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  • The Brutalist

    Concrete Nothingness: How The Brutalist Builds to Nowhere

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    I approached The Brutalist with genuine curiosity and respect. A film centered on an architect—played by the always compelling Adrien Brody—seemed like an invitation into a world of aesthetic discipline, existential inquiry, and visual rigor. Instead, I found myself trapped in a three-hour descent into artistic delusion—an experience so pretentious, so hollow, and ultimately so

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  • Anora

    Anora: A Vulgar Ass-ault on Cinema

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Anora is a glaring example of cinema gone wrong—a film that sacrifices depth and integrity for vulgarity and cheap shock value. Despite inexplicably sweeping numerous prizes at the Cannes Film Festival, the film is mediocre at best, raising serious questions about the festival’s current standards and relevance. The story is shallow and exploitative, centering on

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  • Megalopolis

    Megalopolis: A Misstep from a Legendary Director

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis is a film decades in the making, a passion project fueled by the kind of ambition only a cinematic titan like Coppola could muster. Envisioned in the late 1970s and shaped over forty years, it represents the director’s desire to create a sprawling sci-fi epic with profound ideas about society, power,

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  • What Remains

    “What Remains” by Ran Huang – Locarno Review

    by Elena Ringo Articles, Film, Reviews

    A Tedious and Unimpressive Exploration Scandinavian thriller by Ran Huang “What Remains” fails to thrill and falls painfully short of delivering a captivating and engaging narrative. Set in the 1990s and centered around a psychopathic individual who is accused of heinous crimes, portrayed by Gustaf Skarsgård, the film attempts to delve into a realm of

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  • Barbie

    “Barbie”: A Plastic Parade of Pseudo-Philosophy

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” attempts to reimagine the iconic doll as a vehicle for feminist commentary but ultimately falls flat, bogged down by lackluster humor, repetitive messaging, and a pseudo-philosophical narrative. Despite the overwhelming media hype and extensive marketing campaign, the film struggles to deliver anything beyond a shallow critique of gender roles wrapped in a

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  • Touched (2023) by Claudia Rorarius – Locarno Review

    by Elena Ringo Festivals, Film, Reviews

    The film “Touched” by director Claudia Rorarius was screened at Locarno Film Festival 2023 in the Concorso Cineasti del presente program and was introduced as a love story about a forbidden romance, “celebrating diverse bodies and breaking taboos”. On 12th of august the lead actors Ísold Halldórudóttir and Stavros Zafeiris won the Pardo for Best Performance. “Touched” is

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  • Fallen Leaves

    “Fallen Leaves”: A Wry and Tender Portrait of Love in Kaurismäki’s Helsinki

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Aki Kaurismäki’s latest film, “Fallen Leaves,” is a bittersweet exploration of love amidst the harsh realities of life in Helsinki. Known for his deadpan humor and minimalist style, Kaurismäki returns with a story that is both melancholic and amusing, set in a cityscape far removed from the picturesque visions often associated with Finland. This film,

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  • Playing Through

    by Diana Ringo Film, Reviews

    Exciting biographical drama about golf legend Ann Gregory.

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  • Blonde

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Cheap misogynistic exploitation and a disgusting attempt to slander American icon Marilyn Monroe

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  • Mainstream (2021) by Gia Coppola

    by Diana Ringo Articles, Reviews

    Social media satire “Mainstream” by Gia Coppola (Palo Alto) starring Andrew Garfield (The Amazing Spider-Man) and Maya Hawke (Stranger Things) was released at the Venice International Film Festival in September 5 2020 and on VOD on May 7 2021. “Mainstream” tells the story of Frankie (Hawke), a young woman who is bored with her bar-tending

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  • M

    M (2018) – Review

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

      Film “M” by Finnish director Anna Ericsson won the Grand Prix and Best Feature Film at the Prague Independent Film Festival, and also Best Feature Film and Best Cinematography at the Vienna Independent Film Festival. The film initially premiered at the Venice Critics’ Week in 2018. Ericsson, best known as a singer in her native

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  • The Factory

    The Factory – Review

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Yuri Bykov became known with the film The Fool, an art house social drama. His new film The Factory attracted great interest from his fans who expected another strong drama with pointed social commentary. Nevertheless, the film became a big disappointment. Nothing in this film makes sense; the script is weak, boring, the dialogues consist

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  • Cold War – Review

    by Elena Ringo Film, Reviews

    Pawel Pawlikowski who won the Academy Award for Ida in 2013, once again received a great deal of attention for his film Cold War. The title Cold War sounds promising, as this time was full of intrigues and there were many stories stranger than fiction connected to the period. But unfortunately the film leaves one

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  • Next
1
Concrete Nothingness: How The Brutalist Builds to Nowhere
2
Watch the Curse of Modigliani Trailer—Obsession, Betrayal, and a Haunted Diary
3
Anora: A Vulgar Ass-ault on Cinema
4
A Raven in Tokyo: How Mark Gill Captured the Troubled Genius of Masahisa Fukase
5
Megalopolis: A Misstep from a Legendary Director

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