Movie Review: Bitter Irony Chews Through Clooney’s ‘Suburbicon’
Director George Clooney’s latest film, from a Coen Brothers script, is not entirely successful but still worth seeing
Director George Clooney’s latest film, from a Coen Brothers script, is not entirely successful but still worth seeing
The Coen Brothers’ latest film is a divisive, but delightful, love letter to 1950s Hollywood
Bridge of Spies is a tense and exciting Hollywood version of a John le Carré Cold War thriller, with a dose of Kafka
Unbroken is a gorgeously-photographed (by Roger Deakins), vividly-realized, authentic-feeling adaptation that nevertheless struggles to come to life
Beautifully shot and with an outstanding soundtrack, Inside Llewyn Davis ranks among the Coen Brothers’ greatest films.
Gambit boasts a script by Joel and Ethan Coen, from the original 1966 Michael Caine caper movie of the same name.
True Grit, a new western from the Coen Brothers, is more or less as good as Henry Hathaway’s 1969 original starring John Wayne
A Serious Man might be a little too subtle for mainstream tastes, pretentious and initially unsatisfying
Burn After Reading is a goofy spy comedy that has to live up to last year’s Oscar-winning drama No Country for Old Men.
Paris je t’aime (Paris, I Love You) is about as good as this kind of thing can get
The brilliant novel by Cormac McCarthy is brought to life page-by-page and – at times – word-by-word in the brilliant No Country for Old Men