Categories Lists 2017: Best of, 23-11 Post author By You Call Yourself a Film Critic Post date January 3, 2018 4 Comments on 2017: Best of, 23-11 To read my watchlist and guilty pleasures list, click here. For my worst list 24-11, click here. We’ve done the worst, now let’s look at the best! Continue reading “2017: Best of, 23-11” Tags 2017, A Year in Review, Amy Berg, An Open Secret, Andy Kaufman, Anna Rose Holmer, Ansel Elgort, Baby Driver, Best of 2017, Bria Vinaite, Brooklyn Prince, Cornetto Trilogy, Dafne Keen, Daniel Kaluuya, Daphne, Depression, Documentary, Edgar Wright, Emily Beechum, Florida, George A. Romero, Geraldine James, Get Out, Hollywood, Horror Satire, Hugh Jackman, Jackie, Jackie Kennedy, Jeff Nichols, Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond, Jim Carrey, Joel Edgerton, John F Kennedy, Jordan Peele, Let the Right One In, Logan, Loving, Man on the Moon, Martin, My Life as a Courgette, Natalie Portman, Nathaniel Martello-White, Pablo Larrain, Patrick Stewart, Peter Simonischek, PTSD, R.E.M., Rugrats, Ruth Negga, Sandra Huller, Sean Baker, Stop-Motion Animation, Supreme Court, The Fits, The Florida Project, The Great Beyond, The Transfiguration, Theme parks, Tom Vaughn-Lawlor, Toni Erdmann, Tony Clifton, Willem Dafoe, Worst of 2017, X-Men, Young Adulthood
Categories Lists Cork Film Festival 2017 Post author By You Call Yourself a Film Critic Post date November 29, 2017 No Comments on Cork Film Festival 2017 Okay, let’s get this shit started! Continue reading “Cork Film Festival 2017” Tags 32 Pills: My Sister's Suicide, A Christmas Carol, Abkhazia, Alcoholism, Alexander Payne, Alfred Hitchcock, Aliens, Amanda Fuller, Amour, Andrey Zvyagintsev, Annette Bening, Anti-capitalist film, Ask the Sexpert, Baltimore, Barkhad Abdi, Bee Gees, Ben Safdie, Ben Wishaw, Biopic, Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story, Bond Movie, Brendan Gleeson, Bria Vinaite, Brooklyn Prince, Cannes Film Festival, Cary Grant, Catwoman, Charles Dickens, Christmas, Christoph Waltz, Christopher Plummer, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Condemned to Remember, Cork, Cork Film, Cork Film Festival, Cork Film Festival 2017, Dafhyd Flynn, Dan Stevens, Deborah Haywood, Dina, Dina Buno, Disco, Documentary, Downsizing, Dr Mahinder Watsa, Europe, Eva Marie Saint, Family Film, Fascism, Fashionista, Film noir, Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool, Florida, Florida theme parks, Frank Berry, Fredrich Englels, gentrification, Gloria Grahame, Good Time, Happy End, HBO Documentary, Hedy Lamarr, Holocaust, Holocaust denialism, Hong Chau, Horror, Hugh Grant, Humphrey Bogart, In a lonely place, India, Irish Film, Isabelle Huppert, James Bond, Jamie Bell, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Joanna Scanlan, John Travolta, John Williams, Jonathan Pryce, Jonathan Swift, Joshua Safdie, Judaism, Just Charlie, Karl Marx, King Hu, Kitchen sink drama, Kristen Wiig, Lalor Roddy, Legend of The Mountain, Lily Newmark, Liverpool, Loveless, Martial Arts, Matt Damon, Michael Haneke, Michael Inside, Moe Dunford, Monkeys, Mumbai, Muslim, Nazi, Nicholas Ray, Nicolas Roeg, North by Northwest, Paddington, Paddington 2, Paddington Bear, Palma D'Or, Palme D'Or, Paradise Lost, Paul McGuigan, Pin Cushion, Prison life, Puerto Rico, Raoul Peck, Rat Films, Rats, Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Pattison, Roy Scheider, Ruben Ostland, Russia, Saturday Night Fever, Scott Levin, Scrooge, Sean Baker, Sean Connery, Sexual revolution, Simon Rumley, Slovakia, Snow White, Social Media, Social Satire, Sociological study, Sorcerer, Spy film, Staying Alive, Steven Spielberg, Suicide, Sukhumi, Taiwan, Tangerine, Tarzan's Testicles, The Florida Project, The Man Who Invented Christmas, The Safdie Brothers, The Square, The Wages of Fear, The Young Karl Marx, Tickled, Toby Jones, Tomi Reichental, trans issues, trans rights, Transgender, Udo Kier, USSR, Wi-Fi, Willem Dafoe, William Friedkin, World War Two