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(09/11/18 11:47pm)
Stanley Kubrick’s stirring, wondrous science fiction acid trip “2001: A Space Odyssey” celebrates its 50th birthday this year, and in honor of its past five decades of stunning and bewildering audiences worldwide, it’s come back to the big screen for IMAX and 70mm film presentations.
(09/11/18 11:48pm)
Perhaps the only Best Picture to ever be directed by a man who also directed an Adam Sandler comedy, Tom McCarthy’s “Spotlight” is a work of purely triumphant filmmaking. It’s also beautifully subdued, and its willingness to adhere to facts without overt sensationalizing is vital to its identity as a movie about journalism.
(09/09/18 11:55pm)
Two years after her role in "Moonlight," Janelle Monáe returned to film with a project all her own: the dazzling visual album, or emotion picture as she calls it, "Dirty Computer."
(09/06/18 12:12am)
An event brought to Bloomington by Hulu at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater this Thursday will give audiences a look at a new episode of the series “I Love You, America” with Sarah Silverman.
(09/03/18 7:36pm)
School just started, and Spotify’s already exceptional TV and music streaming bundle just got better with the addition of Showtime. Those things, it might seem, are an unfortunate coincidence for student productivity levels everywhere, but they’re also a nice opportunity to ease into a bad sleep schedule and poor productivity to get that lovely, full college experience. Without further ado, here’s some suggested viewing titles for the month of September, when studying is out and binging the longest possible movies and TV series is in:
(09/04/18 5:16pm)
Silence and dread pervade “First Reformed,” the new film from frequent Martin Scorsese collaborator Paul Schrader and an altogether crushing work of existential and theological terror. They seep into its crevices, fill the vacuous emptiness of its chilly atmosphere. A stirring and harrowing meditation on faith, mortality and the space mankind has carved himself in all of existence, this is one of the finest films of the year.
(08/29/18 8:02pm)
The Coen Brothers’ absurdist political thriller/slapstick comedy “Burn After Reading,” is about the chaos that ensues when a CD containing the memoirs of a former government agent falls into the wrong hands. The film turned ten years old this week and like the majority of the Coen Brothers' positively incredible oeuvre, it remains an excellent work of storytelling as when it released, but has aged remarkably well.
(08/26/18 11:17pm)
“Sorry to Bother You,” the January 2018 feature film debut of political hip-hop-artist-gone-director Boots Riley, feels exactly like the film you’d expect from an artist whose rap group released the song “Me and Jesus the Pimp in a ’79 Granada Last Night.”
(08/20/18 12:12am)
“BlacKkKlansman” will rightfully be described by many as an angry film. Both an energetic period piece that exudes style and class, and a hard-as-nails look at modern racism and political regression, it’s an impassioned work to be sure.
(08/16/18 1:41pm)
Documentarian Jennifer Fox’s first narrative film, “The Tale,” is and will remain one of the most brave feats of storytelling film industry has seen in a long while.
(04/27/18 4:00pm)
The world is falling apart, but Wes Anderson remains unbothered. In fact, it seems widespread political turmoil and a lingering sense of impending doom are his secrets to success. As things have grown worse, he's only improved.
(04/20/18 5:00pm)
IU Cinema is presenting the Ninth Annual Film Symposium on New Trends in Modern and Contemporary Italian Cinema this week.
(04/18/18 4:00am)
Midnight movie connoisseurs can catch a screening of the beloved disasterpiece “The Room” at 8 p.m. April 19 at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.
(04/17/18 6:00pm)
Showrunners Lisa Joy and Jonathon Nolan’s blockbuster television series "Westworld," a small screen adaptation of Michael Crichton’s novel of the same name, galloped onto television screens a year and a half ago. To the probable excitement of every creative and shareholder associated with HBO, it did so grandly. "Westworld" asserted itself as the inevitable “Game of Thrones” replacement they wanted and needed to be.
(04/13/18 7:00am)
As India-born filmmaker Mira Nair took the stage to give a lecture at the IU Cinema on April 12, she joked that she and her friends had long confused the state’s name with that of their country.
(04/13/18 2:00pm)
Local pop-up cinema collective Cicada Cinema is set to screen its monthly movie at 8 p.m. April 14 at Hairstream Studio.
(04/10/18 9:00am)
Mira Nair is not only one of India's most important filmmakers, but one of the most important global filmmakers, John Vickers, director of the IU Cinema, said.
(04/09/18 9:00am)
The 2014 documentary film “States of Grace” will screen at 7 p.m. Monday, April 9 at the IU Cinema. Director Helen Cohen and Dr. Grace Dammann, whose story the film recounts, will be present.
(04/09/18 9:30am)
When I interviewed John Krasinski recently about his new horror thriller, “A Quiet Place,” he said he was too much of a scaredy-cat for horror movies. Oddly enough, that simple fact shows throughout every ferociously tense second of his new film.
(04/03/18 2:00pm)
Mirrors abound in “A Fantastic Woman,” the new Spanish-language drama from filmmaker Sebastián Lelio.