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'Monument' Review: A Definitive Shift in Bryan Singer's Filmography
Singer delivers a slow-burn, psychological drama that feels as heavy and permanent as the stone structures it illustrates. Monument is a film about the architecture of grief and the impossible task of capturing a nation’s pain in a single design.

Shauna Bushe
Apr 23


'Mariana Ant' Review: Luck, Loss, and Lingering Delusion
Mariana Ant is thoughtful and often visually absorbing, but its emotional gravity never quite pulls you all the way in.

Elliot Lines
Feb 6


'H is for Hawk' Review: A Meditation on Grief That's Visually Gorgeous While Equal Parts Cold and Moving
H is for Hawk is a gentle, visually rich, and thoughtfully acted exploration of grief that values subtlety over catharsis. It doesn’t always find the emotional lift its subject promises, but Claire Foy’s performance, the extraordinary presence of Mabel the Hawk, and the film’s calm, observational beauty make it a worthwhile watch.

Dan Bremner
Feb 6


'Bridgerton' Season 4 - Part 1 Review: Masquerades, Mirrors, and the Romance of Not Seeing Clearly
Bridgerton Season 4 understands that romance is not just about recognition, but readiness. And in asking whether love can survive when fantasy dissolves into reality, the series offers one of its most mature propositions yet.

Romey Norton
Jan 29


'Saipan' Review: A Football-drama Framed as a Tense, 90-minute Thriller
Saipan may not fully justify its existence as a feature, but thanks to an incredible central performance from Éanna Hardwicke, solid support from Steve Coogan and a sharp, thriller-like presentation, it stands as a smart, contained drama that is far better than you would expect.

Dan Bremner
Jan 27
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