The Power of the Dog leaves a mark
Movie review: The Power of the Dog
Jesse Plemons and Benedict Cumberbatch flirt with a cowboy take on Cain and Abel in Jane Campion's dusty, and decidedly lusty, moral fable
New on Netflix
Power of the Dog (new on Netflix/ select theatrical) - Remember Jane Campion's grand eclat called The Piano back in 1993? It hit some heavy chords with bloody stumps. The movie was as beautiful as it was horrific, and The Power of the Dog is probably the closest Campion has come to matching the throbbing genius of her breakout feature. Based on the 1967 novel by Tom Savage, in addition to the Bible verse Psalm 22:20, The Power of the Dog focuses on two brothers trying to make a life for themselves as ranchers in 1920s Montana. They are the sons of city folk with money, so their life on the ranch has been one that demanded a hands-on education. And they got it, thanks to a cowboy who we only as a ghost named Bronco Henry -- and he haunts the whole film via Benedict Cumberbatch. Deliver my ...
Movie review: Maestro reveals duelling Bernsteins living within a single legend
Movie review: Maestro
Bradley Cooper brings a heap of passion and a stylish eye to a dysfunctional love story that strips artistic ego down to the studs. Echoing the core themes of an entirely different film about Leonard Bernstein, Maestro may have you asking who plays Bernstein better: Bradley Cooper, or Cate Blanchett?
Movie review: Leave the World Behind captures a very creepy Zeitgeist
Movie review: Leave the World Behind
Sam Esmail serves up a sophisticated psychological thriller that nods to Cold War convention while conjuring the biggest threat of the twenty-first century: A world where money governs morality, friendships are subject to outside influence, and even your neighbour can’t be trusted as an ally.
Outlaw King reimagines tribal history, bares Pine’s parts
New on Netflix/Movie Review: Outlaw King
Chris Pine plays national folk hero Robert the Bruce in David Mackenzie's blood sausage of a costume epic that rewrites a few historical details to serve its dramatic cause, and quench our thirst for more Game of Thrones.
22 July appeals to rule of law, not emotion
Movie Review: 22 July - New on Netflix
Paul Greengrass’s restrained vérité treatment of the July 22 massacre at a Norwegian kids camp lassos truth of tragedy by showing us the banal face of evil and the chilling effect of fear.