Mustang (2015)
Mustang’s sisters are confined, but this is a story of their resistance as much as it is a story of their imprisonment.
Mustang’s sisters are confined, but this is a story of their resistance as much as it is a story of their imprisonment.
This disturbing documentary details the ordeal facing asylum seekers who arrive on our shores, people fleeing persecution, violence and death only to face a politer brand of such injustices in “offshore detention.”
Moana wraps a Polynesian folk tale around a charming children’s film, populated with animal sidekicks and musical numbers. When these two threads are woven together well, the film sings like Disney’s best.
The World of Us is a film of childhood friendship, and therefore it’s a film about rituals of social exclusion.
Someone decided that a frothy fanservice anime needed to emulate Neon Genesis Evangelion’s labyrinthine seriousness. Someone was wrong.
A gentle, thoughtful reflection on how family punctures our most elaborately-conceived fictions.
Behemoth’s immensity gives way to wounded specificity, in an elegy aching with pain.
Disney’s underdog Ugandan chess story digs a little deeper into the difficulties of overcoming disadvantage.
Personal Shopper offers a challenging reflection upon identity and spirituality, enriched by Kristen Stewart’s extratextual resonance with its themes. Also, there are ghosts.
The Dark Wind tells the story of the Islamic State’s impact on the Yazidi community, a Kurdish group targeted for genocide in 2014.