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An equestrian suffers a brain injury that alters his identity in Luis Ortega’s stylized gangster movie.
ByNatalia Winkelman
A documentary by Alex Ross Perry examines how movies and TV have portrayed video store culture.
ByBen Kenigsberg
Uma Thurman joins the expanded cast in this sure-footed sequel to the action blockbuster about a team of immortal heroes.
ByBrandon Yu
This action movie about U.S. and British leaders, also featuring Priyanka Chopra Jonas, plays like a silly version of a BBC political satire series.
ByGlenn Kenny
Danielle Deadwyler tussles with cannibals in a disturbing postapocalyptic thriller.
ByRobert Daniels
With its seventh entry, the popular dinosaur franchise is starting to show signs of wear.
ByAlissa Wilkinson
“Tell Me Everything” is more of a puff piece than its subject might have liked, but the film is at its best examining TV journalism’s evolution.
In her tender, funny feature directing debut, Eva Victor tells the story of a woman, the trauma that changed her and the life she kept on living.
ByManohla Dargis
A couple of loser cinephiles concoct a dumb heist plan, and hilarity is the last thing that ensues.
In this gritty film by River Gallo, an intersex character has to navigate New Jersey gangsters and double crosses.
ByChris Azzopardi
Mariska Hargitay sets out to learn about her mother, the Hollywood actress Jayne Mansfield, through intimate conversations with her siblings.
Everyone’s favorite campy killer doll returns in a movie that has some thoughts about artificial intelligence.
Emma Mackey and Fiona Shaw star in this drama about a young woman in a codependent relationship with her disabled mother.
ByBeatrice Loayza
In tanned, tousled form, the actor stars in a Formula 1 story about fast cars, last chances and pretty people by the director of “Top Gun: Maverick.”
Albert Serra’s mesmerizing documentary about a bullfighter faithfully depicts a violent tradition and the specter of death that suffuses it.
ByNicolas Rapold
In a new documentary, the actress talks about the prejudice and loneliness she faced after becoming the rare Hollywood star who is deaf.
Beyond the somewhat silly premise of this Netflix animated film is a charming, funny and artfully punchy original universe.
The director returns to the postapocalyptic Britain he conjured in his 2002 movie “28 Days Later,” this time with a father and son running from the infected. Mom joins in, too.
An orphaned boy is whisked away on a visually wondrous cosmic adventure, but he returns home with mostly reassuring lessons.
This newly restored screwball comedy is a buoyant romp. The director revisits and refines the techniques used here in his later work in other genres.
Fawzia Mirza’s amiable feature debut traces the lives of a mother and her daughter in two coming-of-age tales.
In this empathetic debut feature, Kathleen Chalfant plays Ruth, a woman who moves into an assisted living facility and adapts to her new life.
A theater family sorts out its offstage drama in a coming-of-age movie starring Bryan Cranston and Allison Janney.
Rebel Wilson gamely plays the role of secret agent and bridesmaid in this action-thriller mixed with a rom-com.
BySheri Linden
The remarkable life of the first American woman in space is profiled in this diverting but tame documentary.
ByJeannette Catsoulis
The film is a memoir of sorts for Jacinda Ardern, who governed at a time of multiple disasters. But it was misinformation that proved hardest to cope with.
A chimney sweep and his colleague get deep on the roofs of Oslo in Dag Johan Haugerud’s curious meditation on marriage and masculinity.
A flinty Iranian judoka competing in the World Judo Championships is menaced by her government in this absorbing political thriller.
A stellar cast led by Julianne Moore is unable to breathe life into this unsuccessful blend of maternal drama and crime caper.
Three hapless comics, played by Orlando Bloom, Bryce Dallas Howard and Nick Mohammed, infiltrate the criminal underworld.