To All Our Cherished Critics, Contributors, Readers and Subscribers: Merry Christmas! I hope 2022 has been a bit healthier and happier for you. And I hope that we here at RogerEbert.com have contributed to some of your joy by sharing our film reviews , TV/streaming reviews , collections , interviews , blog entries and more. All of our contributors and their individual collection of published work, can be found here . But none of that happens without this team: Managing Editor, Brian Tallerico; Editor-at-Large, Matt Zoller Seitz ; Senior Editor, Nick Allen; Literary Editor, Matt Fagerholm; and our Contributing Editor, Nell Minow. I am so grateful to them, and to all of you. Before we embark on 2023, I’d like to take a moment to look back at 2022. In January, we returned to the Sundance Film Festival , publishing dispatches from our editors Brian Tallerico and Nick Allen ...
RogerEbert.com publisher Chaz Ebert's third video dispatch from the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, made with Scott Dummler of Mint Media Works, features a roundtable discussion in which she is joined by contributors Jason Gorber and Isaac Feldberg to discuss two of this year's most buzzed about selections, Martin Scorsese's "Killers of the Flower Moon" and Jonathan Glazer's "The Zone of Interest." Also included are excerpts from the film's respective press conferences featuring insights from Scorsese, Glazer, Robert De Niro and Osage National Principal Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear. You can view Chaz's full report in the video embedded below... from All Content
After decades of Joe Dante and Chris Columbus ’ iconic creations being dead in the sunlight, writer/developer Tze Chun pours fresh water with the animated family prequel, “Gremlins: Secrets of the Mogwai,” a delightful return to form for the franchise and new fantastical ground for exploration. Set in 1920, decades before the events of the original, Gizmo (A. J. LoCascio, picking up the reins from Howie Mandel ) and his fellow Mogwai live in peace and harmony in their Jade Garden valley. When a hawk attacks his village, Gizmo sacrifices himself to protect his community, leaving him on a bog floating down a river and through China. He’s found by a traveling circus ringleader who snatches him up and forces him to act. Enter young Sam Wing ( Izaac Wang ), an ordinary kid who loves to make tea at his family’s shop with his cautious parents, Fong ( Ming-Na Wen ) and Hon (B. D. Wong). However, Sam’s adventure-seeking grandfather ( James Hong ) implores him to leave his comfort zone....
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