When Oliver Laxe’s Sirāt premiered at Cannes this year, it caught both those familiar with his work as well as new viewers off guard; that the film takes an unexpected turn in its second half is only part of its disorienting effect. Where his first three, score-free features defaulted to the quiet and contemplative, Sirāt is nearly an action movie and accordingly nerve-wracking, increasingly suspenseful and—thanks in large part to Kangding Ray’s excellent electronic score—sometimes so deafeningly loud that it’s been known to literally make projection booths shake. With a larger budget and longer schedule than Laxe has had before, […]
by Filmmaker Staff on Dec 22, 2025
Across his 45-year career, independent auteur Jim Jarmusch has continually returned to a particular type of film in which feature-length narrative is broken into a series of short, discrete episodes united by place (Mystery Train), time (Night on Earth) or activity (Coffee and Cigarettes). Through their internal correspondences and connections, and perhaps because of their fractured nature, these films, liberated from traditional three-act structure, produce sly epiphanies and unexpected pleasures. Jarmusch’s attraction to filmic miniatures continues with Father Mother Sister Brother, in which the connective tissue is, yes, the family. (In a clever bit of calendaring by MUBI, the film […]
by Filmmaker Staff on Dec 22, 2025
Set in the Jim Crow South of the 1930s, Sinners finds twin brothers Smoke and Stack (both played by Michael B. Jordan), flush with bootlegger cash, returning to their Mississippi hometown to open a juke joint. The venture proves short-lived as an Irish vampire (Jack O’Connell) and his minions crash the party on opening night. Once the fangs come out, Sinners cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw, a horror neophyte, found herself in unfamiliar territory, especially compared to the film’s genre aficionado director Ryan Coogler. “I’m actually not that well-versed in horror,” said Durald Arkapaw. “It was a new genre for me […]
by Matt Mulcahey on Dec 22, 2025In 2017, for the 25th anniversary of Filmmaker, we commissioned a radical redesign and also initiated a new upfront section: Reflections. For four issues, we published pieces looking back at the history of the magazine as well as ones that meditated anew on its enduring concerns: the struggles of early career filmmakers, changing models of independent producing, the role of print magazines in a digital culture, shifting definitions of the word “independent.” When our anniversary year was over, I decided to keep the section, reasoning that “reflections” didn’t have to refer just to the past; reflections can radiate towards the […]
by Scott Macaulay on Dec 22, 2025
In January, I’ll teach another version of my favorite class, “Creative Critical Writing,” a graduate writing workshop dedicated to exploring diverse techniques for writing about—and with, next to or nearby—film, video, still images, sound and other media forms. Moving beyond the conventions of scholarly writing, the course offers students a chance to dive into forms that have been variously dubbed creative nonfiction, the hybrid essay, the fourth genre, the lyric essay, the video essay and poetic or vernacular criticism, considering writers who have contributed incredible experiments to the writing form, with the ultimate goal being expansive experimentation for students. One […]
by Holly Willis on Dec 22, 2025
Guillermo del Toro’s films are instantly recognizable for their fantastical Gothic imagery, and the director’s adaptation of Frankenstein is one of his most decadent stylized works yet. The film—which stars Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi as the Creature and Mia Goth as Lady Elizabeth Harlander and Baroness Claire Frankenstein—boasts stunning costumes befitting its epic scale. Frankenstein’s costume designer, Kate Hawley, is no stranger to the writer-director’s distinctive visions, having previously worked with him on Pacific Rim and Crimson Peak. She likens this film, with its two-and-a-half runtime and intricate worldbuilding, to “a massive opera.” Earlier in her career, […]
by Abbey Bender on Dec 22, 2025
Since our 2019 winter edition, the brilliant Mark Asch has done something here that isn’t our default position; he’s examined films together, not in isolation, and has teased out what, for him, are their deeper meanings and interconnections—how they say something about our society today. Here, he considers images inside and outside the arthouse, finding trenchant, sometimes troubling messages elided by rote awards season discourse. — Scott Macaulay I remember about a decade ago when Charlie Kirk was a teenage gimmick, a debate-club prodigy haunting college campuses demanding to be taken seriously, provoking protests and deplatformings and then spinning this […]
by Mark Asch on Dec 22, 2025
In his 2017 25 New Face profile of writer/director Ricky D’Ambrose (Notes on an Appearance, The Cathedral), Vadim Rizov described the filmmaker as having “a disciplined, honed gaze refined over years of self-tutoring.” I ran into Ricky recently and told him I was leaving Filmmaker; he responded by telling me that it was not just the magazine but one specific issue that was a vital part of his self-education. In editing this magazine, I’ve always been conscious of the educational breadcrumbs contained within each interview, as my own cinematic self-tutoring followed similar patterns, so I was excited to learn what […]
by Ricky D'Ambrose on Dec 22, 2025
In the ’80s, I’d rent Richard Kern films like Right Side of My Brain and Fingered from Kim’s Video, vibing on the mixture of artistry and exploitation contained in the work of this pioneer of the so-called Cinema of Transgression. In the ’90s, shortly after the release of his first photo book, New York Girls, we got to work with him at Filmmaker as he became one of our regular photographers of directors and talent at festivals and around New York City. Kern Filmmaker covers included Robert Duvall for The Apostle; Kimberly Peirce, Chloë Sevigny and Hilary Swank for Boys […]
by Richard Kern on Dec 22, 2025
By conventional measures, the 2020s have not been very good for the movies. At mid-decade, there’s the nagging sense that the pre-COVID years represented glory days that will never be recaptured. Corporate media consolidation, the dominance of streaming and short-form content and the rapid rise of A.I. have far-reaching implications for the future of the medium. In many ways, independent film and filmmakers are in a far more perilous position than ever, increasingly squeezed out on screens big and small by an algorithmically driven and politically pressured media ecosystem irrevocably moving toward the middlebrow, mediocre and mainstream. Yet, independent filmmakers, […]
by Anthony Kaufman on Dec 22, 2025