May 12, 2025 11:23 pm

Roger Ebert Reviews

Martha’s Vineyard African American Film Festival 2024: Highlights of a Joyous Event

There are few Black film festivals as celebrated or talked about as The Martha’s Vineyard African American Film Festival, the finest film festival of the summer. The 22nd annual MVAAFF took place on the tiny island outside at the local high school Performing Arts Center. This is one of the country’s most decadent film fests,

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Venice Film Festival 2024: Babygirl, The Order, The Brutalist, I’m Still Here

After a screening of “Babygirl,” the Nicole Kidman showpiece about dominance and submission in the workplace that shook up the Biennale on Friday, a colleague insisted that, despite its issues, it wasn’t “a dismissible film.” And feeling my oats, I replied, “Just watch me.” But having had some time to turn it over, I’ve decided

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“Risky Business” Remains One of the Most Daring Films of the ’80s

There’s a long-held belief about Hollywood history that, from basically the moment “Heaven’s Gate” nearly bankrupted United Artists in 1980 to the moment “Sex, Lies, and Videotape” kicked off the indie boom of the ‘90s, studio executives had an almost pathological aversion to any movie with artistic ambition. There’s at least some truth to this,

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Venice Film Festival 2024: Separated, Maria, Kill the Jockey, One to One: John & Yoko

The early films of innovative documentarian Errol Morris — “Gates of Heaven,” about pet cemeteries, “The Thin Red Line,” a staggering true-crime store — waxed profound on matters of mortality and morality while maintaining a wry sense of humor. His more recent works have been ambiguous—his 2018 “American Dharma,” a portrait of political ogre Steve

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Netflix’s “Terminator Zero” Takes Too Long to Develop Its Own Identity

Considering how many R-rated ’80s action franchises had their own Saturday morning cartoons, it only made sense for “The Terminator” to eventually receive its own stylized animated show. Netflix’s anime-inspired “Terminator Zero” is tonally aligned with its film counterparts, if not even more horrific and dour than the watered-down installments in the franchise. However, the

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Home Entertainment Guide: August 2024

10 NEW TO NETFLIX “Fury”“Jack Reacher”“Logan Lucky”“The Man from U.N.C.L.E.”“Man on Wire“Migration”“Pain & Gain”“Pearl”“Room”“The Spectacular Now” 11 NEW ON BLU-RAY/DVD “The Bikeriders” Long delayed after its Telluride premiere (due to the strike and a dumping by 20th Century to Focus) and somewhat divisive when it was released, the latest from Jeff Nichols (“Take Shelter”) is

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Experience the Star Trek Movies in 70mm at Out of this World L.A. Event

If you want to know how difficult it is getting 70mm film prints screened at movie houses these days, just talk to Jerry Blackburn. Blackburn is the senior manager and director of public programming for the Beverly Hills-based Fine Arts Theatre. Built in 1937, the repertory theater is one of the handful of historic movie

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“EA Sports College Football 25” is a True Sports Game Phenomenon

We usually devote our video game coverage at RogerEbert.com to titles with a connection to cinema, whether it’s a series that inspired movies like “Resident Evil” or titles that drew upon a history of movie adventures to tell their tales like “Uncharted” or “The Last of Us.” However, every once in a while, there’s an

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