Pixar Dives Under the Sea Again — and Into Memory Itself

Finding Nemo may have been a cartoon about a clownfish traveling across the ocean looking for his son, but it was also one of Pixar’s first overt forays into the workings of the human mind. The film, from 2003, was haunted by loss: The protagonist, Marlin (voiced by Albert Brooks),…

The Directors of Tickled Dish About Going Up Against a No-Joke Conspiracy

Dylan Reeve and David Farrier’s Tickled might be the oddest documentary you’ll see this year. It starts off with Farrier, a New Zealand TV reporter specializing in human-interest fare, discovering the world of Competitive Endurance Tickling — in which teams of strapping young men tickle each other for extended periods…

Bonkers New Doc Tickled Digs Into the Strangest of Cover-Ups

In a stark white room, four boys huddle on a mattress, addressing the camera. They’re athletic, the picture of youth and every Abercrombie & Fitch catalog. A blond boy says, “We want to thank Jane O’Brien Media for this opportunity,” and they all smile and wave. They’re about to take…

Eva Husson’s Bang Gang Just Can’t Even With Teen Orgies

Teenage bodies are bared but fresh insight concealed in writer/director Eva Husson’s first feature, a dopey examination of Instagram-abetted adolescent abandon. Inspired by a news item that Husson came across in 1999 about a group of orgy-loving high schoolers in the U.S., Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story), despite the…

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Episode 8: Welcome to Steve Buscemi’s Sex Show

Each week, we’re recapping the second season of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt episode by episode. Lots of sitcoms run on sex. Not sexual appeal, necessarily, but sexual plot material: pickup attempts, quirky dates, regrettable hookups, and long-running will-they-won’t-they scenarios between regular characters. This stuff’s the lifeblood shows from Friends and Seinfeld to How I Met…

5 Terrible TV Lawyers You’d Totally Hire

Ineptitude is almost an endearing quality in television characters, so long as there’s a hint of charm within. And while hapless goons frequent many tried tropes and formulaic sitcoms, very few of them remain as lovable as the shitty lawyer. Bad lawyers have been a staple of television going as…

Genius Dramatizes Editor Maxwell Perkins’ Shaping of Thomas Wolfe

If you can get past the spectacle of British and Australian actors portraying some of the most important figures of 20th-century American literature, Genius is a good example of a prestige pic that is not only literate but surprisingly vibrant. It’s the story of the tumultuous relationship between hot-tempered, Asheville-born…

Anna Rose Holmer’s The Fits Makes Growing Up a Fight for Grace

In Anna Rose Holmer’s The Fits, emotion becomes motion and psychology becomes space. It’s a coming-of-age story, but Holmer mostly eschews dialogue and standard storytelling devices; she tells her tale through movements and patterns and the way that she films them. The Fits follows Toni (Royalty Hightower), an 11-year-old tomboy…

Léa Seydoux Enthralls in a Patchy Diary of a Chambermaid

Octave Mirbeau’s The Diary of a Chambermaid, a 1900 novel about the depravities in all social strata written from the point of view of a servant named Célestine, has famously been adapted twice before, by two of cinema’s immortals. Benoît Jacquot’s uneven take on the material won’t challenge the stature…

Therapy for a Vampire Nails the Look of the Horror it Lampoons

When commercials for Mel Brooks’ Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995) ran on Channel One at my high school, I was ready. Vampire movies had dominated the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, and at last a slapstick comedy was set to lampoon all that arty melodrama. High school me couldn’t…

The Fuller House Finale: ‘Til Next Season, We Do Part

After spending 13 episodes catching up on life with them, we’ll miss our old familiar friends DJ, Kimmy, Stephanie and the rest of the Fuller House gang. This finale hardly felt like one, probably because we knew that there will be a second season of the show before we even…

Why Steven Spielberg’s Jaws Still Has Bite, 41 Years Later

When Joe Fortunato was 7 years old, he refused to get into the bathtub. Or go swimming in his cousin’s pool. Or join the family’s annual summer beach trip. “My mom took me to see Jaws,” Fortunato says, before adding with a laugh, “We can question my mother’s parenting skills.”…