Autumn Sonata (1978)

What the Film Is About The first time I watched Autumn Sonata, I was struck by a sense of emotional claustrophobia. The film, directed by Ingmar Bergman and starring Ingrid Bergman and Liv Ullmann, unfolds almost entirely within the walls of a quiet home. But the real setting, as I felt it, is the interior … Read more

Au Revoir les Enfants (1987)

What the Film Is About Every time I revisit “Au Revoir les Enfants,” I’m struck not by the events themselves but by the lingering sense of innocence under threat, of friendships tested by forces too vast for children to comprehend. To me, the heart of the film lies not simply in its wartime setting, but … Read more

Ashes and Diamonds (1958)

What the Film Is About Ashes and Diamonds has always struck me as a film haunted by uncertainty—a living document of the emotional crossroads that consumed Poland in the closing hours of World War II. When I first encountered this movie, I was immediately drawn to the way it immerses viewers in the turbulence of … Read more

Arrival (2016)

What the Film Is About Arrival hit me unlike any other science fiction film of the last decade. Beneath its surface of alien ships and cryptic languages, I felt it was less a story about extraterrestrials than an emotionally resonant meditation on human connection, mourning, and the possibility of hope in the face of uncertainty. … Read more

Argo (2012)

What the Film Is About The first time I saw “Argo,” I was pulled, almost against my will, into its relentless anxiety—so much so that the drama lingered well after the credits. For me, this isn’t just a rescue story; it’s an impressionistic study of trust, invention, and risk in desperately uncertain times. The emotional … Read more

Apollo 13 (1995)

What the Film Is About The first time I experienced Apollo 13, I was struck less by the scale of its disaster and more by the emotional gravity tugging at everyone involved. I see the film not just as a chronicle of technical failure in space, but as a meditation on human ingenuity in the … Read more

Apocalypse Now (1979)

What the Film Is About Apocalypse Now always strikes me as less of a war film and more of a fever dream that interrogates the boundaries of the human psyche. The film does not simply depict a physical journey upriver through war-torn Vietnam; it is, above all, a descent into the existential abyss. The central … Read more

Annie Hall (1977)

What the Film Is About There’s always been something about Annie Hall that makes me want to reach for words like “bittersweet” and “elusive,” but they never quite capture what the film does to my sense of nostalgia and reality. At its core, I found the movie to be about the awkward, exhilarating struggle of … Read more

Angels with Dirty Faces (1938)

What the Film Is About What struck me right away when I first watched “Angels with Dirty Faces” was the gnawing sense of inevitability that runs underneath every interaction. The film, at its heart, is less about the criminal exploits or the trappings of the gangster genre, and more about the collision course between two … Read more

Andrei Rublev (1966)

What the Film Is About Every time I revisit Andrei Rublev, I’m struck by how deeply it refuses to offer comfort, yet how irresistibly it pulls me into the emotional weather of medieval Russia. It’s not a traditional biopic—far from it. For me, the film is less concerned with narrating Rublev’s chronological life and more … Read more