Miami Film Festival 2015: Five Movies to See in the Final Week

As the curtains prepare to close on the 32nd-annual Miami Dade College’s Miami International Film Festival, there are still plenty of films left to see. From foreign dramas to locally made documentaries, the last few days of MIFF offer cinephiles a bevy of diverse and interesting choices. We’ve rounded up…

Disney’s New Cinderella Is Sumptuous and Fearless

There’s no empowerment message embedded in Kenneth Branagh’s Cinderella, no “Girls can do anything!” cheerleader vibe. That’s why it’s wonderful. This is a straight, no-chaser fairy story, a picture to be downed with pleasure. It worries little about sending the wrong message and instead trusts us to decode its politics,…

Miami Film Festival 2015: The Dinner Meanders and Fizzles

I nostri ragazzi isn’t the first time that Dutch novelist Herman Koch’s novel, The Dinner, has been adapted for film. Only a year or so after the Dutch adaptation of the book, we find ourselves with this Italian edition. Showing at the Miami International Film Festival under the novel’s title,…

The Miami International Film Festival Embraces Miami-Bred Filmmakers

From Sundance to Toronto to South by Southwest, Miami filmmakers have made their mark on the festival circuit. The city’s most buzzed-about collective, Borscht Corp., has had work accepted at major gatherings around the world — but never at the Miami International Film Festival (MIFF). Until now. MIFF, which returns…

Bravura Anthology Wild Tales Lays Bare Everyone’s Awfulness

There are two kinds of humanist movie. One kind shows human beings struggling against the most unspeakable horrors, sorrows, or injustices and still, somehow, emerging with their essential goodness intact. The second, thornier type portrays people doing terrible things to one another — screaming, cheating, and generally making life hell…

Wild Canaries Is No Hipster Thin Man

The new Brooklyn is generally derided as a wilderness of double-wide strollers, young men with the facial hair of Canadian loggers circa 1852, and artisanal everything. But in Wild Canaries, a modestly scaled murder mystery/comedy from writer/director/star Lawrence Michael Levine, today’s Brooklyn is a place of danger and intrigue. Just…

MIFF 2015: Elena Anaya Shines in Todos están muertos

Todos están muertos (They Are All Dead) is a weird movie. Humorous, sad, and as sweet as pie. It’s grounded in the lovely magical realism that often seems deeply embedded in Spanish culture. The film focuses on Lupe (Elena Anaya), who was once an eighties rock star and now lives…

Classic Movies Showing in Miami in March

Plenty of cities with art cinemas pride themselves on their classic film programming. There’s always some kind of retrospective, screening of an old favorite on 35mm, or just an abundance of restorations or thematic programming. And Miami is finally stepping up to the classic film plate. Every month, the city…

Podcast: Here’s Why Fox’s Empire Rules

There are five reasons why Fox’s Empire has become a breakout hit, and on this week’s Voice Film Club podcast, we run down why the show, introduced as a mid-season replacement, has surged to nearly 14 million viewers an episode by its eighth week. Joining Voice film editor Alan Scherstuhl…

Miami International Film Festival 2015 Embraces Local Filmmakers

From Sundance to Toronto to South by Southwest, Miami filmmakers have made their mark on the festival circuit. The city’s most buzzed-about collective, Borscht Corp., has had work accepted at major gatherings around the world — but never at the Miami International Film Festival (MIFF). Until now. MIFF, which returns…

Leonard Nimoy Represented the Best of Humanity

Leonard Nimoy has died at the age of 83. Both on camera and off, he exemplified the best of what Star Trek, and thus humanity, could represent. Part of that was Trek’s writing, of course. But it was Nimoy who took what was on the page — often repaired what…