eternity

  • Director: David Freyne
  • Writer: David Freyne, Pat Cunnane
  • Starring: Elizabeth Olsen, Miles Teller, Callum Turner, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, John Early, Olga Merediz

Grade: B

In recent years, romance films have failed to receive theatrical releases. Unless it’s an adaptation of a Colleen Hoover novel like Regretting You or It Ends with Us, the film will more than likely be released straight to a streaming service. A24 is looking to change that this year, with the recent release of Materialists as well as the upcoming film Eternity, a romance story following a heated love triangle between Miles Teller, Callum Turner and Elizabeth Olsen. 

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Left-Handed Girl Review

Left-Handed Girl

  • Director: Shih-Ching Tsou
  • Writer: Shih-Ching Tsou, Sean Baker
  • Starring: Janel Tsai, Ma Shih-yuan, Nina Ye, Brando Huang, Alvin Lin, Blaire Chang

Grade: B+

Recent four-time Oscar winner Sean Baker may be the carrot at the end of the stick that is Left-Handed Girl for cinephiles, but he’s a secondary force in director Shih-Ching Tsou’s delightful family dramedy. It’s easy to understand the duo’s collaboration; they co-directed Take Out in 2004, and have had a working relationship together on most of Baker’s projects in the intervening years. Baker’s sensibilities can be seen within the story (he’s the co-writer of the screenplay along with Tsou, and serves as the film’s editor), but the film is more than a triumph of good editing and writing.

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Die My Love Review

Die My Love

  • Director: Lynne Ramsay
  • Writer: Lynne Ramsay, Enda Walsh, Alice Birch
  • Starring: Jennifer Lawrence, Robert Pattinson, LaKeith Stanfield, Nick Nolte, Sissy Spacek, Gabrielle Rose, Clare Coulter

Grade: B

Motherhood, and all its terrifyingly wonderful aspects, has rarely been rendered with as much dimension as in Lynne Ramsay’s Die My Love. The Scottish writer-director is at her best when she’s tapped into fractured psyches, and the destruction they often wreak on others (You Were Never Really Here and We Need to Talk About Kevin), but her latest is no different, utilizing a scorching lead performance from Jennifer Lawrence. And though it’s often captivating and visceral, the film’s meandering plot tends to wear down the viewer throughout its 2-hour runtime.

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Sentimental Value Review

Sentimental Value

  • Director: Joachim Trier
  • Writer: Joachim Trier, Eskil Vogt
  • Starring: Renata Reinsve, Stellan Skarsgård, Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Elle Fanning

Grade: A-

Beloved international auteur Gustav Borg (Stellan Skarsgård), the ersatz lead character of Sentimental Value, has written what may be his best, and possibly last, film, and he’s written it especially with his daughter Nora (Renata Reinsve) in mind for the lead role. For any actor, this would be seen as a no-brainer decision to gain some bona fide recognition. But Nora rejects his film, without even reading the script, and the remainder of Norwegian director Joachim Trier’s latest film presents an intriguing, nuanced look at why.

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Train Dreams Review

Train Dreams

  • Director: Clint Bentley
  • Writer: Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar
  • Starring: Joel Edgerton, Felicity Jones, William H. Macy, Kerry Condon, Clifton Collins Jr., Will Patton

Grade: A

In the entire history of the universe, since matter was first created, the time which humans have occupied on Earth has been microscopic. And the average life span of an average human fractures that already tiny number into an even smaller percentage. In other words, the modern world which you or I are seeing and experiencing is just a small bit of what’s come before and what will come after. This is, ostensibly, a review of Clint Bentley’s Train Dreams, the best film of the year, but because it’s a film that spoke to me on a deeper, more human level than any film in a long time, I feel it warrants a more philosophical and personal discussion.

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