MARS uses old trick to blast off into new worlds
by Liz Wiest, Staff Writer
Coming in at a crisp eighty-four minutes, Mars knows what it is and accomplishes exactly what it sets out to do.
by Liz Wiest, Staff Writer
Coming in at a crisp eighty-four minutes, Mars knows what it is and accomplishes exactly what it sets out to do.
by Liz Wiest, Staff Writer
The 23rd edition of the Tribeca Film Festival has come to a triumphant close this week after twelve days of magnificent world premieres, delightful events, and cutting edge immersive experiences.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
Here is a rundown of five films that had their World Premieres at the Tribeca Festival.
by Liz Wiest, Staff Writer
While the direction, editing and score all worked together to compose a final product of fabulous festival bait- the optics only do so much to reign in the rather chaotic moving parts.
by Megan Robinson, Staff Writer
As the Tribeca Film Festival continues, highly anticipated films find comfort in discomfort, solace in anxiety, and healing from trauma.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
The shorts programs at the Tribeca Film Festival are uniformly strong and this year’s program was no exception
by Liz Wiest, Staff Writer
Film Festivals have always acted as a vehicle for provocative art to force audiences to confront controversy and difficult topics.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
Gary shares his first dispatch from this year’s Tribeca fest.
by Megan Robison, Staff Writer
Tribeca is abound with features, shorts, documentaries, and plenty of events featuring the industries finest creatives.
by Liz Wiest, Staff Writer
This year’s lineup features the crème de la crème of film, games, and audio storytelling.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
What I enjoy most about attending film festivals is discovering a film that may not get distribution.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
The Tribeca Film Festival offers hundreds of documentaries, shorts, and features from around the world. Here’s a rundown of nine films screening at this year’s fest.
by Audrey Callerstrom, Staff Writer
MM&SOP is about how a young couple navigates things they consider “adult.” T
by Audrey Callerstrom, Staff Writer
Ultrasound is based on a graphic novel, but you would never guess from the look and feel of it. It looks gray and washed-out.
by Audrey Callerstrom, Staff Writer
Ultrasound is based on a graphic novel, but you would never guess from the look and feel of it. It looks gray and washed-out.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
”If you see the program as a whole, every piece has a different style to it. You’re getting this mixtape.
by Audrey Callerstrom, Staff Writer
It’s a modern twist on “The Odd Couple,” strangers who are thrust into living together.
by Audrey Callerstrom, Staff Writer
Shapeless is a visceral, unnerving, and raw portrait of Ivy, a New Orleans lounge singer struggling with an eating disorder.
by Gary Kramer, Staff Writer
It’s not quite “choose your own adventure”—viewers cannot direct the characters to open a door (or not)—rather, it is more like switching channels to follow the most interesting storyline.
by Gary Kramer, Staff Writer
No Future does feature some artfully composed shots, but this downbeat indie never does what it should, which is make viewers feel the characters’ pain