The late Doris Fish's legendary sci-fi film is a landmark of queer indie cinema for a reason.
The late Doris Fish's legendary sci-fi film is a landmark of queer indie cinema for a reason.
Reissue of 1969’s The Best of the Blues Project, which was on Verve Forecast. There is a whole series of releases titled Archetypes from the mid-seventies on MGM – not sure if they are all reissues or not. Other artists in the MGM Archetype Series are: Charlie Parker, Tim Hardin, Billy Holiday, Blues Project, Velvet […]
Directed by John Gray, this 1996 crime thriller had the tagline: "Two good cops. One _bad_ situation."
IndieWire's Alison Foreman looks back on her time in the Ed Sullivan Theater for this week's throwback.
Critics from around the world selected Ryusuke Hamaguchi's "All of a Sudden" as the best film of the festival, with Jordan Firstman's "Club Kid" also receiving significant attention.
Hear from IndieWire staffers and contributors about the best of the fest, from Palme d'Or winner "Fjord" to "Paper Tiger."
This gruesome sci-fi thriller from 1986 sees the legendary horror author go ham on a rural truck stop.
Tom Noonan and Karen Sillas star in this strange hidden gem about two very awkward co-workers.
The 1982 stage adaptation initiated a series of low-budget independent productions that have been largely ignored in favor of the more famous Altman classics that came before ("Nashville") and after ("The Player"), but a new physical media release provides an opportunity for reconsideration.
Johnnie To's kung fu flick from 1993 is a fantasy-laden masterclass in midnight Hong Kong cinema.
Anna Faris leads an endlessly surprising cast in one of the greatest stoner movies ever made.
Starring Ezra Miller and Ellen Burstyn, "Another Happy Day" premiered at Sundance to mixed reviews.
Forget everything you know about the colorful Mushroom Kingdom and venture to "Dinohatten" in the first live-action video game film ever made.
IndieWire's Chief Film Critic stops by midnight's messiest med spa... and lives!
Julianne Moore stands out in an ensemble satire that makes Hollywood look like a circle of Hell.
Bill Gunn's historically groovy vampire romance is an essential horror gem from 1973.
IndieWire's Marcus Jones brings his awards-season expertise to an extra-special midnight "movie" genre.
Paul Gross directs himself, Leslie Nielsen, Molly Parker, and more in this wacky 2002 sports comedy.
Tom McLoughlin's 1986 slasher is the best in the series — and weirdly great for Valentine's Day.
You won't forget a Valentine's Day spent with Fen Tian's interspecies meet-cute from 2011.