This past weekend Amazon Prime debuted โBlow the Man Down,โ Bridget Savage Cole and Danielle Krudyโs compelling crime thriller that should make an excellent option for those looking for a bit of sex, murder, and mystery in their quarantine watching.
Movie Reviews
Movies under quarantine
With most local art institutions closed down due to COVID-19 precautions, we’ll all be consuming entertainment from the comfort of our own homes for the foreseeable future. For many, this means getting our movie fix through streaming services.
What you can’t see
Writer-director Leigh Whannell’s re-envisioning of “The Invisible Man” switches up the traditional perspective, centering the story not on the person with supernatural abilities, but on what it might feel like to be their prey.
Film review: ‘Beanpole’
The traumas of war linger long after the fighting has ended for the characters of Kantemir Balagovโs โBeanpole,โ an unsparingly bleak but compelling tale of two female soldiers striving to rebuild their lives in the aftermath of World War II.
Film review: ‘Clemency’
Alfre Woodard gives a phenomenal performance as a prison warden grappling with the emotional and psychological toll of carrying out death row executions in Chinonye Chukwuโs sobering and provocative drama.
Whatchagonna do?
Will Smith and Martin Lawrence are back at it in “Bad Boys for Life.” The “Bad Boys” films had something of a fascistic streak, with a celebration of police brutality, militarization, and misanthropic cruelty played for laughs.
Film review: ‘Little Women’
Greta Gerwigโs film distinguishes itself from countless iterations of the novel with a work that delivers a supremely faithful adaptation while also offering a fresh, creative perspective on the material.
Risky business
As you might expect, “Uncut Gemsโ is not an easy watch. Itโs a film that operates entirely at a level of clammy panic and desperation, forcing its audience to witness a person make all the wrong decisions and being powerless to stop it.
The 15 best films of 2019
It was as good a year for film as it was bad for, well, (gestures broadly to the world) everything else. These are the movies that most spoke to Adam this year, each conveying something unexpected about what it feels like to be alive right now.
Film review: ‘Waves’
The flawed but deeply-felt domestic drama is essentially two movies in one, split into a harrowing first half and an elegiac second.
Film review: ‘Marriage Story’
At the center of the film is the idea that it takes the tearing apart of a loving relationship for its players to become conscious of how that relationship worked (or didn’t) in the first place.
Film review: ‘Joker’
It’s one-note, overly serious, and self-satisfied, making for a film thatโs alternately tense and kind of tedious. โJokerโ so desperately wants its story to be viewed as holding a mirror up to our violent, empty society.






