While not for everyone, Brazilian import BACURAU is a wild ride of violence, dark humor, and some very pointed political commentary focused on residents of a Brazilian settlement standing together to defend their existence.
Read MoreNominated for Best International Feature Film at this year’s Oscars, Ladj Ly’s Les misérables steps far away from the classic musical, and showcases a gritty, of-the-moment representation of tensions in a modernized France.
Read MoreSouth Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho has made his signature film. Parasite is a blistering, shocking, and unsettling look at class, capitalism, and human decency that transcends all languages and locations.
Read MoreA career-topping performance from Antonio Banderas makes Pedro Almodóvar’s 8th collaboration with the actor, Pain and Glory, one of his most personal and telling films to date.
Read MoreAfter years of buzz, and the championing of numerous writers and directors clamoring for its release, Issa López’s fantastic fairy tale/suspense/horror hybrid, Tigers Are Not Afraid, is powerful, emotional, and one of the best films of 2019.
Read MoreAn insightful, curious road-trip through modern-day Iran serves as a backdrop for Jafar Panahi’s latest act of cinematic defiance.
Read MoreBelgium’s stop-motion animation drama This Magnificent Cake! tells five short stories with Belgium’s occupation of the Congo in the 19th century as a backdrop. And it is unlike any movie I have ever seen.
Read MorePolish import Cold War tells a visually beautiful, if not somewhat emotionally distant story, of a 15-year off-and-on again romance between a young singer and music director in 1950s Europe.
Read MoreAlfonso Cuaron has made a deeply personal and stunning film with ROMA, exploring memories from childhood and analyzing how those memories guide us through adulthood.
Read MoreThe night’s final call leaves an emergency dispatcher doing everything he can to save a family in crisis in Denmark’s fantastic import, The Guilty.
Read MoreA heavy metal comedy from Finland, Heavy Trip is a lot of fun and celebrates the artistic voice which exists in all of us.
Read MoreFrench/Belgium horror film Let the Corpses Tan is stylish and well-crafted, but hard to follow and convoluted.
Read MoreUnited Kingdom import I Am Not A Witch tells a poetic story of a young Zambian girl, wrongly accused of witchcraft, who adjusts to life in a “witch camp.”
Read MoreJim McKay’s En El Séptimo Día (On the Seventh Day) is a terrific look at a different kind of immigrant story, as a bicycle deliveryman weighs a number of decisions in one life-changing week in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn.
Read MoreLucrecia Martel’s Zama is an Argentinian import that tells us the strange and clever story of a magistrate, mentally unraveling in 18th century Paraguay.
Read MoreSlow, calculating drama Western finds Germans and Bulgarians becoming increasingly tense and volatile during the building of a hydroelectric power plant on the border between Bulgaria and Greece.
Read MoreWith his first new film in more than five years, Michael Haneke's Happy End is a quasi-sequel to the 2012 Oscar-winning Amour, which finds depression and deception consuming a family's day-to-day existence.
Read MoreOscar nominated A Fantastic Woman (Best Foreign Language Film) tells a memorable story of a transgender woman finding strength after being spurned by the family of her recently deceased boyfriend.
Read MoreSenegal's entry for the 2017 Best Foreign Language Film Oscar race is a uniquely crafted, music-laden drama about a mother desperately attempting to find money to pay for her teenage son's surgery.
Read MoreFrom Norway, The King's Choice gives a new perspective and shares an important new story from the era of World War II.
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