TIFF 23: Conrcete Utopia

What is human nature? How is it affected by the systems placed on it and what would happen if those fell away? If you’re looking for answers to those questions, make sure to get to a theater near you when Concrete Utopia opens. An aftermath of a disaster movie, this film plants us in Korea

TIFF 23: Woman of the Hour

As I have begun to see with the films chosen for this year’s TIFF, lots of films tackled pretty heady subject matter and aims to use narrative tools to paint a picture of an issue. Anna Kendrick’s directorial debut Woman of the Hour certainly works as another reminder of how violence against women is not

TIFF 23: The Boy and the Heron, Finestkind, and Les Indésirables

It’s very late now on TIFF 2023 Day 2 and all of my screenings are starting to blend together already. I saw three films today and wanted to make sure to get these mini reviews out for The Boy and the Heron, Finestkind, and Les Indésirables. I’ll likely expand these in the future, especially the

TIFF 23: Evil Does Not Exist

Is there such a thing as too much ambiguity or too much openness in a film? If there was ever a movie that would make you ponder that question it’s Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s new film Evil Does Not Exist. I’m not sure if there’s ever been a movie I’ve struggled with reviewing quite like this one.

TIFF 23: The Zone of Interest

History is very ugly. For every good person you can find, there’s a seemingly endless pool of atrocities and the lowest of the low. Jonathan Glazer’s film The Zone of Interest sets its stage in one of the ugliest chapters of human history right next to arguably the main center for its horrors. It’s a

TIFF 23: Sira

Movies like Sira are exactly what film festivals should be all about. Thrillingly directed and acted, this film places us in the Sahel region of Northern Africa and makes us all witness to both the horrors and strength of spirt of these people. When we first meet Sira, she is traveling across the desert with

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