Saturday, February 28, 2026

Pillion


PILLION   ***

Harry Lighton
2025

























IDEA:  A shy, diffident man from the suburbs of London enters into a dom/sub relationship with a confident biker that tests his limits.




BLURB:  At its essence, Pillion is an archetypal story of two opposites — one meek and impressionable and the other brash and obdurate — who change by awakening something in the other. This version of the story just happens to be told with more leather and assless pants than usual. That the film takes place within a gay BDSM subculture is a novelty that writer-director Harry Lighton also makes disarmingly mundane; he’s not interested in taboo-breaking eroticism but in the power imbalances that can affect any relationship, especially one based on dominance and submission. Risking generalization (or worse, misinterpretation), Lighton uses the BDSM milieu to study how partners might negotiate control, desire, and boundaries within an ostensibly consensual relationship. “Ostensibly” because the ways in which Ray treats Colin frequently cross over into abuse. The grace and empathy of Pillion are such that neither character is judged for their respective behavior in this ethically slippery scenario, nor are they psychoanalyzed in some facile effort to rationalize their choices. Lighton puts enormous, gratifying trust in Harry Melling and Alexander Skarsgård to carry the ambiguities of a relationship in which hurt and pleasure, control and surrender, are separated by a hair (trigger). As the tone oscillates, so does the image and sound, moving between orgiastic countryside idylls, dreamy slow-motion bike rides, and arguments fought through mirrors to the stuttering tune of Satie. Through its kinks, the film finally emerges as a classic Bildungsroman, in which Colin’s sexual, emotional, and moral education reveals how difficult — but also rewarding — it can be to discover yourself. 

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Magellan


MAGELLAN   ***1/2

Lav Diaz
2025

























IDEA:  Ferdinand Magellan and his crews wreak havoc on indigenous populations as they seek to bring Christianity to the global East.




BLURB:  It takes quite some time before the nominal hero of Magellan is given his close-up. Aside from a brief, wryly askance angle of him sleeping, he is seen in the first portions of Lav Diaz’s film wandering far afield in the deep-focus frames, marginalized by a foreground of merciless jungle and the lifeless bodies of the indigenous Malacca people his expedition has massacred. Even when Gael García Bernal’s Portuguese general assumes a more prominent visual and narrative role, Diaz continues to subvert his authority in a strategy of inversion that is anti-colonial at its core. Rebelling against “Great Man” historiography and Age of Discovery romanticism, the filmmaker depicts a grinding, sickly, recursive imperialist project carried out by petty, insecure Europeans ready to kill each other before even reaching the other side of the ocean. In the mesmerizing scenes at sea, Diaz films in low-angle shots that might seem reverential if not for the savage behavior of the men within them. He lingers on bodies battered by both the elements and intramural violence, on exhaustion and boredom and quarrels scored to nothing but a creaking ship. The extended duration, static camera, and elision of dramatic spectacle serve to undermine any sense of progress or accomplishment; this is a story, ultimately, of Western ideological and geopolitical failure. That failure becomes the (temporary) triumph of the indigenes in a last chapter that portrays their righteous uprising and the creation of a new national myth. Magellan also creates its own, cinematic myth, one that fascinatingly runs counter to both Western and Filipino grand narratives. Underlying the stunningly immersive sensory experience is the fundamental problematic of how history is written, imagined, and promulgated, and Diaz is bold enough to make his film not an answer, but another question.

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Eureka


EUREKA   ***1/2

Lisandro Alonso
2023

























*LIGHT SPOILERS AHEAD*



IDEA:  A shapeshifting, time-bending, magical realist exploration of Native American experience.



BLURB:  Eureka contains one of those legitimately astonishing form-breaking moments you see once in a while in the feature-length art film, a consciousness-torquing rupture that’s like the filmmaker pulling off a magic trick. Of course, it basically is; it’s the magic of a medium that can reorganize time, space, and the spectator’s perceptual economy. Lisandro Alonso no doubt exploits this ability in part because of the thrill of it (and it is thrilling to see!), but he also wants to get at something deeper about how film can unsettle the language of the status quo. His project, continuing explicitly from his previous film, Jauja, is to denude hegemonic Western narratives of their mythical heroic trappings. Eureka goes further than Jauja in that it actually centers indigenous subjects, although this isn’t apparent until the aforementioned schism, a masterful fakeout that yanks the film from a seemingly typical Western (albeit a grimly deglamorized one) into a contemporary realist drama layered with the traces of colonial violence. Over the rest of the film, which has in store one further and more metaphysical spatiotemporal shift, Alonso encourages us to find parallels across his different idioms. What is most prominent — from the severe argentine frames of the Viggo Mortensen-led Western to the frigid, durational tableaux of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to the lush but endangered Amazon — is a history of American indigeneity pockmarked by abuse and displacement. Alonso and his co-writers complicate “positive” representation by showing how these things don’t always come from the top down but are internalized and perpetuated within a community, as in the weary, ethically dubious law enforcement of a Lakota officer (Alaina Clifford) operating within a seriously compromised socioeconomic structure. Perversely, ironically titled, Eureka pointedly offers mostly lacunae and irresolution in its entrancing cosmic tapestry, but there is also startling, poignant clarity in the microscopic human detail it rescues from the gaps.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Testament of Ann Lee


THE TESTAMENT OF ANN LEE   ***

Mona Fastvold
2025

























IDEA:  In the 18th century, Ann Lee begins the Shaker religious movement in England and journeys across the Atlantic to grow her community in America.




BLURB:  As a genre for the exuberant externalization of feeling, the musical is perfectly suited to the subject of ecstatic religious worship. The Testament of Ann Lee is not a traditional musical, but it wholly embraces the roles of singing and dancing as extra-verbal, extra-rational, and transcendent expressions of human experience. Here, that expression is tied to a religious sect primarily characterized by the musicality and somatic energy suggested by its name. The film’s Shakers writhe, stomp, prance, and circle each other in rapt communion, Daniel Blumberg’s sonorous hymnal song-score flowing through them like volts of electricity connecting heaven and earth. In its most potent moments, when Fastvold and Corbet cede the sometimes stodgy narrative to the primal joy of bodily movement, The Testament of Ann Lee captures the euphoria — phenomenological or spiritual — of giving oneself over to a sensation of collective reverence. And in this, the film locates a core irony: that Ann Lee started such a profoundly corporeal movement as a repudiation of sex and earthly desires. She is a mother who refuses the biological mandates of the role, and as such, Fastvold and Corbet render her a kind of queer feminist figure, defined not merely by an opposition to patriarchy but procreation and domesticity. Amanda Seyfried is so passionately, uninhibitedly keyed into her portrayal that she helps mitigate the feeling that this all seems pretty idealized, biographical nuances softened by admiration for Lee’s iconoclasm and tenacity. Maybe it’s worth valuing such an earnest celebration of faith, and one that doesn’t forget its ineluctable basis in a human body at once mortal and malleable.

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Resurrection


RESURRECTION   ***

Bi Gan
2025

























IDEA:  In a future in which most people have chosen to stop dreaming, a vigilante woman tries to eliminate a man who has refused, but becomes enthralled as she experiences his dreams.




BLURB:  Cinema as dreaming, falsity, truth, absence, presence, immortality, ephemerality, transgression, sacredness; the manifold characteristics and connotations of the medium reverberate throughout Bi Gan’s shapeshifting fantasia. Resurrection is one of those deliriously metacinematic movie-movies — think Leos Carax’s Holy Motors or Guy Maddin’s The Forbidden Room — that self-consciously salutes film by metabolizing its ontological properties and sedimented histories into hallucinatory form. In this case, it’s a journey through film idioms and genres, from silent German Expressionism to a buddy crime caper and a giallo-inflected supernatural romance, in which the underlying subtext is the mutability and uncontainable excess of the medium itself. Resurrection may be more linear in narrative than Bi’s first two Möbius-strip like films, but it still mostly speaks in an oneiric language of symbols and affects. Visual and thematic motifs proliferate across its chapters: fire, water, reflections, a suitcase; deception, illusion, lost parents and children; and the sensory modalities that allegedly correspond with each chapter but are really, as cinema would have it, exploited in combination throughout. Film intertexts abound, from the Lumière short L'Arroseur arrosé to Nosferatu and The Lady from Shanghai. It’s cinema unfolding as eternal return, until, in the arresting single-shot penultimate chapter, set on the last day of the 20th century, the medium morphs into something else, something more uncanny and terrifying. Is it the end, or just another transformation? Perhaps the key lies in the interstitial shots of melting candles, which burn down only to come back, prime to melt again, in yet another shape and time.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Marty Supreme


MARTY SUPREME   ***

Josh Safdie
2025

























IDEA:  In 1952, a cocky young table-tennis player from New York gets into worsening straits on his journey to prove his greatness.




BLURB:  In the vein of the last two films Josh Safdie made with his brother Benny — and the gritty New Hollywood tradition that inspired them — Marty Supreme is a raucous, whirlwind portrait of a monomaniacal schemer who can’t help digging himself into deeper holes as he rushes headlong toward some elusive reward. Working on a broader historical and sociopolitical canvas than he has before, Safdie casts this character as an embodiment of American ideals in toxic overdrive, a hyperbolic national avatar of self-sufficiency, exceptionalism, and ruthless striving. Timothée Chalamet dives into this role with nervy, full-bodied gusto, darting through the film with an indefatigable flop-sweat energy that is equaled at every turn by the breakneck pacing, cacophonous soundtrack, and restless camerawork that captures a teeming ensemble of faces in extreme closeups. Among several subversions of sports-movie conventions, Safdie refuses to make the narcissistic, immoral Marty easy to root for. At the same time, he makes him impossible to despise, and this is why the character is compelling. If Marty signifies an unabashedly swollen American ego, he also represents working-class mettle and Jewish perseverance. An unusual vignette about a Holocaust survivor underlines a crucial theme: for a disadvantaged minority, survival takes on a different form. For Marty, that form is an overcompensating audacity revolving around an embryonic ping-pong ball that entangles him in Oedipal relationships and the dark heart of capitalist ethics. His perdurance is less a triumph of the American can-do spirit than the raw, existential will to keep on going.