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‘The Things You Kill’ Film Review: A Psychological Thriller Rendered Surreal And Slippery By A Lynchian Dream Logic

Following its Sundance world premiere in early 2025, The Things You Kill, the third feature from Iranian filmmaker Alireza Khatami, is set to screen in Philippine theaters as part of the 2025 QCinema International Film Festival. Selected as the Canadian submission for the 2026 Oscar Best International Feature Film category, …

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‘Familia’ Film Review: Italy’s Oscar Entry Offers an Intense Look Into Domestic Abuse and Masculinity in Crisis

Selected as Italy’s official contender for best international feature film at the 2026 Oscars, Francesco Costabile’s sophomore feature Familia carries the thematic preoccupations of their directorial debut Una Femmina: The Code of Silence, a crime drama loosely based on Italian journalist Lirio Abbate’s investigative book, which wrestles with women victims …

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The Ghost in the Machine: Interview with Ratchapoom Boonbunchachoke of ‘A Useful Ghost’

Ratchapoom Boonbunchachoke’s debut feature A Useful Ghost exhibits a hooky high concept, one that’s centered on a woman who dies of dust pollution and gets reunited with her grieving husband by possessing a vacuum cleaner, much to the chagrin of her in-laws. The director dresses this concept, essentially a loose …

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Neon Nightmare: Interview with Morgan Knibbe of ‘The Garden of Earthly Delights’

Screening in the Before Midnight section of the 2025 QCinema International Film Festival, Dutch filmmaker Morgan Knibbe’s sophomore feature The Garden of Earthly Delights portrays a gritty, neon-tinged Manila inferno centered on a young queer protagonist played by first-time actor JP Rodriguez. A teenager named Ginto descends deep into the …

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‘Exile’ Film Review: A Genre-bending Vision of Proletarian Inferno

Following his 2021 Filmmakers of the Present debut Streams, Tunisian director and screenwriter Mehdi Hmili made his return at this year’s Locarno Film Festival, with the out-of-competition title Exile, which functions as part revenge thriller and part grief and social drama stylized in a way that evokes visual poetry and …

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‘Cain and Abel’ Film Review: A Brocka Tale At Once Biblical And Brutal

Made in 1982, restored and remastered by ABS-CBN Film Restoration Project in 2016, and released by Kani Releasing on Blu-ray in 2022, Lino Brocka’s Cain and Abel now plays on The Criterion Channel as part of the streaming service’s retrospective on the acclaimed Filipino director.  A two-fisted riff on the …

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‘On the Road’ Film Review: David Pablos’ Venice Orrizonti Winner Is A Neo-noir Road Movie With A Schmaltzy Impulse

Winner of the Orrizonti Award for Best Film at the 2025 Venice International Film Festival, On the Road (En el Camino) is, at its core, a poignant tale of repressed desire bursting in the most undesirable of places. It’s the fifth feature from Mexican writer-director David Pablos, and it’s the …

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‘Sweetheart’ Film Review: A Predictably Endearing Riff on the Coming-of-age Genre

There are only so many ways a film like Sweetheart, originally titled Gioia Mia, pans out. Special Jury Prize winner at the 2025 Locarno Film Festival’s Filmmakers of the Present competition, Margherita Spampinato’s debut feature is a predictably compelling take on the coming-of-age genre: a schmaltzy drama about grief and …

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‘Magellan’ Film Review: Lav Diaz’s Radical Omissions

Forty-four minutes into Magellan, we see the eponymous Portuguese navigator at the film’s center, deftly portrayed by Gael García Bernal, sitting still inside a 16th-century tavern, his mind drifting elsewhere. He grips a walking cane on one hand, then an oversized hat on the other. Lit candles beside him quietly …

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‘Human Resource’ Film Review: Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s Return to Realism Reckons With Personal Agency in a Harsh World

Playing in the Orizzonti competition program at the 2025 Venice International Film Festival, Thai director and screenwriter Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s latest vision Human Resource doubles as an intimate character study and a meditative portrait of contemporary Thai life mapped through the soul-sapping mechanics of corporate grind, a kind of a white-collar …

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‘Nova ‘78’ Film Review: A Prophetic William Burroughs Tribute

Playing out of competition at the 2025 Locarno Film Festival, Nova ‘78, from the directing duo of Aaron Brookner and Rodrigo Areias, functions both as a moving paean to the enduring greatness of eminent writer and iconoclast William S. Burroughs (1914-1997) and an electrifying snapshot of a bygone period of …

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‘Fantasy’ Film Review: Kukla’s Surreal Social Drama is One of 2025’s Strongest Debuts

A competitive entry in the Filmmakers of the Present program of the Locarno Film Festival’s 78th edition, Fantasy, the feature directorial debut from Slovenian musician and director Kukla, at times credited as Katarina Bogdanović, is a hypnotic, surreal expansion of the story the filmmaker initially sketched in her award-winning short …

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‘Tabi to Hibi’ Film Review: Shô Miyake’s Golden Leopard Winner is a Pulsating Drama About Existential Solitude and the Limits of Language

An incommunicable solitude pulsates at the heart of Tabi to Hibi — also titled Two Seasons, Two Strangers — the bifurcated drama from Japanese writer-director Shô Miyake, who just won a career-defining Pardo d’Oro (Golden Leopard) for the movie, following its world premiere in the Concorso Internazionale section of this …

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‘A Balcony in Limoges’ Film Review: A Subtle, Slippery Morality Tale (Locarno)

Premiering in the Filmmakers of the Present competition of the recently concluded Locarno Film Festival, A Balcony in Limoges, French writer-director Jérôme Reybaud’s feature follow-up to his debut 4 Days in France (2016), is the kind of movie that one might describe as deceptive, or unforeseen at the very least, …

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Fantasia 2025: ‘I Fell in Love with a Z-Grade Director in Brooklyn’ Film Review: A Lovely Ode to Rediscovering Artistic and Romantic Desire

Winner of the Bronze audience prize for Best Asian Feature at the 2025 Fantasia International Film Festival, I Fell in Love with a Z-Grade Director in Brooklyn is a captivating romantic comedy that functions as yet another endearing paean to independent horror cinema from Japanese cult filmmaker Kenichi Ugana, following …

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