Tag Archives: film

Ballad of a Small Player Review

Ballad of a Small Player

  • Director: Edward Berger
  • Writer: Rowan Joffe
  • Starring: Collin Farrell, Fala Chen, Tilda Swinton, Deanie Yip Tak-Han, Alex Jennings, Jason Tobin, Adrienne Lau

Grade: C+

Every gambler knows that, sooner or later, no matter how hot their streak becomes, they’ll eventually go bust; the only variable is how much it’ll hurt when it happens. After making an international splash in 2022, director Edward Berger’s new film Ballad of a Small Player isn’t a spectacular bust, but is a relative disappointment compared to his recent output. Though it’s easy to see why Berger was drawn to making the film, the end result is a worn-out character piece full of wasted potential.

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Blue Moon Review

Blue Moon

  • Director: Richard Linklater
  • Writer: Robert Kaplow
  • Starring: Ethan Hawke, Andrew Scott, Bobby Cannavale, Margaret Qualley, Jonah Lees, Simon Delaney

Grade: B

Richard Linklater’s long and illustrious career has taken him across genres, decades, countries, and styles to make one of the most varied filmographies since his rise on the indie scene in the 1990s. For his latest, Blue Moon – the first of his two films to be released in 2025 – Linklater reunites with his most constant collaborator, Ethan Hawke, to produce a new spin on the biopic. I had written in my review of Linklater’s last film that he’s always been interested in exploring the private persona versus public, and while this certainly applies here, he’s perhaps just as fascinated with the passage of time and how it can distort those same perceptions.

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Frankenstein Review

Frankenstein

  • Director: Guillermo del Toro
  • Writer: Guillermo del Toro
  • Starring: Oscar Isaac, Jacob Elordi, Christoph Waltz, Mia Goth, Felix Kammerer, Charles Dance

Grade: B-

Netflix has multiple auteur-driven films set to release throughout the rest of the year. From Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly to Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite and even the Sundance breakout Train Dreams, the streaming studio has numerous films gunning for Oscar nominations. Arguably the biggest contender is Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, a $120 million spectacle that adapts one of the most foundational horror novels of all time.

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Queens of the Dead Review

Queens of the Dead

  • Director: Tina Romero
  • Writer: Tina Romero, Erin Judge
  • Starring: Katy O’Brian, Jaquel Spivey, Nina West, Margaret Cho, Tómas Matos, Riki Lindhome

Grade: C

Films made by children of beloved filmmakers can run the gamut in quality and style. From critical failures like Ishana Shyamalan’s The Watchers or Oscar darlings like Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation, it is almost impossible to tell how well films from nepo babies will turn out. Tina Romero’s Queens of the Dead is the latest debut from a child of an iconic filmmaker —in this case, horror director George A. Romero. Seeing Tina Romero take on the horror subgenre that cemented her father as an all-time horror director could lead to deadly consequences if it turned out poorly, but luckily, her film takes a unique spin on the zombie flick, making for an entertaining experience from start to finish.

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It Was Just an Accident Review

It Was Just an Accident

  • Director: Jafar Panahi
  • Writer: Jafar Panahi
  • Starring: Vahid Mobasseri, Mariam Afshari, Ebrahim Azizi, Hadis Pakbaten, Majid Panahi, Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr

Grade: A-

Getting any film made, even under the best of circumstances, is a small kind of miracle. For auteur Jafar Panahi, getting a film made under the Iranian regime is another kind of miracle entirely – not to mention an active act of resistance. Panahi has faced difficulties making films before (his last film, No Bears, was made while he was under house arrest). But It Was Just an Accident is as openly critical towards his government as possible, and presents a moral and existential quandary that anyone can relate to when living under fear.

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Heartland Film Festival 2025: Under the Lights, Outerlands, Adult Children

Under the Lights

It’s always nice to see actors challenging themselves after more family-friendly fare, and this is the case with Pearce Joza’s starring turn in Under the Lights. Viewers may recognize the actor from Disney’s Zombies franchise, but here he’s given the room to show his depth. Miles Levin, who writes and directs, expands on his short film of the same name, about a high schooler named Sam (Joza) with epilepsy who desperately wants to attend his prom. The story is full of mostly standard stuff, with Sam finding the courage, accepting his limitations, and finding his true friends, but Levin’s heart is in the right place.

The cast list is unusually stacked, with Randall Park, Nick Offerman, Mary Holland, and Mark Duplass making cameo appearances, plus Lake Bell playing Sam’s overly protective mother. Joza’s performance stands up to scrutiny, as he plays into Sam’s teenage naivety but bullish determination. After all, what teenager doesn’t feel deathly determined to prove their doubters wrong, regardless of their own potential health issues? I don’t know if any version of the film exists which scratches deeper beneath the surface, but Under the Lights is the kind of regional film festival title which comes and goes without much further investigation. Of course, it’s great to see accurate representation of little-seen disabilities on film, and Joza proves that he can easily break from the Disney mold, so Levin’s film is ultimately a mild net positive.

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Outerlands

Another Heartland film featuring recognizable faces comes in the form of Elena Oxman’s Outerlands, starring Orange is the New Black star Asia Kate Dillon. The film is one of the few purely adult-oriented offerings at Heartland, as it explores a number of difficult topics without reservation. Though there are some rough edges in some areas, Dillon shines in a difficult role.

The film follows Cass (Dillon), a restaurant server who has a brief fling with Kalli (Louisa Krause), a new server with a shady past. Before long, Kalli asks Cass to take care of her tween daughter Ari (Ridley Asha Bateman) while she goes out of town for a job. Cass can barely take care of herself, but the added responsibility of a young girl who could care less about her or her problems. There isn’t much, dramatically speaking, to sustain the 100 minute runtime, but Oxman doesn’t go down unnecessary avenues, nor do characters behave like they’re in a movie. Outerlands may not be the standout film of the festival, but it’s not a total downer either.

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Adult Children

Virtually every film festival, every year, contains some version of Adult Children, an indie comedy featuring overly qualified stars in overly written situations. Director Rich Newey’s still young career is full of Hallmark-esque holiday rom-coms, and screenwriter Annika Marks’ script sets up the major conflict – such as it is – not unlike those same films. Morgan (Ella Rubin) has to write a college application essay, but struggles for inspiration. The plot kicks in when her older half-brother Josh (Thomas Sadoski) relapses and comes to live with her and her parents.

Her other half-siblings Dahlia (Aya Cash) and Lisa (Betsy Brandt) have their own existential issues, but they come together to support him. The film succeeds more on the interpersonal relationships between them, and less when they’re on their own. Lisa is the type-A neurotic wife and mother in a loveless marriage, and now she’s dealing with a possible unplanned pregnancy. Dahlia is a directionless nude model between relationships, strapped for cash and needing a place to live. Josh is reeling from a break-up, but there’s not much more to him that this. Everyone is cast to perfection and Newey utilizes their strengths (Rubin is especially strong in the second half), but Adult Children plays out mostly how you’d expect once the plot is set up. There are dramatic contrivances between the siblings – not to mention the casual hostility towards sobriety and addicts – but there’s a level of nuance that comes into focus. In spite of its issues, I left the film mostly feeling warmer towards the interpersonal dynamics and performances overall.

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Heartland Film Festival 2025: Mistura, Soft Leaves, Transplant

Mistura

Mistura is a film that’s easy to root for, and sometimes that’s enough to carry it through. It helps when, right off the bat, we learn that Norma’s (Bárbara Mori) husband has absconded unexpectedly with another woman and she’s left reeling. Sure, she has a decent home in Lima in 1965, but she has no prior ambitions and only has a limited amount of time before she’s left essentially destitute. Her only resource is to start a fine dining restaurant within her own home and dedicate it to her parents’ French heritage, recreating the dishes she grew up loving and hoping to spread that love to those around her.

Unfortunately that love doesn’t catch on quite so easily, and the restaurant comes dangerously close to shuttering. It’s not until Norma begins to take the advice of her staff, and they begin to adopt the cultures and cuisines of their own backgrounds, that the restaurant really takes off. Ultimately, Mistura is a safely enjoyable period piece that doesn’t challenge much but goes down smoothly regardless. Mori is steady as the lead, and her relationship and chemistry with right hand man Oscar (Pudy Ballumbrosio) is an unvarnished bright spot. The restaurant didn’t change the world, or Peru, and neither will the film, and that’s okay.

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Soft Leaves

Admittedly, I watched Soft Leaves over a week ago, and not much has stuck with me in the intervening days. That probably says more about me than the film itself, but it’s a smartly assembled but sleepy film nonetheless. Writer-director Miwako Van Weyenberg’s feature debut film tackles a culture clash between a single family, and a little girl caught in the middle. When Yuna’s (Lill Berteloot) Swedish father suffers a serious accident, her estranged Japanese mother (who moved back to Japan after their divorce) moves in with her and her older brother Kai (Kaito Defoort) to take care of her.

Berteloot is the standout element of the film, playing a girl who’s wiser than her years but still innocent enough to made the occasional bad decision. Thankfully Van Weyenberg’s screenplay doesn’t insert drama where it doesn’t need to be, instead letting the cultural differences and the familial drama play out mostly naturally. Tristan Galand’s cinematography helps to add a wistful air of nostalgia, evoking the summer haze of foggy memories that may or may not be true. Soft Leaves won’t go down as the best film of the festival, nor is it the worst, but it’s hard not to wish it left a more lasting impression once it ends.

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Transplant

Let’s get the obvious out of the way first: Transplant feels, at best, like an updated version of Whiplash within the confines of a hospital. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, as the stakes within the former are certainly more crucial (heart surgery) than the latter (jazz music). But first-time feature director Jason Park’s film lacks the same pizzazz and snappy magnetism that worked so well for Damien Chazelle. Thankfully Park has enough to offer, including a subtle commentary on race and assimilation, that it doesn’t feel like a completely empty endeavor.

The film concerns Dr. Jonah Yoon (Eric Nam), an ambitious resident who has his eyes set on a heart transplant fellowship at his hospital. But he has to work under the tutelage of Dr. Harmon (Bill Camp), a renowned surgeon who has a contentious relationship with his staff, and it’s on full display during Jonah’s first surgery with him. Throughout Transplant, the two go back and forth, as Harmon gaslights and needles Yoon beyond his comfort zone, always escaping responsibility or blame. Throughout all of this, Yoon has to care for his mother (Michelle Okkyung Lee), who’s suffering from cancer and has nobody else to take her to and from chemo appointments. Camp has made a career out of supporting character turns, but he takes full advantage of the spotlight here, and Nam carries the film well enough when it focuses on him. At only 94 minutes, the film hums along nicely and knows when to hit the dramatic beats effectively. But the ending comes a little abruptly, even if it is ultimately cathartic. Much like Chazelle with his debut feature, Park could have an exciting career to come after Transplant.

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After the Hunt Review

After the Hunt

  • Director: Luca Guadanigno
  • Writer: Nora Garrett
  • Starring: Julia Roberts, Michael Stuhlbarg, Ayo Edibiri, Andrew Garfield, Chloë Sevigny

Grade: C

Luca Guadagnino has been a hard-working director for the past couple years. Having three films released within two years of each other, he is putting out films at a rate unlike most filmmakers working today. His latest, After the Hunt, sees what is possibly his biggest and most ambitious film yet, unabashedly delving into modern-day topics with honesty that many filmmakers have yet to do.

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Heartland Film Festival 2025: Interview with Winter Fantasy director Lauren Z. Ray

Winter Fantasy

Below is my conversation with Lauren Z. Ray, the director of Winter Fantasy, a documentary about the small town of Logansport, Indiana, and the theater program that forms a kind of backbone throughout the community for its young artists. The film is making its World Premiere at the Heartland Film Festival. We discuss her thought process behind inserting herself in the film, the universality of small-town theater programs, and life in the arts post-high school. Our conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Ben Sears: Logansport is such a unique place, and the film really captures that nicely.

Lauren Z. Ray: That was part of the goal. I always wanted to showcase Winter Fantasy, but I wanted to make this film very Logansport and very Hoosier as well. I kind of had this bucket list of items that I wanted to include, whether it’s a quick B-roll shot or a scene, just to give that texture and vibe to everything. In Indiana, I always think they have fantastic sunsets, so I wanted to include that, or a bonfire, which were very special to me when I was growing up.

BS: Did you have a goal in mind when you first conceived of the film, besides featuring the program? Did the story change at all throughout production?

LR: Totally, the initial idea was a micro-doc, under 20 minutes. I just wanted to showcase what Winter Fantasy is, and that’s it. But I hadn’t really been back to my high school, or talked to anybody in 10 years. But upon arriving, as I started setting up interviews and going through all my old things, I didn’t even really think of myself at first, but I started getting nostalgic.

My first interview is with the manager of McHale, and after that interview, I wanted to just explore everything with high school and Winter Fantasy, so I went through everything in my bedroom. That’s when I realized how much of my story needed to be included in this story in order for it to make sense. From there, I also wanted to include the stories of people who went on to become professionals after going through Winter Fantasy. Every documentary I’ve done is like detective work, it’s journalism. You learn more about the story through the interviews you do; it became a lot longer in the process of all the interviews and learning everyone’s stories. I initially wanted it to be just about Winter Fantasy, but it ended up being about my acting career, Winter Fantasy, and all the decades of people who have done the show.

BS: It’s interesting that you never even considered inserting yourself into the story because it helps to ground the story through your eyes.

LR: That’s how it felt at the time. It became more of a first-person documentary, which I had never done before. That really challenged me because I didn’t know how I could make it happen. Normally I’m the one behind the camera, so I knew I’d have to allow someone else behind the camera and help them to understand my vision. I hadn’t seen too many first-person documentaries, so I watched a lot, and I had to learn how this style is done. It was definitely a big process.

BS: You stay focused on Logansport and this specific program, but do you see this program as a microcosm of similar small town arts programs? Do you think there are similar stories like this across the country?

LR: I think so, I think it’s totally relatable. I remember when I did my first documentary, which was about a small town in Indiana, and I thought ‘this town’s really quirky and unique.’ And then everyone who saw it had a relationship to a small town across America somewhere, and it was relatable to a lot of people, even if they weren’t from this particular town. I think with this one, it was the same thing. People had either gone through their own musical theater program, or someone they knew went on to become someone from their theater program. Any time I’ve explained to someone what I was working on, people say they relate to it and they tell me stories about their programs, or their experiences with it. People totally understand that theater kids and staff tend to be very quirky by design, so I definitely think it’s a relatable topic, even though it’s just about Logansport, Indiana.

BS: You also have, later in the film, the experiences from you and your friend in Chicago, and the struggles with finding work in the arts after high school. Was that another avenue that was unplanned as well?

LR: Yes, actually, I was hoping I could get a hold of Dannie Smith. She didn’t know who I was, but I knew who she was because I went to all of her Winter Fantasy shows. I was absolutely obsessed! [laughs] I had never met her before, and the conversation we had on her couch was so crazy because of how similarly our stories had aligned. I had no idea, when I had called her initially, that she had retired from acting; I thought she was still acting. To learn that it was for similar reasons to me was really interesting.

BS: A development like that could be seen as a kind of mood killer, but in Winter Fantasy, it’s kind of hopeful, and a celebration of theater, and what people can do when they work together.

LR: I think a lot of people can relate to that as well. I know a lot of people that pursued theater after high school but couldn’t find any success, so I hope they can find something relatable in that. I think, accidentally, I always try to make my stories a feel-good story of some type. Those are the types of stories that I prefer to see, myself.

BS: Have you shown the film to the Logansport community at large yet?

LR: I haven’t. I’m very excited to do that, though. In January of this year, literally a week after I had finished, I had the cast come and see the film. Heartland is taking place during the school’s fall break, so that didn’t work out for them to screen it. But on November 8th, I’m going back to Logansport again, and I’ll do a public screening at McHale auditorium. I’m very excited, and this year’s Winter Fantasy is the following weekend, so I’m hoping it’ll hype up the town to show up and support that show this year.

Winter Fantasy will have in-person screenings at the Heartland Film Festival in Indianapolis, and will be available to stream online throughout the festival. Buy tickets here.

Good Fortune Review

Good Fortune

  • Director: Aziz Ansari
  • Writer: Aziz Ansari
  • Starring: Aziz Ansari, Keanu Reeves, Seth Rogen, Keke Palmer, Sandra Oh, Stephen McKinley Henderson

Grade: B-

Actors becoming directors has become a more common trend in recent years. With Scarlett Johansson’s debut film, Eleanor the Great, releasing only a couple weeks ago, and Bradley Cooper set to release his third feature, Is This Thing On?, in December, actors have been inspired by their on-set experience to direct their own movies. Aziz Ansari is the latest actor-turned-director with his film Good Fortune, an absurd comedy that nails the current state of America.

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