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Babylon 5: The Complete Series Comes To Blu-ray – Own The Fully Remastered Iconic Series December 5

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In celebration of its 30th anniversary, Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment is releasing the groundbreaking original sci-fi TV series Babylon 5 on Blu-ray for the first time ever! On December 5, just in time for holiday gift giving, Babylon 5: The Complete Series will be available at online retailers with all 110 original episodes fully remastered in HD. The highly anticipated release is one fans don’t want to miss!

Babylon 5 is an American space opera television series created by writer and producer J. Michael Straczynski that ran for five seasons from 1994–1998. The critically acclaimed franchise debuted in 1993 with the pilot film The Gathering. The series then launched a year later and ran for five seasons and 110 additional episodes. A future-history story covering the years 2257–2262, with each year corresponding to one season, Babylon 5 was the first series to introduce viewers to the concept of a five-year arc, with a defined beginning, middle, and end, paving the way for a number of such later series.

The beloved award-winning series starred Bruce Boxleitner, Michael O’Hare, Claudia Christian, Jerry Doyle, Mira Furlan, Andreas Katsulas, Peter Jurasik, Richard Biggs, Andrea Thompson, Stephen Furst, Bill Mumy, Tracy Scoggins, Jason Carter, Robert Rusler, Jeff Conaway, Patricia Tallman and Mary Kay Adams.

SYNOPSIS:

2258 CE. Five hostile federations dominate the outermost regions of space. Heroes, thieves, and rare and exotic beings find refuge in this time of uneasy peace and the constant threat of war on a lone space station — the last and best hope for peace between a hundred worlds, alien and human alike — Babylon 5

SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE:

·    Features pilot movie The Gathering

Babylon 5: The Complete Series will be available December 5 to purchase on Blu-ray Disc via online retailers. Pre-order your copy now.

Pricing and film information:

 

PRODUCT                                                                SRP

Blu-ray                                                                      $99.99 SRP USA

Blu-ray                                                                      $119.99 SRP Canada

 

Audio: English

Subtitles: English SDH

Running Time: 4730 (43 min episodes)

Rated: Unrated – 18+

THE MIRACLE CLUB – Interview with Director Thaddeus O’Sullivan

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Tomorrow Sony Pictures Classics is releasing the moving film, THE MIRACLE CLUB.  Director Thaddeus O’Sullivan talked with our Gadi Elkon about the film, the cast and so much more!

THE MIRACLE CLUB – A Review by John Strange

THE MIRACLE CLUB – A Review by John Strange

What I love most about Sony Pictures Classics are the films that bring us views of the world outside of the usual studio blockbusters and independently made documentaries.  Don’t get me wrong, those films are good as well, but these are small gems.  Some of those gems may be occluded or cloudy, but all are worth the time we spend with them.

The Miracle Club is an excellent example of one of these gems.

Set in Dublin in 1967, we are introduced to the lives of families living in a small Catholic neighborhood where life goes on, revolving around the church.  One of the elder ladies has died, causing her estranged daughter to return to the neighborhood after 40 years.

The central plot of the film has a group of three ladies, two elder and one younger, who compete in a church talent show for the chance to win tickets to go to Our Lady of Lourdes in France where they might experience a miracle in the baths.

The trip causes a lot of panic among the men who don’t want their women (aka house servants, typical of the era) to leave them for several days.  The ladies stick to their guns and get on the bus.

There are indeed miracles in this film, if not the ones the ladies hope for.  The casting of Maggie Smith, Kathy Bates, Agnes O’Casey, and Laura Linney as the ladies who make the trip is spot-on perfect.  I expected and received spotless performances from Maggie Smith, Kathy Bates, and Laura Linney.  I did not know Agnes O’Casey, but her performance was on par with her co-stars, spotless perfection.

The men, spearheaded b the outstanding Stephen Rea, played their parts as Irish husbands of the mid-1960s, very well.  And speaking of men, the young boy, Eric D. Smith, did a superb job in his role as Daniel, the non-verbal son of Dolly.

We are shown the pain and love that went to the very core of their lives.  And the miracles that can happen when hearts and minds are opened.  And it made me feel… wonderful.  Maybe not a miracle, but certainly a good thing to feel.

 

Director: Thaddeus O’Sullivan

Cast: Maggie Smith, Kathy Bates, Agnes O’Casey, Laura Linney, Stephen Rea

MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for thematic elements and some language)

Selig Rating: 5 Stars

Runtime: 91 Min.

Release Date: 07/14/2023

Local Release Locations: AMC Village on The Parkway 9 (Addison), Angelika Film Center & Café – Dallas, AMC Northpark 15 (Dallas), AMC Stonebriar 24 (Frisco), Firewheel 18 (Garland), AMC Grapevine Mills 30 (Grapevine), Angelika Film Center & Café – Plano

Language: English

Movie Site: THE MIRACLE CLUB Official Site

Trailer: THE MIRACLE CLUB Trailer

 

The Selig Rating Scale:

5 Stars – Excellent movie/show, well worth the time and price.

4 Stars – Good movie/show

3 Stars – OK movie/show

2 Stars – Well, there was nothing else…

1 Star – Total waste of time.

THE MIRACLE CLUB – A Review by Jenn Rohm

THE MIRACLE CLUB – A Review by Jenn Rohm

Not all movies are made to be big box office hits with tons of merchandise for fans to buy.  Those movies do have their place and add to summer fun.  There is also room for films that share a bit of history, open our eyes to other life paths, and take us on a journey. 

This summer Thaddeus O’Sullivan brings us The Miracle Club. This story takes place in 1967 and starts in a small village outside of Dublin.  The church is hosting a talent show and first place is tickets for a trip to Our Lady of Lourdes in France.  This is a popular pilgrimage site for those in the Catholic faith.  In 1858 the Virgin Mary appeared to a local (Lourdes) woman in the grotto.  Those that bathe or drink from the spring water may experience a miracle.  Chrissie (Laura Linney), Eileen (Kathy Bates), Lilly (Maggie Smith), and Dolly (Agnes O’Casey) each have their reasons for wanting to go and try for a miracle.  Father Byrne (Mark O’Halloran) is along to help guide them through the path they each need to travel.  

Newcomer O’Casey holds her own with the three known powerhouses.  In her shared scenes I did not lose sight of her.  This has happened in other films such as Love Actually and The Squid and the Whale for Linney, Titanic and Failure to Launch for Bates, and Sister Act I/II and Harry Potter for Smith.  Everyone was given moments to stand out while the others held attention but did not take away focus when appropriate.  I was able to relate to each of the women and their role in the tale.

The start of the film could have been a bit cleaner in showing how the characters of Chrissie and Eileen were connected.  I am not sure if a few additional lines of script or maybe then and now photos just a little something.  It was cleared up before the end of the film.  

While the beliefs of the characters and the pilgrimage itself are Catholic-focused, I would not call this a faith-based film.  There are mature subjects and a bit of language that have me suggesting parents watch it first and decide if it is appropriate for their children. 

The movie has a great pace thanks to the cast.  I was surprised it had been just over an hour and a half when the credits began.  There are some very sweet moments sprinkled along the way. I do wish there was a bit more depth, this cast had the talent to deliver.  Once it is clear who everyone is and how they tie together, knowing what will happen (not the how but the what) leaves no room for surprises.  You have husbands not wanting wives to leave and then watch them try to juggle what the wives do in ways that we have seen before.  While it did play into one of the ladies’ stories, there was an opportunity to be creative with the script.

I enjoyed the film and would watch it again when it plays on a channel I subscribe to, I do not see myself buying a copy to have in my personal collection.  Get out of the mid-day heat and see it as a matinee or midweek summer price special.

 

Director: Thaddeus O’Sullivan

Written By: Joshua D. Maurer, Timothy Prager, Jimmy Smallhorne

Cast: Laura Linney, Kathy Bates, Maggie Smith, Agnes O’Casey, Mark O’Halloran

MPAA Rating: PG-13 for thematic elements and some language

Genres: Comedy

Selig Rating: 3 Stars

Runtime: 1h 31m

Release Date: July 14, 2023

Movie Site: The Miracle Club official site

Trailer: The Miracle Club official trailer

 

The Selig Rating Scale:

5 Stars – Excellent movie/show, well worth the time and price.

4 Stars – Good movie/show

3 Stars – OK movie/show

2 Stars – Well there was nothing else . . .

1 Star – Total waste of time.

THE CHANNEL – A Review by John Strange

THE CHANNEL – A Review by John Strange

New Orleans.  The town has many stories.  I don’t know why it is that so many of those seem to involve crime.  The Channel by director William Kaufman is one of them.

The Channel refers to a section of New Orleans called The Irish Channel.  The group of bank robbers, led by brothers Mic (Max Martini) and Jamie (Clayne Crawford), come from that neighborhood’s streets.  They plan to steal a lot of money.  Unfortunately, their well-planned heist goes to pot and the FBI shows up before they can get away. 

This heist film has a lot of action.  And a lot of excellent human interaction. 

The Irish brothers are close.  This is both their strength and their weakness.  The FBI task force pursuing them is working with New Orleans SWAT to stop the gang once and for all.  They, too, are very good at what they do.

This story is well thought-out and well-written.  The acting talents on each side of the law show great chemistry, even those who are Mamma’s boys.  This is a dark film but one that has many small moments of love. 

If you like heist films, this is a good one for you.  I had a great time watching it!

 

Director: William Kaufman

Cast: Clayne Crawford, Max Martini, Nicoye Banks, Juliene Joyner, Paul Rae, Michael Thomas, Todd Jenkins, Fabiola Andújar, Lucky Johnson, Gary Cairns, Ava Justin, Linds Edwards, Scott Phillips, Kevin Pozzo, Jeremy Sande, Siya, Jaren Mitchell, E.K. Spila, Tyler Galpin, David Opegbemi, Kanesha Washington, Mike Lobo Daniel, Francine Segal, LaKesha Glover, Xander Gòmez, Levon Rector, Spencer Crim, Jay Moses, David Ibrahim

MPAA Rating: Not yet rated

Selig Rating: 5 Stars

Runtime: 95 Min.

Theatrical and On Demand Release Date: 07/14/2023

Language: English

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kt4eCdrwk04

 

The Selig Rating Scale:

5 Stars – Excellent movie/show, well worth the time and price.

4 Stars – Good movie/show

3 Stars – OK movie/show

2 Stars – Well, there was nothing else…

1 Star – Total waste of time.

The Channel – A Review by Jenn Rohm

The Channel – A Review by Jenn Rohm

Those of you that know me or have read my reviews know I love a good action movie.  The adrenaline rush mixed with the suspension of reality and some amazing cars (if I am lucky) make for time well spent.  Filled with characters we want to be, want to date, or have as friends, they have a level of glamorization that creates an appeal to lifestyles that are not totally legal.  Of course, with large budgets, options for special effects, wardrobes, and vehicles are almost limitless.  Not every film works with large budgets, what are the options then? 

William Kaufman is a Director/Writer who has proven to provide a good movie with a more realistic view while having a smaller budget.  His latest release, The Channel, will be available as VOD on July 14, 2023. 

Set in New Orleans we learn about another part of this historic city.  While the movie does not go into the history of The Irish Channel, knowing a bit about it helps establish the story.  In the early 19th century, the Irish immigrated and assisted with building the New Basin Canal.  As the area already had a strong Roman Catholic presence it was a natural fit.  As immigrants were coming from all over gangs developed out of ethnic conflict creating a bit of ruffian history passing down the generations.  The Port of New Orleans was a primary location for income for those living in the area, technological advances were made and the need for certain jobs was reduced.  This of course added to the growing poverty levels we see today.

Brothers Jamie (Clayne Crawford) and Mic (Max Martini) Sheridan with others they know from active military duty as Marines rob a bank.  Somehow local authorities arrive faster than expected and the FBI is brought in.  Special Agent Frank Ross (Nicoye Banks) has shut down all options to leave and now the robbers must find a way out of New Orleans. 

The movie starts from a first-person shooter perspective which had me worried about what I was in for.  Fortunately, the whole movie is not from this shooting perspective.  While I understood what the goal was, it took away from the movie for me.  There were other places in the movie we were able to pick up on the military service of Jamie without it.

Without giving away anything more than I already have, there were a few speedbumps for me.  There is a female character that the second time we see her it isn’t 100% clear that we had seen her before.  Something as simple as her wardrobe not changing, a statement necklace, her hair staying the same style, or even a different hair color than the other females would have made the connection clear and prevented me from rewinding and fast-forwarding to verify what I was thinking.  I also found there were more characters with little moments than necessary.  It bogs down the experience with the viewer having a partial focus on, do I have to remember that person?  Is that the person that _____ or another person?  Passing some of the moments on to other established characters would have created a smoother story.

At a base level, this is a movie plot that has been used before.  It does go deeper into the characters’ stories than most looking at where loyalties lie and how deep they run.  Sadly this creates a tripping hazard between telling the characters’ stories and providing a lot of action.  There is a balance to be found and I will continue to watch Kaufman’s films to see the moment where he finds that balance.  

 

Director: William Kaufman

Written By: William Kaufman, Paul Reichelt

Cast: Clayne Crawford, Max Martini, Nicoye Banks, Juliene Joyner

MPAA Rating: Not yet rated.

Genres: Action

Selig Rating: 3 stars

Runtime: 1h 35m

Release Date: July 14, 2023

Trailer: The Channel Official Trailer

 

The Selig Rating Scale:

5 Stars – Excellent movie/show, well worth the time and price.

4 Stars – Good movie/show

3 Stars – OK movie/show

2 Stars – Well there was nothing else . . .

1 Star – Total waste of time.

Ojai Film Society Announces Free 2023 Summer Film Series

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The Ojai Film Society announced the lineup of films for this year’s edition of the organization’s popular Free Summer Film Series. Sponsored by Hotel El Roblar, the series kicks off with Alejandra Vasquez and Sam Osborn’s Sundance hit Going Varsity in Mariachi on July 28. The series will include classics and beloved favorites that movie fans, cinephiles, and families alike can enjoy in outdoor screenings at the Libbey Bowl (210 S. Signal Street) every other Friday from late July through early October.

Regarding the creation of the Summer Film Series, Ojai Film Society President, Kathleen Schafer, said, “As the OFS emerged from the Pandemic, we understood the need for a new way of fulfilling our mission to bring film to the Ojai Valley. By focusing on screening films outdoors and making attendance free for everyone, it is easier for anyone who wants to enjoy these films to do so. And the enthusiastic response of our audiences helps attract filmmakers to bring their new films to Ojai. Not only is it a wonderful model for watching films, but it is also a great way for filmmakers to share their work with communities.” This year’s theme is ‘Shooting for the Stars,’ which reflects the aspirational, and practical ways we are all searching for something better for our lives.”

OFS Vice President, Nicholas Weissman, added, “Great films allow for wonderful collective community experiences and that’s what we’re trying to facilitate with the Ojai Film Society. Bringing people together to inspire, learn, and enjoy cinema – outdoors – on the warm summer nights that are so special to the California coast. That elevated outdoor experience provides a special setting for everyone to see both new and old films to our audience – including classics, independent, foreign, documentary, and first run films.”

Vasquez and Osborn’s Going Varsity in Mariachi opens the series on July 28. The documentary follows Edinburg North High School’s Mariachi Oro as they compete for a state championship. With a fiery passion for the music, their coach guides the varsity band through a steep competition season and a fraught year in their adolescent lives. Filmmakers Vasquez and Osborn will appear in-person as part of the screening presentation.

The Free Summer Film Series concludes on October 6 with Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi visually arresting documentary Wild Life, which focuses on conservationist Kris Tompkins and her epic, decades-spanning love story with outdoorsman Doug Tompkins as they embarked on a visionary effort to create National Parks throughout Chile and Argentina.

Ojai’s Hotel El Roblar is the premiere sponsor for this series with additional support from the City of Ojai.

For tickets, please go to: https://www.eventbrite.com/o/ojai-film-society-49453718643, and more information on the Ojai Film Society can be found at:  https://www.ojaifilmsociety.org/.

Ojai Film Society’s 2023 Summer Film Series Selections

Friday, July 28
Going Varsity in Mariachi
Directors: Alejandra Vasquez, Sam Osborn
Country: USA, Running Time: 104 min
This energetic documentary captures the highs and lows of Edinburg North High School’s Mariachi Oro as a green team strives for state championship. With tough love, finely tuned empathy, and a fiery passion for the music, Coach Abel Acuña guides the varsity band through a steep competition season and a fraught year in their adolescent lives. Team captains Abby, Marlena, and Bella prove the value of the skills taught in the band room as they navigate life’s challenges on and off the stage with grace, immutable work ethic, and total charm.

Friday, October 6
Wild Life
Directors: Jimmy Chin, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
Country: USA, Running Time: 93 min
Wild Life follows conservationist Kris Tompkins on an epic, decades-spanning love story as wild as the landscapes she dedicated her life to protecting. After falling in love in mid-life, Kris and the outdoorsman and entrepreneur Doug Tompkins left behind the world of the massively successful outdoor brands they’d helped pioneer – Patagonia, The North Face, and Espirit – and turned their attention to a visionary effort to create National Parks throughout Chile and Argentina.

 

Festival of Cinema NYC 2023 Announces Films and Events for August Fest

 

Festival of Cinema NYC returns to the Regal UA Midway and the Queens Library at Forest Hills for its 7th year, August 3 – August 13. The festival opens with Christina Kallas’ indie NYC favorite Paris in Harlem and closes with Anna Baumgarten’s multiple award-winning drama Disfluency. Dito Montiel will be honored with FOC NYC’s inaugural Achievement in Filmmaking Award in conjunction with a special screening of his film, A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, and Greg Brownderville and Bart Weiss’ groundbreaking Southern Gothic multi-media project Fire Bones will be presented live in New York City for the first time.

World premieres include Isaac Dell’s Boys At Twenty, and North American premieres include Aly Yeganeh’s Sibel’s Silence, Pelayo De Lario’s Tales of Babylon, and Cindy Drukier’s The Unseen Crisis: Vaccine Stories You Were Never Told.

After a pre-launch party inside Resorts World NYC’s famous 360º Bar and Lounge (110-0 Rockaway Blvd) on Wednesday, August 3, FOC NYC will screen over 100 independent films from local filmmakers as well as world cinema representing countries that include Turkey, Spain, Denmark, The Philippines, Germany, and more.

New initiatives and presentations include participating in the Theaters Unsilenced Initiative. A nonprofit organization founded by three sisters in Queens whose mission is to spread awareness and provide educational resources and tools to help improve communication with the deaf and hard of hearing community. As part of the initiative, participating filmmakers have added subtitles and captioning to aid in making the festival accessible to individuals with hearing impairment.

This year, FOC NYC has invited organizations that offer further resources to filmmakers. Phil Cappadora, founder of The Astoria Filmmaker Club, will host a seminar discussing how to get involved with the community of filmmakers based in Queens. The film festival will also include a special screening block of selected short films from members of Ghetto Film School – a Bronx-based organization dedicated to educating and developing the next generation of great storytellers. Other seminars include a presentation by entertainment lawyer Patrick Kondas, on the legalities of film making and contracts; cinematographer Ray Preziosi will be holding a Cinematography workshop; and crowdfunding expert Melissa Center will talk about raising funds for indie film production. In addition, this year’s festival welcomes FoHI Improv, giving attendees a chance to participate in an improv 101 demonstration, and an interactive presentation by members of The Station House Reading Series.

Also new this year will be the addition of a script writing competition where 13 un-produced scripts will compete for top honors. Attendees will be given the opportunity to attend a live staged reading of each of the 13 Finalists.

Along with its presentation of more than 100 screenings, and FOC NYC’s popular Red Carpet entrances flush with seemingly countless filmmakers, actors, documentary subjects, and below-the-line talent, the festival will also offer filmmaking seminars and workshops, that are completely free and open to the public, at the Queens Library in Forest Hills. The jam-packed week and a half of screenings and events will conclude with an Awards Ceremony on August 13th at the Jamaica Performing Arts Center in Jamaica Queens.

Festival of Cinema NYC Founder and Executive Director Jayson Simba, said, “This year’s edition of the film festival embraces the idea of not simply screening our films and celebrating our filmmakers, but underlining the ‘festival’ in “’film festival’, by emphasizing the connection of filmmaker to audience member via our panels, discussions, and Q&As, focusing on our accessibility, and increasing the interactive nature of FOC NYC.  It always begins and ends with great films, but it becomes special by highlighting why we love to come to the movie theater and the artistic accomplishments of our filmmakers.”

Christina Kallas’ drama Paris Is In Harlem opens the film festival on Thursday, August 4. The film involves the lives of several strangers intertwining during a shooting a jazz club in Harlem on the eve of New York City’s controversial “No Dancing” Law getting repealed. The screening will be preceded by Miguel Gallardo’s short film, Herizon. Anna Baumgarten’s Disfluency, a winner of several awards on the film festival circuit., closes FOC NYC on Sunday, August 13. The film follows a promising scholar who returns home without graduating as she deals with the PTSD resulting from the incident that sent her spiraling. The screening will be preceded by John Cappello’s short film, Floppies.

On Wednesday, August 9, Greg Brownderville and Bart Weiss will introduce NYC audiences to their one-of-a-kind multi-media creation, FIre Bones. A whimsical Southern Gothic shaggy dog story told in ten chapters via multiple mediums including  podcasts, short films, music videos, poems, and still images. Fire Bones follows a poet and filmmaker  who meet one crazy character after another as they investigate the mystery of  a  missing  pilot  and  Pentecostal  preacher who vanished on a  transatlantic flight. Created with smartphones in mind, the project includes podcasts, short films, music videos, poems, and still  images.

On Sunday, August 13, Dito Montiel will be honored with FOC NYC’s inaugural Achievement in Filmmaking Award in conjunction with a special screening of his film, A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints (2006). The coming-of-age drama about a boy growing up in Astoria, New York during the 1980s, earned Montiel awards at Sundance and Venice, and launched his indie filmmaking career, including Fighting (2009) and The Son of No One (2011), both of which starred Channing Tatum, Empire State (2013) with Dwayne Johnson, Boulevard (2014) with Robin Williams, Man Down (2015) with Shia LaBeouf, and The Clapper (2017) with Ed Helms and Amanda Seyfried. The prolific filmmaker’s currently in production on the film Riff Raff, which will star Brian Cox, Jennifer Coolidge, and Gabrielle Union.

World premieres include Isaac Dell’s Boys at Twenty which follows the experiences of two post-teen boys sorting through their fraying friendship. Among the films making their North American premieres are Aly Yeganeh’s Sibel’s Silence about a young Iraqi woman forced into sexual slavery by ISIS until she is pulled out of her situation by a French woman who tries to provide her with a normal life. Pelayo De Lario’s Tales of Babylon finds two siblings at the center of its story, who join forces with a pair of hitmen with a knack for the theatrical in their search for a new life. Cindy Drukier’s documentary The Unseen Crisis: Vaccine Stories You Were Never Told looks at the lives of those who live with the debilitating after-effects they claim were caused by COVID-19 vaccines.

Additional highlights include Alethea Root’s Good Side of Bad about a brother and sister who struggle to care for their sister dealing with mental illness, The film was recently the Opening Night selection at L.A’s Dances With Films. Linh Tran’s Waiting for the Light to Change follows the relationship machinations of high school friends reunited a year later during a week-long beachside getaway, with jealousies, unrequited crushes and more coming to light. The film, recently picked up by Byron Allen’s Freestyle Digital Media, won the Grand Jury Prize at Slamdance earlier this year. Quark Henares’ Trans catfishing drama Where Is The Lie? focuses on a hopeless romantic girl who is randomly targeted by a sociopathic mastermind. Matthew Taylor’s documentary Gotham: The Fall and Rise of New York looks at the largely untold story of New York City’s revival and revitalization of its infrastructure and neighborhoods with an eye toward how it could be duplicated in other major cities across the country.

Tickets for the 2023 Festival of Cinema NYC can be purchased beginning July 5th by visiting FestivalofCinemaNYC.com. General admission tickets begin at $18 per screening block ($35 for opening and closing night films which include entry to the afterparty), with discounts offered to seniors and individuals with disabilities. Tickets can also be purchased to the Closing Awards Dinner for $75. All programming at the Queens Library at Forest Hills is free and open to the public.

The 2023 festival is supported by The National Endowment for the Arts, The New York Department of Cultural Affairs, and The New York State Council on the Arts. Support from all three major foundations is a testament to the organizer’s passion for community, education, and advocacy through film exhibition.  Sponsors for this year’s festival include Resort World Gives, NYC & Company Foundation, Ponce Bank, the Queens Library, and Regal Cinemas. Prizes are being offered by Soundview Media Partners, Stage 32, Inktip, Videomaker Magazine, and Silver Sound Studios.

 

2023 FESTIVAL OF CINEMA NYC OFFICIAL SELECTIONS

 

OPENING NIGHT SELECTION

Paris is in Harlem
Director: Christina Kallas
Country: USA; Running Time: 110 min
On the eve of New York City’s controversial “No Dancing” Law getting repealed, the lives of several strangers are forever changed by a shooting at a historic jazz bar in Harlem.
Preceded by
Herizon
Director: Miguel Gallardo
Country: USA; Running Time: 7 min
A woman’s escape to the beach becomes a desperate quest for self-liberation when she’s confronted with an enigmatic force of nature.  As the sun sets, the boundaries between reality and metaphor quickly begin to disappear.

CLOSING NIGHT SELECTION

Disfluency
Director: Anna Baumgarten
Country: USA; Running Time: 96 min
After unexpectedly failing her final college class, Jane, an aspiring speech pathologist, retreats home to her parent’s lake house in the hometown she grew up in. Her sister and friends soften the burden of failure, inspiring her to embrace the carefree summer as she tries to sort out what to do next. She also rekindles an old friendship with her neighbor Amber, a single mother with a difficult toddler, utilizing her skills and knowledge to help her connect with her son. Jane, however, fights through PTSD and imposter syndrome as she attempts to piece together what exactly happened in order to unravel the emotional and psychological tangle that has been haunting her as she finds a path forward toward the never-ending process of healing.
Preceded by
Floppies
Director: John Cappello
Country: USA; Running Time: 14 min
Floppies is an intimate glimpse into the complicated relationship between an artist son and his dementia-addled father as they attempt to communicate by collaborating on a one page comic. As they bring this comic to life, they recall flashbacks to key moments in each of their lives.

SPECIAL SCREENINGS AND PRESENTATIONS

A Guide To Recognizing Your Saints (2006)
Director: Dito Montiel
Country: USA, Running Time: 100 min
A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, filmed in Queens, NY, is a coming-of-age drama about a boy growing up in Astoria, New York during the 1980s. As his friends end up dead, on drugs or in prison, he comes to believe he has been saved from their fates by various so-called saints. The film features performances by Robert Downey Jr., Shia LaBeouf, Chazz Palminteri, Dianne West, Channing Tatum, and Rosario Dawson.

Fire Bones
Directors: Greg Brownderville, Bart Weiss
Country: USA; Running Time: 90 min
Told in ten chapters via multiple mediums including podcasts, videos, poems, and songs, Fire Bones follows the journey of a poet and filmmaker as they explore the mystery of a drop-duster pilot and Pentecostal preacher who vanished on a transatlantic flight. The two men encounter one eccentric character after another as their trip brings them closer to the truth of her story and ultimate destination.

ADDITIONAL NARRATIVE FEATURES

Boys at Twenty                                                                     World Premiere
Director: Isaac Dell
Country: USA; Running Time: 76 min
Over a summer weekend at his country home, a 20-year-old boy and his increasingly distant best friend relive their childhoods, while silently navigating a changing friendship.

Crash the System
Director: Kamal Ahmed
Country: USA; Running Time: 75 min
An ex-conman unwillingly becomes a pawn to the industrial weapons industry and tries to overthrow them when he meets up with an underground group of saboteurs who are iconoclastic.

D.O.A.
Director: Kurt St.Thomas
Country: USA; Running Time: 82 min
Private detective Frank Bigelow accepts a routine assignment from a wealthy socialite only to discover that he’s been fatally poisoned; with just days to live, he must unwind a tangle of conspiracies to figure out who “killed” him and why. He also confronts the toxic effects of his own isolation. Can he solve the mystery, exact revenge, and save his soul before time runs out? D.O.A. stars John Doe, founding member of legendary punk band X.

Ghosts of the Void
Director: Jason Miller
Country: USA; Running Time: 91 min
Jen Wilson has hit hard times; after years struggling to support her husband Tyler in following his dream, their debt has caught up with them, and they’ve been evicted from their home. With forty dollars to their name, Jen and Tyler decide to spend the night in their car, finding a secluded park in what they believe to be a safe neighborhood. But as they settle in, Jen, fighting exhaustion and overwhelmed by anxiety, cannot shake the feeling that they are being watched. Eventually, that paranoia seems to be validated when they discover that someone has snuck a tire boot onto their car during their fleeting moments of sleep. Now, stuck in this parking lot, harassed by people lurking in the shadows, Jen and Tyler’s facade of loving support begins to slip. Soon, the lines between reality and paranoia will blur as Jen must confront their masked tormentors…and the path that led her and Tyler to this void of hopelessness.

The Goldsmith
Director: Vincenzo Ricchiuto
Country: Italy; Running Time: 89 min
A home invasion thriller with a bloody twist, The Goldsmith offers plenty of violent fun as three burglars learn that crime can be a deadly career. Childhood friends and now adult criminals, Stefano, Roberto and Arianna concoct a simple plan: break into an elderly couple’s home and find the valuables in the old man’s hidden jewelry workshop. But not this night and not this house, as the doddering couple (Giuseppe Fregni and Stefania (Suspiria) Casini) prove not as helpless as they may seem for underneath those wrinkles are two totally fucked up killers. The thieves soon become victims as they are locked in a soundproof room and become the experimental guinea pigs for this deranged couple. What begins as a seemingly normal crime thriller soon morphs into a blood and eye sockets horror romp in Vincenzo Ricchiuto debut feature.

Good Side of Bad
Director: Alethea Root
Country: USA; Running Time: 96 min
Three adult siblings are brought back together after a shocking diagnosis forces them to confront harsh future realities regarding the mental state of one of their own. A raw and intimate look into what it means to be a family navigating the waters of mental illness, Good Side of Bad film dives into humanity’s dark places while illuminating the love, laughter, and light discovered when you reconnect with those closest to you. Based on the bestselling book The Good Side of Bad, this raw family drama touches on our shared human experience of disconnectedness, and how connecting to each other is ultimately the best way to help one another.

Guy Friends
Director: Jonathan Smith
Country: USA; Running Time: 84 min
Jaime Sharma is a self-described “guy’s girl” who lives in an upscale Manhattan apartment with her lawyer boyfriend and who works as an assistant to a famous architect. All her life, she’s only been friends with men.  After Jaime and her boyfriend temporarily split, all of her guy friends profess their secret, undying love for her. Jaime turns to Ted, her best friend from college who just moved to the city, for his typical, gentle advice. Instead, she’s challenged by advice from Ted’s brash girlfriend Sandy, who, for the first time in Jaime’s life, tests Jaime’s views about male friendship and about herself.

Miss Viborg
Director: Marianne Blicher
Country: Denmark; Running Time: 100 min
Former beauty queen and senior citizen Solvej lives alone with her dog in a social housing area on the outskirts of Danish provincial town Viborg. Each day, she performs the same old routines roaming around on her scooter dealing her prescription drugs, dreaming of a world outside Viborg and reminiscing over old love letters from her past. When unforeseen circumstances bring her neighbour’s daughter, rebellious 17-year-old Kate into her life, an unlikely friendship forms and new hope for the future emerges.

Sibel’s Silence                                                                       North American Premiere
Director: Aly Yeganeh
Country: France; Running Time: 95 min
In August 2014, ISIS militants attacked and captured the town of Sinjar, a Yazidi enclave in northwest Iraq. After her entire family was murdered, 13-year-old Sibel was taken prisoner and forced into sexual slavery. Hana is an ophthalmologist living in a small town in central France. She cannot bear the atrocities committed against Yazidi women. Hana pays a ransom to Sibel’s captors, then adopts her, and they return to France, where Hana tries to provide her with a normal life filled with nurturing love.

The Sound of Southside
Director: Tyrel Hunt
Country: USA; Running Time: 78 min
In a rapidly gentrifying Queens NYC, Maliki — a young Jazz musician — sets out on a journey to continue his father’s legacy and reopen his famous Jazz club. Along the way he meets Afeni, a passionate, yet homesick actress from Jamaica. When Maliki secretly accepts an ill-advised donation from a local philanthropist, he finds himself in a web of corruption and deceit. As he attempts to navigate his way out, Afeni toils with a secret of her own.

Stars
Director: Mars Roberge
Country: USA, Canada; Running Time: 108 min
A group of homeless women must learn that a glimmer of hope is worth more than all the money in the world. Based on the play by Doron Braunshtein, Bianca is an undercover police officer hiding in a NYC women’s shelter to help clean up the neighborhood crime and protect women, all while trying to deal with the loss of her family who were recently killed by a drunk driver. The women who share a room with Bianca all have the nicknames of the celebrities they hide from their lives by imitating: Madonna, Oprah, Lauren Hutton, Martha Stewart and Juliette ‘Lucifer’ Lewis. This same group of individuals are plagued by drug addiction, prostitution, gambling, depression, incest, racism, schizophrenia and violent tendencies yet they need each other for survival.

Tales of Babylon                                                                   North American Premiere
Director: Pelayo De Lario
Country: UK; Running Time: 126 min
Escaping from their abusive mobster grandfather, two siblings will join forces with a pair of hitmen with a knack for the theatrical in their search for a new life in this tale of crime, violence, and redemption. Crime, money and violence in London are at the centre of this tale of modern Babylon.

There´s No Place Like Home
Director: Puk Grasten
Country: Denmark; Running Time: 106 min
The movie is based on the self-biographical novel “The One Who Lives Quietly” by Leonora Christina Skov. It is an Oedipus the King story: you are born with a predestined fate you cannot escape. Leonora’s fate is her social heritage. When her mother dies her father manipulates Leonora to come back home to fulfill the role of her mother. The father gaslights Leonora to believe that she is sick like her mother, and he must protect her. Leonora gets lost in her father’s reality and must break free.

Waiting for the Light to Change
Director: Linh Tran
Country: USA; Running Time: 89 min
Over the course of a week-long beachside getaway, Amy, having recently undergone dramatic weight loss, finds herself wrestling between loyalty to her best friend Kim and her attraction to Kim’s new boyfriend.

Where Is The Lie?
Director: Quark Henares
Country: Philippines; Running Time: 87 min
Hopeless romantic Janzen Torres finds another chance at love when she matches with the handsome and seemingly perfect Theo Balmaceda on a dating app. Unfortunately, on the day of their meet-up, Theo ghosts her, leading Janzen into an intricate web of deceit, lies, and catfishing led by sociopathic mastermind Beanie Landridos.

DOCUMENTARIES

Aurora’s Sunrise
Director: Inna Sahakyan
Country: Armenia, Germany, Lithuania; Running Time: 96 min
At only 14 years old, Aurora lost everything during the horror of the Armenian genocide. Two years later, through luck and extraordinary courage, she escaped to New York, where her story became a media sensation. Starring as herself in Auction of Souls, an early Hollywood blockbuster, Aurora became the face of one of the largest charity campaigns in American history. With a blend of vivid animation, interviews with Aurora herself, and 18 minutes of surviving footage from her lost silent epic, Aurora’s Sunrise revives a forgotten story of survival.

The Book of Harth
Director: Pierre Guillet
Country: USA; Running Time: 63 min
For 20 years, conceptual artist David Greg Harth carried a Bible with him every single day, seeking signatures from the most culturally significant people in the world. In The Book of Harth, filmmaker Pierre Guillet follows the artist during the final year of his absurd quest, trailing him to scenes of frenetic celebrity worship. As Harth secures signatures behind stage doors, in city streets, and on the fringes of red carpets, Guillet cops spontaneous interviews with previous signees, from Noam Chomsky to Kevin Smith. As the last hours of his magnum opus draw to a close, Harth struggles to reconcile the project’s meaning with its personal cost.

Copyright Infringement
Director: David Sabshon
Country: USA; Running Time: 105 min
Contemporary Artist, CJ Hendry, creates a global scavenger hunt for her artwork in her annual exhibition, Copyright Infringement. The film explores the law of copyright infringement, social media’s effect on the art world, and the value systems of the contemporary art market.

Gotham: The Fall and Rise of New York
Director: Matthew Taylor
Country: USA; Running Time: 124 min
Today, the world sits at a unique moment in urban city history. Our cities are falling apart. Rampant homelessness, increasing crime, mounting drug use, unaffordable housing – once a beacon of innovation and success, today our cities are failing. But it doesn’t have to be that way. New York City faced the worst challenges in its past and managed to overcome them. More than ever, the country needs to know the story of New York’s revival. Politicians need to understand how this happened to have an example to model the future. Community leaders need to recognize the grassroots efforts that turned New York around and the policies that contributed to her rehabilitation. And residents need hope that things will get better and encouragement that it is worth staying and contributing to help their city recover. We need a blueprint on how to revitalize and save our great cities. Nothing could be more important than telling the story of the transformation of New York and its revival in the words and through the stories of those who were there and did the work.

The Unseen Crisis: Vaccine Stories                                   North American Premiere
You Were Never Told
Director: Cindy Drukier
Country: Canada; Running Time: 89 min
The Unseen Crisis: Vaccine Stories You Were Never Told provides an intimate, uncensored look into the lives of those who live with the debilitating after-effects of the COVID-19 vaccines. It examines the issue of COVID-19 vaccine injury claims in a fresh, honest, and comprehensive manner with expert interviews, whistleblowers’ statements, and government health statistics. The film features some patients who suffered severe reactions to the shots and had their health spiral out of control. When they reached out to the public health system and pharmaceutical companies for help and support, instead of being acknowledged, cared for, and studied, they were ignored, censored, and called “anti-vaxxers” despite having gotten the shot.

SHORT FILMS

A Real Adventure
Director: Ingela Ogard
Country: Sweden; Running Time: 17 min

A Tiger in the Subway
Director: James Abrams
Country: USA; Running Time: 9 min

Aaron With 2 A’s
Director: Michael Goldburg
Country: USA; Running Time: 17 min

Advantages of NOT Being in the Same Room
Director: Geoffrey Alexander Altrocchi
Country: USA; Running Time: 5 min

Adventures of the Fboys
Director: James C. Watson
Country: USA; Running Time: 10 min

The Ankou, the Child and the Bandits                               World Premiere
Director: Simon Vautier
Country: France; Running Time: 32 min

Another Day On 73rd St
Director: Michael Mendoza
Country: USA; Running Time: 21 min

Art
Director: Alex Martins
Country: USA; Running Time: 9 min

Autumn Leaves Fall Far From Home                                 North American Premiere
Director: Matthew Petti
Country: USA; Running Time: 11 min

Bondage on 14th Street                                                       World Premiere
Director: Jeffrey Johnson
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Brenda and Billy (and the Pothos Plant)
Director: Dave Solomon
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

Bring it to the People
Director: Luis Palomino
Country: USA; Running Time: 36 min

Brontë
Directors: Mateo Márquez, Allison Strong
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

The Ankou, the Child and the Bandits                               World Premiere
Director: Simon Vautier
Country: France; Running Time: 32 min

The Caddy
Director: Gabriel Beristain
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

Can’t Get It Right
Director: Cierra Colier
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Cold Eggs, Hot Coffee                                                         World Premiere
Director: Sam Adelman
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

Come Find Me
Director: Nela Wagman
Country: USA; Running Time: 13 min

The Coolest Club
Director: Sheng Ting Shen
Country: USA; Running Time: 13 min

The Coral Reef Chronicles
Director: Zhuoyin He
Country: USA; Running Time: 5 min

Cuando La Rumorosa Calla
Director: Patricia Montoya
Country: Mexico; Running Time: 16 min

Diversion (Politics of)
Director: Simon Heymans
Country: Belgium; Running Time: 17 min

Dogs In The Ocean                                                               World Premiere
Director: Gareth Francis Williams
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

Duane Bruton                                                                        World Premiere
Director: Duane Bruton
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Erik
Director: David Kodheli
Country: Albania; Running Time: 23 min

Events at Hemlock Manor
Director: Katie North
Country: USA; Running Time: 14 min

Faith in Blackness: An Exploration of AfroLatine Spirituality
Director: Charles Reynoso
Country: USA; Running Time: 27 min

Fear of Poetry                                                                       World Premiere
Directors: Marla Cotovsky, Nish Nishimura
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Fever
Director: Angele Cooper
Country: USA; Running Time: 19 min

Finding Something You Lost                                              World Premiere
Director: Eric Kwasnjuk
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

Fog of War
Director: Steven Lundgren
Country: USA; Running Time: 20 min

Forensic Psychologist                                                         World Premiere
Director: Bizhan Tong
Country: Hong Kong; Running Time: 32 min

Four Walls – Episode 1
Directors: Kgosana Monchusi, Menzi Mzimela, Juvaiś Dunn
Country: South Africa; Running Time: 6 min

From Chile to Canada: Media Herstories
Directors: Sarah Shamash, Sonia Medel
Country: Canada; Running Time: 16 min

Gareth Francis Williams
Director: Kim Hlavac
Country: USA; Running Time: 5 min

Good Grief
Director: Rob Sharp
Country: UK; Running Time: 10 min

Helado
Director: Melissa Rodriguez
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

How Did That Happen?!
Director: Laurence Shanet
Country: USA; Running Time: 27 min

Human Nature
Director: Michael Cutrone
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

The Hunt
Director: Yann Reuzeau
Country: France; Running Time: 23 min

I Could Eat
Director: Rick Bedrosian
Country: USA; Running Time: 28 min

Interviewing Guillaume Bogaert
Director: Fabrice Chan
Country: België; Running Time: 24 min

Kogershin                                                                              North American Premiere
Director: Malik Zenger
Country: Kazakhstan; Running Time: 5 min

LifeQuest
Director: Richard Lounello
Country: USA; Running Time: 26 min

Look Like You
Director: Snigdha Kapoor
Country: USA; Running Time: 13 min

Loved
Director: D.J. Higgins
Country: USA; Running Time: 14 min

Mariposas
Director: Adrian Carey
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

Miracle on 74th Street                                                          North American Premiere
Director: JT Doran
Country: USA; Running Time: 7 min

My First Car                                                                           World Premiere
Director: Wendy Wilkins
Country: USA; Running Time: 7 min

My Foot Hurts
Director: Bjørn Johnson
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

My Holographic Heart
Director: Kai Brown
Country: USA; Running Time: 12 min

Naked Men in the Woods
Director: Paul Ploberger
Country: Austria; Running Time: 30 min

Nala
Director: Darshan Singh Bhuller
Country: USA; Running Time: 13 min

Nothing Happened
Director: Katya Yakubov
Country: USA; Running Time: 16 min

The Ocean Listens to No One                                             World Premiere
Director: Jasiel Louison
Country: Iceland; Running Time: 19 min

Old T-Shirts
Director: Michelle O’Shea
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

The Online Shop
Director: Carsten Woike
Country: Germany; Running Time: 12 min

Overdue
Director: Melissa Skirboll
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

Pearly Gates
Director: Loring Murtha
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

Pillow Talk
Director: David B. Jacobs
Country: USA; Running Time: 5 min

Radiant Ties
Directors: Conner De Mita, Logan Floyd
Country: USA; Running Time: 3 min

Remain
Director: Kit Reilly
Country: New Zealand; Running Time: 3 min

The Right Thing
Director: Fion Sin
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Rings
Director: Thailer Fox
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Roses in the Night
Director: Pencho Kunchev
Country: Bulgaria; Running Time: 11 min

Salvation
Director: Zane
Country: Canada; Running Time: 3 min

The Scenario
Director: Evan Richards
Country: USA; Running Time: 13 min

Scrawn
Director: Samuel Crow
Country: USA; Running Time: 8 min

Sedition, Seduction, Militia, Production
Director: Michael Franco
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Short Draft
Director: Spyridon Papaspyrou
Country: Greece; Running Time: 23 min

Snail Mail
Director: Jay Stern
Country: USA; Running Time: 6 min

Soldiers                                                                                  North American Premiere
Director: Zhaoshuai Wu
Country: China; Running Time: 29 min

Static
Director: Jamin Mears
Country: USA; Running Time: 5 min

Sting Ray
Director: Joey Krulock
Country: USA; Running Time: 11 min

Subterranean Love (Olga)
Director: Robert Haufrecht
Country: USA; Running Time: 15 min

Takbir
Director: Jordi Calvet
Country: Spain; Running Time: 14 min

The Third Defector
Director: John Gray
Country: USA; Running Time: 17 min

This City                                                                                 World Premiere
Director: Jeff LeBeau
Country: USA; Running Time: 2 min

The Torture Within
Director: Sean Martinez
Country: USA; Running Time: 38 min

Una Carta a Mis Hijas                                                           North American Premiere
Director: JT Doran
Country: USA; Running Time: 6 min

Whiskey Floats
Director: Rob Douthat
Country: USA; Running Time: 18 min

Why My Room Is Never Clean
Director: Sharice Lacson
Country: USA; Running Time: 4 min

Wicked Image
Director: Caitlin Scherer
Country: USA; Running Time: 9 min

Yellow Lines
Director: Megan Magee
Country: USA; Running Time: 13 min

Your Silent Face                                                                   World Premiere
Director: Anna Capunay
Country: USA; Running Time: 19 min

SCREENPLAY COMPETITION

Ann Arbor Pilot Vagina Dialogue
Writer: Richard Redlo

Dimo
Writer: Cory Choy

Godfor
Writer: Pablo Torroella

Lobby Card: Some Fabulous Rhapsody
Writer: Tom Morgan

Pickleball Killer
Writer: Jim Carroll

Real Heroes
Writer: Richard Hohenrath

The Reflections of Appletree Junction
Writer: Harvest Dawn Bellante

Sadist
Writer: Jennifer Anderson

Searching for Shadow
Writer: Marie Smalley

Shepherds Gone Wild
Writer: Joey Maranto

Skybound
Writer: Jordan Orlando

William LiPera
Writer: William LiPera

Witchblood
Writer: Richard Hohenrath

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – DEAD RECKONING PART ONE – A Review by John Strange

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – DEAD RECKONING PART ONE – A Review by John Strange

Mission: Impossible, the TV series, ran from 1966 until 1973.  First led by Daniel Briggs (Stephen Hill) and later by Jim Phelps (Peter Graves), the IMF faced weekly challenges that they never attacked head-on.  They used guile and disguises to reach their objectives.  It was an excellent show.

In 1996, Brian De Palma directed a new look at the IMF.  Mission: Impossible starred Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt, doing everything the original TV show did, but bigger.  WAY bigger.  And Tom did his own stunts.  And Tom was a producer on the project.

Since that first film, the M:I franchise has made five additional films, each wilder and more daring than the previous films.  Now, the franchise is back with Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One.  And Tom, still the star, is an Executive Producer and still does his own stunts.

As always, the powers-that-be have put Ethan and his team in an untenable situation.  One where to fail will probably lead to their deaths.  Their foe du jour is not a human but a sentient AI that uses humans to reach its goals.  Those bad humans are led by Gabriel (Esai Morales), a man who has a history with Ethan.

The action is intense.  The drama is almost over the top but expected in these films.  The acting is superb.  And the special effects?  Absolutely mind-blowing.  The filmmakers have spent a not-so-small fortune on the effects and the quality shows.

As this is a two-parter, I was worried about how they would handle the break.  They did a great job.  You can leave the theater without that sense that they just dropped you in a bottomless pit of despair.  The action peaked and left us where a good cliffhanger ending should, satisfied but ready to see the next chapter.

A note for you Marvel-ites out there: Pom Klementieff, Mantis from the Guardians of the Galaxy films, does a great job in this film!

 

Director: Christopher McQuarrie

Cast: Rebecca Ferguson, Tom Cruise, Pom Klementieff, Vanessa Kirby, Hayley Atwell, Rob Delaney, Cary Elwes, Simon Pegg, Shea Whigham, Indira Varma, Ving Rhames, Esai Morales, Henry Czerny

MPAA Rating: PG

Selig Rating: 5 Stars

Runtime: 160 Min.

Release Date: 07/12/2023

Release Locations: Wide

Language: English

Movie Site: MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – DEAD RECKONING PART ONE Official Franchise Site

Trailer: MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – DEAD RECKONING PART ONE Final Trailer

 

The Selig Rating Scale:

5 Stars – Excellent movie/show, well worth the time and price.

4 Stars – Good movie/show

3 Stars – OK movie/show

2 Stars – Well, there was nothing else…

1 Star – Total waste of time.

THE LESSON – Interview with Director Alice Troughton

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Director Alice Troughton talked with our Gadi Elkon about her feature film debut, her wonderful cast and even about her beloved Manchester City Football Club!