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The Cow

Dec 3, 2019 Performances If there was one mother-daughter television date my busy mum was always willing to down tools for, it was a Bette Davis movie. Her favorite—and mine, for the preteen period when I gave the thumbs-up to anything my mother...

Mar 15, 1989 When Darling debuted in 1965, Bosley Crowther of the New York Times remarked that director John Schlesinger had “made a film that will set tongues to wagging and moralists wringing their hands.” There was plenty of tongue-wagging over this satirical...

A Tale of Two Hiroshimas

On the Channel

May 3, 2018 Two of the earliest films to depict the bombing of Hiroshima show how politics shapes national mourning.

Oct 28, 2025 Selections from the independent Cannes sidebar will screen in New York and Los Angeles.

Sep 9, 2025 Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley enthrall critics with their portrayals of parents mourning the loss of a child.

Venice 2025 Lineup

The Daily

Jul 22, 2025 New films by Olivier Assayas, Noah Baumbach, Kathryn Bigelow, Guillermo del Toro, Mona Fastvold, and Park Chan-wook will compete for the Golden Lion.

Oct 16, 2024 This year’s special anniversary edition will open with Malcolm Washington’s August Wilson adaptation, The Piano Lesson.

Jun 6, 2019 Deep Dives He is our treasured resident alien, visiting from a dimension where shadows are rooms and movies are bad dreams that change reality. That’s one kind of way to think about David Lynch, and there are thousands more. For...

Mar 9, 2015 François Truffaut’s adultery drama is at times corrosively funny and at others frighteningly tense, but it’s always incisive and humane.

The Third Man

Essays

Nov 8, 1999 In The Third Man—probably the greatest British thriller of the postwar era—director Carol Reed and screenwriter Graham Greene set a fable of moral corruption in a world of near-Byzantine visual complexity: the streets and ruins of occupied Vienna. It is...

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