The director Guillermo del Toro narrates a sequence in which Dr. Victor Frankenstein presents his findings at a disciplinary tribunal.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
The film captures the friendship between an Iranian filmmaker and a Gaza City resident. They never actually meet but speak movingly via video calls.
This month’s picks include the new “Superman” reboot and an adaptation of a beloved Roald Dahl book.
“Mishima,” which explores nationalism, sexuality and ritual suicide, was screened in Tokyo for the first time since its 1985 release.
Guillermo del Toro narrates a sequence from his film, starring “Oscar Isaac.”
A prolific journalist and author, he wrote the only authorized biography of Alfred Hitchcock and heaped early praise on the future Nobel laureate Harold Pinter.
The new Bruce Springsteen biopic uses the diner as a cinematic device, and a symbol of a state that has been called the nation’s “Diner Capital.”
In this moving drama from the director of “The Worst Person in the World,” Stellan Skarsgard and Renate Reinsve star as father and daughter in counterpoint.
A young Black girl learns that her land allotment is rich with oil in this story that aspires to teach us a lesson about white predation.
The latest installment from the director of “Prey” finds a Predator and an android played by Elle Fanning teaming up against some big baddies.
This movie starring Rami Malek and Russell Crowe looks back at the trials and a psychiatrist who evaluated the defendants.
The latest documentary from Liza Mandelup (“Jawline”) concerns a man who seeks to change the color of his eyes — permanently.
The actress gives a career-defining performance opposite Robert Pattinson in Lynne Ramsay’s latest.
Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall invigorate this experimental look at a gifted New York photographer.
The movie, directed by Johnny Depp, adapted from a play by Dennis McIntyre, follows the artist fleeing the police, in Paris.
The ring is a treacherous place to be, but for this boxer, the living room held the greater threat of terror.
The actor-director Dolores Fonzi chronicles the battle to legalize abortion in Argentina through the real-life story of a woman’s wrongful imprisonment.
If he had signed a major-label deal and moved to Los Angeles as a teen, “I don’t think I’d be here today,” Yung Lean said.
The “Hedda” actress and the artist chat about balancing art with commerce and the politicization of a Black queer figure.