
‘The Social Network’ movie review: David Fincher’s exceptional Facebook story
The Social Network is a surprisingly profound story that lives in the “now” and demands to be seen by contemporary audiences

The Social Network is a surprisingly profound story that lives in the “now” and demands to be seen by contemporary audiences

Brooding and atmospheric, the Aussie crime saga Animal Kingdom is an incredibly well-composed feature debut from director David Michôd

Exit Through the Gift Shop is, upon first glance, a disarmingly straightforward documentary about street art and street artists.

A Serious Man might be a little too subtle for mainstream tastes, pretentious and initially unsatisfying

Inception is a masterpiece, brilliant and complex, endlessly fascinating and thought-provoking and profound

A Single Man immediately identifies director Tom Ford as an auteur with impeccable control over his craft

Wildly imaginative, surprisingly dark and complex, Toy Story 3 ranks right up there with Pixar’s best films

Roman Polanski’s The Ghost Writer is one of the director’s best films in his post-1970s career

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call – New Orleans is hugely entertaining, unexpectedly funny, with a fully wigged-out Nicolas Cage performance that mesmerizes

The Hurt Locker was the best film of 2009, and one of the best of the decade
Avatar is a technical revolution in filmmaking, as director James Cameron has mastered motion-capture animation

Michael Jackson’s This is It is part concert documentary, part backstage behind-the-scenes production footage, all fascinating

Man on Wire tells Petit’s incredible tale, and lets Petit tell it himself a good portion of the time

Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds is a real pleasure to watch, an audacious and inventive amalgamation of spaghetti westerns and WWII exploitation films,

Pixar’s Up doesn’t quite reach the heights of Ratatouille and Wall-E, the kind of wonderful, transcendent animated films that Hollywood rarely sees

Mickey Rourke is nothing short of phenomenal in The Wrestler, an intimate, personal drama from director Darren Aronofsky

Public Enemies, starring Christian Bale and Johnny Depp, is Michael Mann’s finest film: an out-and-out masterpiece and an immense technical achievement

Kinoautomat was the world’s first interactive movie, which premiered at the World Expo in Montreal back in 1967

Star Trek is the kind of Hollywood blockbuster that hasn’t been seen since Spielberg and Lucas were in their prime

Synecdoche, New York, is the best translation of a Charlie Kaufman screenplay to the screen yet

Toys in the Attic is a wonderful little children’s picture that’s plenty of fun for adults (especially animation buffs) to boot

Che; Part One is an incredible portrait of worldwide revolutionary icon Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara

Changeling is a film that really delivers – compelling story, gorgeous production design, excellent performances

WALL·E, directed by Andrew Stanton, is a captivating animated film that manages to tell its story (mostly) without dialogue