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Interview: Asghar Farhadi, A Separation

Interview: Asghar Farhadi, A Separation

Modern Family: In Asgar Farhadi’s A Separation, a family falls apart and a child falls from grace in a testament to the bonds between a father and daughter
Director Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation, about the consequences in a middle-class Iranian family when the parents decide to split, which reverberate in their community, could easily be [...]

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Review: A Separation

Review: A Separation

As a cultural document A Separation is invaluable—it really is a bridge to modern Iranian society that very purely focuses on the dynamics of one family, any family, just like yours and mine.

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Review: We Need to Talk About Kevin

Review: We Need to Talk About Kevin

As a portrait of woman on the verge of collapse, We Need to Talk About Kevin, rendered by a director and actress at their respective peaks, is a masterful character study.

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Review: Albert Nobbs

Review: Albert Nobbs

Perhaps the issue is Close, straight-jacketed with a character who keeps everything so close to the vest (or under it), so on the down low and so minimal, that Albert is nearly inaccessible.

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Review: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Review: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close touches us even though ultimately it doesn’t quite get where it’s going.

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Review: Carnage

Review: Carnage

Carnage is a blackly funny, mean, fast game of verbal one-upsmanship, and gives us great actors at the top of their games.

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Review: Pariah

Review: Pariah

With so much discussion today about high school bullying, the pressure to conform and the painful pressure to simply be oneself—in this case a dual minority—filmmaker Dee Rees’ semi-autobiographical film is a compassionate, fully felt and lovely coming of age story with an unlikely, yet highly likable, protagonist.

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Interview: Gary Oldman, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

Interview: Gary Oldman, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

In the new adaptation of John le Carré beloved Cold War thriller Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Gary Oldman delivers an engrossing performance as George Smiley, the retired head of the British secret service, who goes back into the fray to hunt a Russian mole hiding somewhere within the establishment.

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Interview: Michael Fassbender and Steve McQueen, Shame

Interview: Michael Fassbender and Steve McQueen, Shame

I caught up with actor Fassbender and filmmaker McQueen recently to discuss their latest daring collaboration, as well as notions of intimacy and connection in the modern world.

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Review: Shame

Review: Shame

Shame, about a sex addict in a downward spiral, is an incredibly sad film. As a character study that charts the disintegration of an outwardly successful alpha male undone by impulses imploding beneath the surface, this frank, adult film calls to mind Last Tango in Paris, Carnal Knowledge, Bad Timing and other landmark movies about sex and obsession—it’s that serious, and that good.

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