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FIN REVIEW: Sisters Brothers a Hollywood showcase with indie flair

With an A-list cast, an impeccable, well-wrought screenplay and some of the year’s best marketing, you’d think The Sisters Brothers would be A-Rate Hollywood fare. And yet, the sensibilities of French director Jacques Audiard, who makes his first big English debut here, are not lost in the fray. This comedy-western has all the flash and…
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FIN REVIEW: Becoming Astrid a formidable tale of Pippi Longstocking creator

Titular character Astrid became the eventual creator of beloved children’s novel Pippi Longstocking, but how she got there is far from cheery. This Swedish-made film about the author’s formative years is a bleak take on the expectations of women, pitfalls of a deeply religious society, and the young girl who refused to conform. It follows…
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FIN REVIEW: Bel Canto a moving portrait of hostages and their captors

This film about hostages, their captors and the humanity they come to share is one of the most powerful films to come about this year. Adapted from a popular novel by Ann Patchett, this film brings depth and character development to a topic that could have easily became overdramatic. Roxanne Coss (Julianne Moore) is playing…
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FIN REVIEW: Pogey Beach a lot of raucous, but not totally refined

Imagine if you took the beginnings of bawdy, foul-mouthed endeavours like Trailer Park Boys and Letterkenny, and turned the self-aware attitude up to 20. That, my friends, will be what you get from Pogey Beach. The film, from director-writer Jeremy Larter, is a no-holds-barred, mile-a-minute farce that would play perfectly to a drunk crowd that…
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FIN REVIEW: Life Itself a contrived drama rescued by key performances

I could tell from the fact the audience was given kleenex on the way in that we were in for a rocky road. Life Itself is a new work from Dan Fogelman, the creator of This Is Us and writer of Crazy Stupid Love. I knew the melodramatics I was getting myself into, but I…
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FIN REVIEW: Documentarian befriends his criminal suspects in 20th Circuit

As journalists and objective media, we’re always told not to get too close to our subjects. But in the case of documentary filmmaker Hesam Eslami and the outlaw teenagers he chronicles for six years, the regular rules don’t apply. The group of boys, fearless leader Ehsan ahead of them, rob stereo systems out of cars…
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FIN REVIEW: At First Light an average throwback genre film

At First Light is one of those Goldilocks style of films: not bad, not great, but just good enough. This throwback to the E.T. and Close Encounters — as FIN program manager Alex Brundige aptly sold it — is a whole lot of Stranger Things with a lot of style, but little substance. The special…
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FIN REVIEW: Audience Of Chairs will astound cinema audiences

With true grace and elegance, An Audience of Chairs mesmerizes even as it breaks your beating heart. This portrait of mental illness — adapted from the Joan Clark novel — is a testament to the vision and strength of director Deanne Foley. It follows Maura Mackenzie, a talented concert pianist and devoted mother who begins…
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REVIEW: Searching revolutionizes filmmaking tactics

You won’t see another film like Searching this fall, this year or in the last decade. Shot guerilla-style from Smartphones, computer screen perspectives and more, it is one of the most immersive film experiences I’ve ever witnessed. The film follows a father, David, and his daughter Margot as they deal with the fractured relationship they…
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REVIEW: Jennifer Garner’s screen presence lost in formulaic Peppermint

Jennifer Garner has reigned supreme as the bad-ass female action star since her time on Alias. Even her turn as Marvel heroine Elektra was hailed, despite a solo film that was underwhelming overall. She’s been largely absent from the big screen for a bit, but to see gun-toting Garner go after gang members was reason…