“Familiar references and attention to detail make A Nice Indian Boy feel authentically Indian despite being set in the West.”
Read More“The Mother and the Bear presents a powerful look at parenthood and celebrates personal growth at any age.”
Read More“One Battle After Another tackles stereotypes but doesn’t give characters enough depth to subvert them.”
Read More“Hamnet breathes life into an unknown woman.”
Read More“Wicked: For Good imparts an awful message about friendship.”
Read More“Sinners explores intraracial conflicts, showcasing the diversity of Black Americans.”
Read More“Merrily We Roll Along’s source material leaves little room for its women to have agency or nuance.”
Read More“H is for Hawk irons out the most interesting complexities of Helen Macdonald’s lived experience.”
Read More“In a sometimes cavalier movie like Nuremberg, the invocation of horrific archival footage feels misguided, even callous.”
Read More“Without a single original idea, Violent Ends just doesn't hold up.”
Read More“No matter how sharply Margaret Qualley plays Blue Moon’s blond bombshell, there’s no fixing a script that spends most of its time objectifying her.”
Read More“After the Hunt feels outdated in its surface-level commentary on the #MeToo movement.”
Read More“A Diwali Dilemma grapples with the internal conflict shared by many people of color.”
Read More“While the visuals lean heavily into traditional gender coding, Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie avoids toxic messages.”
Read More“To its credit, Adulthood does weave in disability storylines without sensationalizing them.”
Read More“The cultural references in Doin’ It suffer from oversimplification.”
Read More“The Sun Rises On Us All demonstrates an intimacy with women’s experiences around healthcare and fertility, with certain moments feeling plucked from my own life.”
Read More“The women of Meadowlarks are recognizable in so many ways.”
Read More“Modern Whore challenges the desexualization of disabled people in mainstream narratives.”
Read More“Weapons squanders its potential by rehashing outdated stereotypes.”
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