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‘Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga’ Is All Muscle Memory
George Miller’s highly anticipated follow-up to ‘Fury Road’ is less a victory of originality than of pieces sliding (or slamming, in this case) into their predetermined places
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An Ask-Us-Anything Mailbag, and ‘I Saw the TV Glow,’ With Jane Schoenbrun
Sean and Amanda answer your mailbag questions before Jane Schoenbrun joins to discuss the making of the ‘I Saw the TV Glow’
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The Kingdom of the ‘Planet of the Apes’ Evolves, for Better or for Worse
The fourth installment of the ‘Planet of the Apes’ reboot franchise highlights the ups and downs of diving headfirst into a post-Caesar world
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A24’s ‘I Saw the TV Glow’ Is a Warped Coming-of-Age Story
Jane Schoenbrun’s psychological horror movie ‘I Saw the TV Glow’ mines ’90s nostalgia to tell an eternal story of identity, isolation, and coming of age
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All’s Fair in Love and Tennis
A long-awaited movie starring Zendaya and featuring threesomes, cheeky homoeroticism, and the sensation of having a tennis ball thwacked down your throat, ‘Challengers’ is guaranteed to thrill and titillate. Just maybe don’t expect it to do more than that.
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10 Most Memorable Dystopian Movies
Inspired by the release of ‘Civil War,’ Adam Nayman reflects on some of the most iconic dystopian movies
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‘Civil War’ Probably Isn’t What You Expected It to Be
For a movie that set off a firestorm with its trailer, Alex Garland’s latest is surprisingly bereft of any major commentary—choosing instead to merely drop the viewer into a war zone and see what happens
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Somebody’s Always Listening
As the release of Francis Ford Coppola’s self-funded, $100 million extravaganza ‘Megalopolis’ nears, it’s worth revisiting ‘The Conversation’ from 50 years ago as a reminder of what it looks (and sounds) like when a master is at work
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Is This the Best Movie of 2024 So Far?
Radu Jude’s ‘Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World’ won’t take the box office by storm, but it still stands out for its incisive dark comedy, subtle acting, and extraordinary choreography
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‘Love Lies Bleeding’ Review: Kristen Stewart Finds Love, Drugs, and Murder
Things might get out of control, but the excess can be exhilarating