Top Films by Year
Top Films of 2020
Top Films of 2017
Top Films of 2015
Lee – 4
There is more nicotine than subtlety in this retrospective recounting of Lee Miller’s career as a wartime photographer. When every scene is high drama, none are. Kate Winslet trundles from one confrontation to another with enough overacting expressiveness to make Ralph Fiennes in Conclave seem restrained. But worst, probably, is that her character is neither sympathetic […]
Dahomey – 7
A meditation/symposium on the subject of art repatriation, in this case from France’s Musee du Quai Branly to the Republic of Benin, not to be confused with the Kingdom of Benin from which the British looted art in 1897, five years after the French appropriated the objects at issue here from the Kingdom of Dahomey […]
Blitz – 6
Steve McQueen is an admirable writer-director of historical race-based dramas, and this film. is no exception. Unfortunately, it is easier to admire than to connect with, as bland characters and an unfocused story don’t measure up to the special effects and crowd scenes of London in the blitz. Young George reenacts “Lassie Come Home,” but […]
A Real Pain – 7.8
Writer/director/actor Jesse Eisenberg has crafted a charming short story of two cousins on a Holocaust tour of Poland, not a minute too long or too short. Unfortunately for one’s viewing pleasure, Kieran Culkin’s neurotic, or “unfiltered,” character is a real pain, albeit not the one alluded to in the film’s title (or is it?). Hearing […]
Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen & E Street Band – 7
I love Bruce, his band, his music, his performances, but there was nothing new in this documentary about his latest tour. I would have learned what his producer Jon Landau looked like if I hadn’t just had dinner with him last month in New York.
