Andrea Arnold’s American Honey Spins Its Wheels on the Fruited Plain

In American Honey, her 162-minute fourth feature (and the first she’s made in the U.S.), the British director Andrea Arnold sets an infatuation-at-first-sight encounter to Rihanna’s “We Found Love,” a conversation about dreams to Bruce Springsteen singing “Dream Baby Dream” and a moment of camaraderie among itinerant youngsters traveling across…

Degrassi: Next Class Recap: Truth Will Set You Free

Every week, we’re recapping season two of Degrassi: Next Class. #TheseAreMyConfessions. Finally, we have an arc worthy of a badass chick like Grace. She’s spent a lot of her time on the show as a rough-and-tumble bad girl caricature and occasional sounding board to people like Zig, Tiny, and Maya. We…

Not Magnificent, but Not Bad

Look, if you’re not stirred by the sight of Denzel Washington, clad in head-to-toe black, riding a black stallion over dunes and bluffs and right up to the saloon of some two-bit frontier town — well, then maybe the movies just aren’t for you. Washington, of course, strides right into…

Judy Davis on the Art of Acting — and Being Judy Davis

Judy Davis doesn’t like the expression “scene-stealing,” even though it precisely describes her performance in The Dressmaker. “I always sort of cringe when I hear that,” she says, “because what it implies is that’s what the actor is after.” So let’s just put it this way: As Kate Winslet’s acerbic,…

Storks Is So Funny You Might Forgive Its Mawkish Weirdness

In this age of billion-dollar, candy-colored, fully digital child-distraction movie-making, the new chatty-animal adventure comedy Storks wouldn’t have to be good in any way to be wildly profitable. It often is good, though, hilariously so, its too-familiar misfits-become-a-family storyline enlivened by flights of lavish comic invention. Its set pieces, especially…

With Cameraperson, Kirsten Johnson Interrogates Documentary Itself

“These are the images that have marked me and leave me wondering still.” That’s how Kirsten Johnson prefaces Cameraperson, made up of footage she has collected over 25 years of working as a camera operator, cinematographer, and director on dozens of different documentaries — films like Laura Poitras’ The Oath…

Degrassi: Next Class Recap: Dancing in the Dark

Every week, we’re recapping season two of Degrassi: Next Class, episode-by-episode.  #WhateverItTakes. Just when we thought it would be smooth sailing waters for the troublesome twosome, Tristan and Miles, the boat was rocked yet again. During a game of truth or dare, Zoë pins Miles down with the “how many have…

Here’s What We Learned From the Friday Night Lights Reunion Special

“Mr. Street, do you think God loves football?” asks a young boy in a Dillion High School jersey. “I think everybody loves football,” replies Jason Street, a quarterback-turned-coach on the show, Friday Night Lights. This clip kicked off a reunion special about the beloved drama, available to watch now on…

Dancer Ogles and Celebrates Sergei Polunin, the Bad Boy of Ballet

Prodigies flame out; it happens all the time. But the tale of Sergei Polunin, a young Ukrainian ballet dancer whose family hitched its wagon to his star, is a particularly sad one. Steven Cantor’s doc Dancer illuminates Polunin’s celebrity before it reveals his artistry; much of the film is a…

Tense Comedy Miss Stevens Puts Responsibility on a Teacher With Lots to Learn

Lily Rabe’s discomfiting performance anchors the fascinatingly uneasy comedy-drama Miss Stevens. Julia Hart’s film — about a young, slightly hapless English teacher who must chaperone three students to a state drama competition — has a premise that could easily invite cliché. You half expect it to become either an inspirational…