Klieg lights
Kristen Wiig is extraordinary in a stunning black comedy about madness, media and money.
Kristen Wiig is extraordinary in a stunning black comedy about madness, media and money.
"The Imitation Game," while rousing, does Alan Turing, and history, no favors.
When cornered, J.C. Chandor's alpha men don't grow wild with rage. They turn inward.
Dan Gilroy's "Nighcrawler" offers up an credibly amoral character, but it's ugliness that wins out.
"Shattered Glass" gets to the underbelly of journalism, while "The Hill" is the underbelly of life itself.
Keith Ridgway takes detective fiction to a place it never knew existed.
The 1970 music documentary "Gimme Shelter" almost inadvertently captured rock's sudden souring.
Victor Nuñez and Harmony Korine took very different directions in dealing with Florida girls.
Welcome to darkness in the forest, darkness in space, and a "pro-life" future.
Decades apart, two films that dig into the mixed-up heart of being American
John Cleese generates comedy that's offset by a potboiler and a Conrad story.
"Barfly," "Out of Sight" and "Snatch" are heavy on eccentric style and male advancement.