Film Jeffrey Zhang Film Jeffrey Zhang

TIFF 2020 Film Review: Nomadland

A vérité mix of fiction and documentary, Chloé Zhao’s enthralling Nomadland captures a lost sliver of American life. Frances McDormand is astounding as the understated Fern, bringing a quiet dignity to one of the most soulful performances of the year. Adapted from Jessica Bruder’s book, Nomadland jettisons melodrama and traditional narrative tensions, choosing instead to explore life on the road with lightly-fictionalized versions of real-life nomads. A graceful elegy and a hopeful portrait, Nomadland - like Zhao’s The Rider before it - is a new standard for the American western.

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TIFF 2020 Film Review: Shadow in the Cloud

With its nonsensical story, unlikeable characters, and tawdry effects, Shadow in the Cloud is a flight better off grounded. Chloë Grace Moretz does her best to anchor this installment of TIFF’s Midnight Madness, but it’s mostly a weightless and messy endeavor that squanders its potential. Minor spoilers ahead…

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TIFF 2020 Film Review: Violation

One of only three titles in TIFF’s Midnight Madness slate this year, Madeleine Sims-Fewer and Dusty Mancinelli’s Violation is a haunting and disturbing deconstruction of the rape-revenge genre. Exacting to watch and remarkably complex, the film eschews formula and withholds catharsis to chilling effect, delivering a horror experience that is as harrowing as it is challenging. Minor spoilers ahead…

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TIFF 2020 Film Review: Pieces of a Woman

Vanessa Kirby shines in Kornél Mundruczó’s and Kata Wéber’s Pieces of a Woman, a devastating drama that details the act of living in the wake of unimaginable tragedy. The film finds considerable buoyancy in its awards-worthy performances, but struggles to escape the shadow of its searing single-take opening scene. Unable to commit to its most powerful thread, Pieces of a Woman flounders in its scattered and callow narratives. Minor spoilers below…

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TIFF 2020 Film Review: One Night in Miami

My TIFF 2020 coverage starts here! Regina King, in her first full-length feature, crafts a dialogue-driven triumph grounded by evocative performances, powerful debate, and a gripping timeliness. Following four Black icons of the 20th Century as they navigate the winds of change in a semi-fictional meeting of the minds, One Night in Miami hews close to its stage play roots, translating Kemp Powers’ theater into rousing, intimate cinema. Minor spoilers ahead…

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TIFF 2020 Film Reviews Portal

My coverage of 2020’s Toronto International Film Festival begins here! One of the most prestigious film festivals, TIFF is a major predictor of Academy Awards success, screening some of the best films the world has to offer. From documentaries to dramas to its horror-leaning Midnight Madness slate, TIFF is a cinematic experience unlike any other. This year marks my first year as accredited press, and I’m so excited to be able to review a selection of films from the festival. You can find my entire coverage here. All reviews in viewing order…

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: The Dark and the Wicked

Bryan Bertino’s new possession horror film, The Dark and the Wicked, is a merciless gauntlet of grief, trauma, and violence. Centered around a nerve-fraying performance by Marin Ireland, the film is rife with effective scares and blistering violence that become increasingly heavy. The Dark and the Wicked is birds of a feather with the director’s cult debut, The Strangers, and while the film takes the home invasion concept to a new place, it struggles to rekindle its predecessor’s razor-sharp tautness. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Mulan, Xian Lang, and Why Representation Behind the Camera Matters

Mulan, which saw its unprecedented streaming release on September 4th in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, rises above the recent spate of facile live-action Disney remakes by trying something a little different, but the bar is so low that it barely feels like a victory. And while there’s something undoubtedly stirring about seeing an all-Asian cast in such a high-profile tentpole film, Mulan’s representation only extends to the actors in front of the camera, resulting in an end product that is woefully dispirited and underwritten. In the end, by glossing over rich historical detail and ignoring an era of atypically empowered women, the film’s all-white producers and writers are never more apparent, especially when tackling what could have been the story’s most fascinating addition: Gong Li’s sorceress villain, Xian Lang. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: The Block Island Sound

A cleverly affecting mix of environmental and cosmic horror, The McManus brothers’ The Block Island Sound is one of the best surprises of Fantasia Festival this year. With its standout performances and adroit pacing, the film ratchets up a creeping atmosphere of dread and paranoia, all in service of a powerful allegory for mental illness, inherited ailments, and the deteriorating state of our world.

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: Detention

Deeper and more pensive than your average video game adaptation, John Hsu’s Detention aims to shine a revealing light on a violent and oft-ignored time period in Taiwanese history. A love story, a horror movie, and a political thriller all wrapped up in a single package, the film delivers a stirring history lesson and an incisive commentary on the evils of authoritarianism, but its fractured and ride-the-rails ghost story does it no favors. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: Feels Good Man

One of a handful of documentary features in this year’s Fantasia Festival lineup, Feels Good Man chronicles the evolution (or devolution) of an innocuous cartoon character into an uncontrollable symbol of racism, misogyny, and the alt-right. As told by documentarian Arthur Jones, the film paints a tragic portrait of meme culture and of artist Matt Furie as he grapples with his corrupted creation. Despite some odd pacing and a tonally inconsistent focus on Furie himself, Feels Good Man is a timely and gripping examination of the dark side of the web. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: The Mortuary Collection

The only anthology in Fantasia Festival’s 2020 lineup, director Ryan Spindell’s The Mortuary Collection is a haunting love letter to vintage horror and the pulp comics that inspire it. With Clancy Brown chewing up the scenery just like the horror hosts of yore, the film delightfully reaches back to recall the frightful morality plays of Tales from the Crypt and Creepshow. Expertly crafted and gorgeous to boot, The Mortuary Collection is the most fun I’ve had at Fantasia so far, and a film that will likely be a Halloween mainstay for years to come. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: The Columnist

My coverage of Fantasia Festival 2020 continues with director Ivo Van Aart’s dark satirical comedy, The Columnist. The tale of a writer driven to murder by Internet trolls, the film is a timely modern-day parable about the power of words and one woman’s swath of bloody vengeance when she pierces the veil of online anonymity. In the titular role, Katja Herbers puts forth a wicked performance that is pure fun and catharsis, but The Columnist leaves a fair amount on the table, rarely venturing past the surface to get its kicks. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Fantasia Festival 2020 Film Review: Fried Barry

Our coverage of 2020’s Fantasia Film Festival begins here! With Fried Barry, director Ryan Kruger expands his hit short film of the same name into a feature length fever dream of violent and near-pornographic absurdity. Not everyone will vibe with the film’s provocative vision, but Fried Barry is anchored by a mesmerizing performance from Gary Green and a rollicking improvisational momentum. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Fantasia Film Festival 2020 Film Reviews Portal

This year, I have the privilege of being invited as accredited press to Fantasia Festival 2020, North America’s largest genre film festival. This is my very first experience at a film festival as press, and even though it’s mostly digital due to the COVID-19 pandemic, I’m extremely excited to be among the first to see some of the best genre films from all around the world. This page will be your portal to my coverage. I’ll be working my way through plenty of titles, some that won’t see full release until next year. All of my reviews will be in viewing order…

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Film Review: An American Pickle

Seth Rogen pulls double duty in the absurdist comedy-drama, An American Pickle, directed by noted cinematographer and frequent Rogen-collaborator Brandon Trost in his feature debut. But even with two singularly great performances from Rogen, Pickle can’t save its muddled self from plot points that fizzle and a script full of dead air. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Film Review: Host

Expanded from director Rob Savage’s two-minute viral video on Twitter, Host is a bite-sized horror treat that comes at the perfect time. While it doesn’t reinvent horror or even the “screenlife” subgenre, Host gets by with a bevy of unsettling, clever, and economical choices, all within the space of a single Zoom call. The film is now streaming on Shudder. Minor spoilers ahead…

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Film Review: She Dies Tomorrow

Originally slated to debut at SXSW in March before the festival was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic, She Dies Tomorrow is finally seeing its U.S. release July 31st at select drive-ins and August 6th on VOD. Writer and director Amy Seimetz, with her third feature film, conjures a gorgeous and affecting nightmare with a weight of timeliness that can’t be ignored. Experimental, surreal, and mesmerizing, She Dies Tomorrow is one of the best films of the year. Minor spoilers ahead…

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