Wind Rises, The (Japanese Animation)
As much as Miyazaki likes to trail off into the land of dreams, The Wind Rises is a biopic through and through.
As much as Miyazaki likes to trail off into the land of dreams, The Wind Rises is a biopic through and through.
From start to finish, Win Win is pretty much a warm, sweet indie film that benefits greatly from a strong cast and solid scripting by Thomas McCarthy, who makes the story easy for the audience to connect with the characters.
A funny short about the audition process of the film Who’s the Man, for which actress Jun Karasawa is looking to get the male lead role.
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is the gritty bonkers story of a drunk and depressed detective who must clear the name of toon Roger Rabbit who is being blamed for the murder of Mr. ACME.
Indie directors Gok Kim and Sun Kim take on some of those Kpop industry stories, and give it a K-horror spin in their most commercial film to date.
In White Northern Lights, Emmett Malloy documents The White Stripes’ first time doing a nationwide tour in Canada, not only visiting the biggest cities in the country, but also stopping by unusual venues in not-so-known Canadian cities.
A bittersweet dark comedy about a woman trying to side-step the overwhelming grief of losing her husband.
In White Frog, Ellie and Fabienne Wen set out to tell the story of a well-off Asian American family with a few skeletons in their closet.
Elefante Blanco follows priests Julián, Nicolás and social worker Luciana work hard to provide help and social assistance in Villa Virgen, whose inhabitants are ignored by the government and currently engaged in an ongoing drug war.
The Whistleblower is an intense drama based on Kathryn Bolkovac’s experience as a peacekeeper in post-war Bosnia, who exposes the U.N. for covering up a sex traffic scandal.