“Some of the year’s most affecting pictures were about just making it through to tomorrow. This terrifying time of isolation made emotional connections onscreen feel all the more precious and fragile, with crowd scenes and hugs feeling like gifts we’d been taking for granted. Whatever the new normal may be, I hope some of the lessons of 2020 will be remembered.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/21/2020
INDIEWIRE CRITICS SURVEY / OFCS BALLOT 2020
THE MIDNIGHT SKY
“It’s an ungainly film but not ineffective, particularly in the silent scenes with a gruff Clooney hidden behind a large David Letterman beard, his haunted eyes filling in the missing dialogue. An unexpected spirit of can-do positivity carries it through to a revelation you can see coming lightyears away, yet made me cry all the same. Look, it’s been a long year.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/17/2020
SYLVIE’S LOVE
“For such a square story it feels wonderfully subversive, as Ashe has moved the entire aesthetic of the Technicolor melodrama uptown. These perfectly painted sets and impeccably pressed clothes aren’t attempting to replicate reality, but rather a dream life in the movies from which people who look like the cast of Sylvie’s Love have always been excluded. Until now.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/17/2020
TO THE ENDS OF THE EARTH
“The search for authentic experiences in our over-mediated age can be an elusive one, almost as slippery as this provocative mood piece from writer-director Kiyoshi Kurosawa. In the film’s quieter moments we feel the character’s yearning for real connections in a modern world where everything, to some degree or another, is a performance being staged.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/17/2020
MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM
“Director Wolfe hasn’t made much of an attempt here to reimagine the play as a movie. Which is fine, because when the cast and the material are this strong sometimes it’s preferable to just have a record of the performances. Especially Boseman’s, which feels like the first role in the electrifying second act of a career cut heartbreakingly short. What an incalculable loss.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/17/2020
TENET
“Tenet is practically a Christopher Nolan fetish film, fawning over all the director’s favorite things: temporal loops, bespoke suits, large-format photography, sexless saviors, Michael Caine, dialogue-muffling masks and a curiously stunted way of looking at the world that feels derived almost entirely from James Bond movies of the 1960s and ’70s.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/17/2020
LET THEM ALL TALK
“Individual vignettes have purpose and snap while the larger point of it all remains a little fuzzy and out of focus. Still, it’s refreshing to see a movie about senior citizens in which their sex lives aren’t played for horrified laughs. Like its three leading ladies, the film is a class act and even if the destination is a bit disappointing this is still a trip worth taking.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/17/2020
WORLD OF WONG KAR WAI
“There’s a certain irony in the idea of a Wong Kar Wai retrospective, as so many of his characters are already living in the past. His best films feel like memories of themselves, rhapsodies of regret and lingering visions of the ones that got away. Watching a Wong Kar Wai movie in a theater is like living inside of somebody else’s dream for a little while.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/11/2020
I’M YOUR WOMAN
“It’s a 1970s crime picture told from the POV of the gun moll, a character continually cast to the side and kept in the dark. It’s a brilliant concept, forcing viewers to ask ourselves all sorts of important and uncomfortable questions about who we gravitate to at the center of our stories and why. If only the film’s execution were half as exciting as its ideas.” – WBUR’s The ARTery, 12/10/2020









