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Laberint Sequences (2023) by Blake Williams

January 12, 2024

Review by Andrew Swafford

Laberint Sequences takes as its subject a hedge maze in Barcelona, making of it a filmic structure appropriately labyrinthine. Through the slightly graying blur of Williams’s chosen set of glasses, the film presents its audience with varying vantage points of the maze in no discernable order until the film begins looping back on itself. I counted 2-3 revisits of the opening image before I got the impression that every trip through the maze was unique, and that the viewer wasn’t so much restarting but moreso going deeper with every go-round. 

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The Royal Hotel (2023) by Kitty Green

January 12, 2024

Review by Andrew Swafford

In The Royal Hotel, Kitty Green’s follow-up to The Assistant, the monsters are everywhere. This, too, is a film about institutional rape culture, but of a kind far less insidious and clandestine. Set almost entirely in a rowdy bar that serves as a central watering hole for a remote Australian mining town, The Royal Hotel depicts sexual harassment against women at its most casual and flagrant, with all manner of unwanted attention and aggression shrugged off with “I was just being nice” or “it was just a joke. In the world of this film, catcalling, misogynistic slurs, and physical violation is so normalized as to become almost blasé, and the one woman who attempts to push back against this everyday violence (Julia Garner, again), repeatedly finds herself dismissed or outright targeted in response. While The Assistant exposed a single machine from the point of its smallest cog, The Royal Hotel attempts to tackle the full breadth of sexual harassment experienced by women from a bird’s eye view, and the resulting story is more schematic than compelling.

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The Boy and the Heron (2023) by Hayao Miyazaki

January 12, 2024

Review by Andrew Swafford

Walking into The Boy and the Heron was a little surreal: I couldn’t believe I was getting a chance to see a new film by Hayao Miyazaki. Perhaps the greatest animator in film history, Miyazaki is in his eighties and has announced his own retirement numerous times – and the last time, it felt real. The Wind Rises, released ten years ago at this point, was a profoundly melancholy film, a bittersweet reflection on a storied career that could only have been made by a great artist with a complicated relationship to his own work. It felt less like a typical Studio Ghibli fantasia and more like something Miyazaki needed to get off his chest: a personal admission to his audience that making art on an industrial scale comes with a moral cost. It was personal and powerful, but more importantly it felt final; it was a film that felt intended to be a filmmaker’s last film. What could possibly follow it?

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2022 Toronto International Film Festival

November 15, 2022

In full force for the first time since the pandemic, our return to the Toronto International Film Festival didn’t disappoint. There’s always a feeling of attempting to capture everything — every movie being discussed, the “big” picks, the smaller world cinema submissions that don’t garner as much spotlight and also explore the lush and vibrant city of Toronto. This year was no different. It was helpful to have two other companions along the way from Cinematary so we three could experience the festival. Here are our reviews of films viewed between myself, Andrew Swafford and Reid Ramsey at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. — Zach Dennis

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John David Washington stars as The Protagonist in director Christopher Nolan’s Tenet

Tenet (2020) by Christopher Nolan

April 12, 2022

Retro Review / Personal Essay by Noah Thompson

When I saw Tenet for a second time, in December from the comfort of my home, it brought me back to the darkest period of my life.

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Cinematary's Top 10 Films of 2021

January 26, 2022

Every year, we like to look back at the year in movies by gauging the favorite picks from our Cinematary contributors — both on the website and the podcast. As always, the list contains a variety of films from foreign and arthouse favorites, to mainstream blockbuster hits and musicals featuring marionette puppets.

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Hidetoshi Nishijima and Tōko Miura star in director Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car

Drive My Car (2021) by Ryusuke Hamaguchi

January 3, 2022

Review / Personal Essay by Logan Kenny

I will never forget the sound of her voice. I will forget a million other things as I grow older but that is not one of them. Because it will always be there when I need to hear it, even when she’s been gone for longer than she was alive. That’s one of the fundamental reasons I immediately connected with Drive My Car.

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Silence (2016) by Martin Scorsese

December 13, 2021

Retro Review by Cam Watson

The 2010’s had its fair share of films concerned with modern applications of Christian faith. Paul Schrader’s harrowing First Reformed (2017), John Michael McDonagh’s odd-but-effective Calvary (2014), and Malick’s contemplative The Tree of Life (also 2011) all hit screens within the decade, to name a few. Among these also stands Martin Scorsese’s Silence, which I saw in theaters back in 2017 and have never really stopped thinking about since.

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Noah (2014) by Darren Aronofsky

November 29, 2021

Retro Review / Personal Essay by Michael O’Malley

Noah, the 2014 oddball Biblical fantasy epic, directed by Aronofsky, has stuck with me. It won’t let me go, nor will the notion go away that the film’s semi-forgotten, oddball status belies that Noah is not only Aronofsky’s masterpiece but also the defining faith film of the past couple decades.

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The French Dispatch (2021) by Wes Anderson

November 15, 2021

Review by Zach Dennis

In both print journalism and the work of Wes Anderson, there is a bit of room for humanity under their lavish facades.

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Labyrinth of Cinema (2019) by Nobuhiko Obayashi

November 1, 2021

Review by Andrew Swafford

Labyrinth of Cinema is one of those movies that is easily described as a career-capping magnum opus: it’s 3-hours long, it’s a highly experimental work by a filmmaker who had been experimenting with form for half a century already, it’s a metafictional movie-about-movies that spans a great deal of Japan’s sociopolitical and cinematic history, it was written, directed, and edited during Obayashi’s battle with cancer, and it was likely made with the full understanding that it would be Obayashi’s final statement as a filmmaker. As someone who has seen at least a handful of Obayashi’s films, I feel relatively more qualified to speak on Labyrinth of Cinema than the average white American film critic who has only seen House, but I have to admit that I struggled greatly with it.

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Cry Macho (2021) by Clint Eastwood

October 20, 2021

Review by Logan Kenny

Cry Macho is a cinematic version of thinking about memory while you’re experiencing a moment in time. As we think of a specific moment and how it is destined to become nothing more than a memory soon, intensively reflecting on our exact place in the universe, it slips away from us.

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Sandrine Bonnaire stars in director Agnès Varda’s film Vagabond.

Sandrine Bonnaire stars in director Agnès Varda’s film Vagabond.

Vagabond (1985) by Agnès Varda

September 13, 2021

Retro Review by Michaela Thordarson

A world of unadulterated freedom can be difficult to conceptualize. In her 1985 film Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi), Agnès Varda actualizes the life of a woman who decides to live her life drifting on the road with no home or job.

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O Vigilante (1992) by Ozuldo Ribeiro Candeias

August 23, 2021

Retro Review by Nazeeh Alghazawneh

How far must a community be collectively pushed before they can no longer ignore repeated casual atrocities occurring right outside the place they lay their heads?

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Nathalie Emmanuel and Vin Diesel star in F9 by longtime series director Justin Lin

Nathalie Emmanuel and Vin Diesel star in F9 by longtime series director Justin Lin

F9 (2021) by Justin Lin

August 16, 2021

Review by Logan Kenny

F9 reminded me how good it can be to be alive, even if it’s just for a couple hours in the multiplex.

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LeBron James and Bugs Bunny in Space Jam: A New Legacy.

LeBron James and Bugs Bunny in Space Jam: A New Legacy.

Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021) by Malcolm D. Lee

July 26, 2021

Review by Zach Dennis

There’s a difference between constructing a narrative that doesn’t coalesce together and piecing together references to other icons that the audience would recognize in order to continue to keep them interested.

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Pig (2021) by Michael Sarnoski

July 12, 2021

Review by Jessica Carr

I did not think I was going to get this emotional while watching a pig movie starring Nicolas Cage.

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Theo Anthony captures his camera’s reflection while observing the headquarters of Axon

Theo Anthony captures his camera’s reflection while observing the headquarters of Axon

All Light, Everywhere (2021) by Theo Anthony

June 28, 2021

Review by Andrew Swafford

All Light, Everywhere encouraged me to reflect on the profound importance of how cameras can be used to justify or condemn police violence – and who is better positioned to take advantage of the power offered by them.

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Inside (2021) by Bo Burnham

June 14, 2021

Personal Essay / Review by Logan Kenny

Inside has little focus because it is a frantic pool of despair for Burnham to wallow within, taking the same bitter solace in complaining about basic irritants as he does outlining all the things in the world that cause him great existential suffering.

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From Beginning of the Serpentine Dance (1908) by director Segundo de Chomón

From Beginning of the Serpentine Dance (1908) by director Segundo de Chomón

Serpentine Dance Films

June 2, 2021

Retro Review by Reid Ramsey

It was 1897, and although the cameras were not yet moving, the people certainly were. Loie Fuller, working with the Lumiere Brothers, stamped her name on one of cinema’s earliest movements: the serpentine dance film. This movement not only represented a significant portion of early film history, but paved the way, visually, for what cinema could become.

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