On Film
Reading Up on the Contenders
A selection of fine writing on this year’s Academy Award nominees.
Bani Khoshnoudi and Jocelyne Saab
TIFF Cinematheque spotlights the work of both an Iranian exile and a Lebanese artist and filmmaker.
Boris Barnet, a Soviet Poet
Metrograph presents a retrospective of work by a filmmaker championed by Godard, Rivette, and Bazin.
Agnès Varda at Film Forum
The comprehensive retrospective can be a daunting prospect, but programmer David Schwartz has spotlit five essential features.
Look Who’s Back
Jonathan Rosenbaum returns to the Reader, there’s a new Cineaste, plus: Hiroshi Shimizu, John Akomfrah, and Robert Vas.
Rendez-Vous in New York
A Film at Lincoln Center series will bring several French filmmakers to the city.
True/False 2026
Twenty-one world premieres, several critical favorites from Sundance, and the True Vision Award for Ross McElwee.
Iranian Cinema: From Aesthetics to Politics
The BAMPFA series presents newly restored classics and four films by Rakhshan Banietemad.
The Fantastic Realism of Georges Franju
A New York retrospective offers Eyes Without a Face, naturally, but also rarely screened features and nonfiction shorts.
Daydreams and Nightmares
Tony Kushner revisits Munich, a Satyajit Ray restoration hits theaters, and the new Film Quarterly is out and free.
Cinema Revival at the Wexner
This year’s program features a new restoration of a Martin and Lewis comedy in Technicolor and 3D.
Near and Far: A Conversation with Dwayne LeBlanc
The director of Civic and Now, Hear Me Good talks about how his experience as a first-generation Caribbean American and his love of Chantal Akerman’s short La chambre have influenced his work.
February Books
A survey of Black cinema and memories of watching movies with John Ashbery are among this month’s highlights.
The Man Who Wasn’t There: The Barber of Santa Rosa
For this existential noir, Joel and Ethan Coen drew inspiration from crime-fiction master James M. Cain’s lean, hard-boiled style and interest in the quotidian world of work.
Network: Back to the Future
Centered on the emotional unraveling of a failed newsman, this darkly prescient satire envisions the collapse of American society as we knew it through an unsparing critique of corporate media and capital accumulation.
Berlinale 2026: Loaded for Bear
Juries, critics, filmmakers, and audiences debated politics from the first through the last day of this year’s edition.
The Eclectic Continuum
Steven Soderbergh talks and two retrospectives showcase work by Raymond Depardon and John Schlesinger.
Native Nonfiction’s Quest for Self-Determination
Since the 1980s, Indigenous artists have turned to documentary filmmaking and a variety of experimental forms to reassert their cultural sovereignty and lay claim to their own narratives.
The Fury and Humor of Frederick Wiseman
In more than forty nonfiction features, he tried, as he said, “to create dramatic structures out of ordinary experience.”
Life in the Raw: The Pre-Code Films of Mervyn LeRoy
Though in many ways the quintessential company man, the director brought an intimate understanding of the margins of American society to the films he made for Warner Bros. in the 1930s.
Robert Duvall’s Boundless Range
One of the most versatile and committed actors in cinema, Duvall was also an accomplished writer and director.
Indie Dreams
Clint Bentley’s Train Dreams was the big winner at this year’s Film Independent Spirit Awards.
Clashing Values and Wild Facts
This week brings a tribute to Diane Keaton, notes on Taxi Driver at fifty, and three flights of the spirit.
Noir, Nitrate, and a Zine
Opening Friday: Noir City in Seattle, the Nitrate Film Festival in Los Angeles, and Cinéma Du Cashiers in New York.