Category: 2024

Total 86 Posts

Tribeca 2024: Documentary- Checkpoint Zoo

February of 2022, Russian dictator, Vladimir Putin, launched an unprovoked assault on the Ukraine. The Feldman Ecopark facility in Kharkiv (located near the Russian border) became one of the many casualties of Putin’s despicable attacks. The fighting left the Ecopark’s

Tribeca 2024: Now Program- This Really Happened

Dating in the modern age is full of surprises. With this being a tech-heavy world, everyone is in tune to everyone, and at all times. The days of real-life “meet cutes” and sizing someone up in person have gone the

Tribeca 2024: Spotlight Narrative- The Everything Pot

Planning a wedding is fun, but hard, yet an ultimately exciting adventure. Sustaining a healthy marriage is fun, but hard, yet an ultimately exciting adventure. The complexities of both events merge in writer/director Sherise Dorf’s new relationship comedy, The Everything

Tribeca 2024: Documentary- Missing From Fire Trail Road

Director Sabrina Van Tassel powerful documentary, Missing From Fire Trail Road, examines the devastating case of Mary Ellen Johnson-Davis, an Indigenous woman who disappeared from the Tulalip Reservation of Tulalip, Washington in 2020. Johnson-Davis is far from the only case

Tribeca 2024: Documentary- Linda Perry: Let It Die Here

Singer/songwriter Linda Perry is vulnerable, direct, and completely honest about every aspect of her life. In the new documentary, Linda Perry: Let It Die Here, (premiering in the Spotlight+ section of the 2024 Tribeca Film Festival), director Don Hardy is

Tribeca 2024: Short Film Competition- Shut Up, Jack

We have all stuck our respective feet in our respective mouths on more than one occasion. Even those who are comfortable in any social situation have felt the wrath of embarrassment from saying something inappropriate. Sometimes, reading the room is

‘The Watchers’ Film Review: A Good Premise Thrust Into Absurdity

Adapted from the A.M. Shine novel of the same name and directed by Ishana Night Shyamalan (M. Night’s daughter), the new horror movie/thriller, The Watchers, is an interesting film, until it isn’t. What starts out promising becomes a picture that

Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival: ‘Grassland’ Film Review No

With its unflinching look at the failures of our criminal justice system, William Bermudez and Sam Friedman’s Grassland is a powerful and important social justice drama. Through the microcosm of a single Latina mother who grows and sells marijuana to

‘Young Woman and the Sea’ Film Review: The Choppy Waters of Clichés

To play Trudy Ederle, the first woman to swim across the English Channel, Daisy Ridley trained under the tutelage of Olympic swimmer Siobhan-Marie O’Connor. Ridley’s dedication to getting her character’s swimming technique down correctly is evident every moment she is

‘The Dead Don’t Hurt’ Film Review- A Lyrical and Emotional Western Piece

With its beautiful landscapes coloring an artful story of emotion and violence, Viggo Mortensen’s The Dead Don’t Hurt, exists between the worlds of Claude Lelouch’s 1977, Another Man, Another Chance, and the western films of Andre De Toth. Scored, written