On Film
Corbaz, Critics, and Cannes
This week: Super 8 films by Teo Hernández, a new feature from Patrick Wang, and a revival of Aloïse (1975), starring Isabelle Huppert and Delphine Seyrig.
Cannes Openers
Jane Schoenbrun’s third feature is met with raves, while three other early entries are seeing mixed reviews.
The Delta: Across the Lines
In the landscape of gay-themed cinema, which often focuses on positivity and pride, Ira Sachs’s debut feature stands out for asking unsettling questions about the limits of queer connection across socioeconomic and racial divides.
Previewing Cannes 2026
Sorting through critics’ most-anticipated titles, catching up with interviews and profiles, and more.
May Books
We begin with the Marilyn Monroe centenary and move on to thrillers and collections of poetry and critical essays.
Out of Your World
Film Comment relaunches, Richard Kelly writes, Lynne Ramsay prepares, and in 1976, Roberto Rossellini talked.
AntĂłnio Reis & Margarida Cordeiro, Restored
Jean Rouch said they created “a new cinematographic language,” and a retrospective touring North America begins in Toronto.
African Cinema in New York and Seattle
Erige Sehiri’s Promised Sky opens the New York African Film Festival and screens as part of Seattle’s African Pictures program.
San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2026
The nation’s largest silent film festival returns to the newly renovated Castro Theatre.
Four by Sophie Letourneur
L’Alliance New York presents a series of films by a director ripe for discovery in the U.S.
Magnanimous!
A new month begins with a Visconti restoration, a new issue of Senses of Cinema, and a deep backgrounder on Backrooms.
First Look, Second Weekend
The festival presents new work by Isabel Sandoval, Kogonada, IldikĂł Enyedi, and more.
The Grandmaster: Tony Leung
Film at Lincoln Center’s thirteen-film series will feature an evening with the man himself.
The Defiant Ironies of Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s The Third Generation
In this delirious and deeply polarizing satire about political violence, the legendary director takes aim at hypocrisy and opportunism at every level of German society.
TCM Classic Film Festival 2026
Opening with Jane Fonda’s tribute to Robert Redford, this year’s edition features several world premieres of new restorations.
John Singleton’s Hood Trilogy: Born and Raised in South Central
In the trio of star-studded films that cemented his legacy as a groundbreaking figure in American cinema, the writer-director illuminated the hopes and struggles of Black communities in his native Los Angeles.
Kinuyo Tanaka Directs: Married to Cinema
At a turning point in her career, one of Japanese cinema’s most beloved stars decided to step behind the camera, creating a string of remarkable films that possess the same honesty and warmth that distinguished her work as an actor.
Prismatic Ground, Year Six
The festival centered on experimental documentary and avant-garde film will roll out across five New York venues.
Far from Home: Three Noirs by Jacques Tourneur
In a trio of Hollywood crime dramas made in the 1940s and ’50s—including the masterpiece Out of the Past—the director follows wayward characters who venture into profoundly unsettling landscapes and encounter the foreign at home.
The Act of Watching
Great writing this week on Maurice Pialat, Paul Newman, Johnnie To, Mark Fisher, and wrestlers.
First Look, First Weekend
Over the next four days, the Museum of the Moving Image will be showcasing a wide range of “adventurous new cinema.”
IFFBoston 2026
Boots Riley and Olivia Wilde both have two films at this year’s edition of New England’s largest film festival.
On Restoration and Repair: A Conversation with Ja’Tovia Gary
The shape-shifting artist and director of The Giverny Document talks about the Black feminist tradition, her approach to direct animation, and the influence of Toni Morrison and Soviet montage theory on her work.
Point Blank: A Dream of Full-Color Noir
A crime-cinema masterpiece whose influence can be seen in such later touchstones as Mean Streets and Reservoir Dogs, this highly stylized portrait of a gangster subordinates the needs of plot to director John Boorman’s saturated aesthetic.