Adios Buenos Aires is a love story to both Buenos Aires and its soundtrack, the Tango and the Bandoneon. Director Germán Kral’s native city with its melancholic vibe and almost dreamy urban vistas permeate every scene. ...

Love and empathy are reserved for those who are closest to her as Sandra Hueller’s character Hedwig Hoess, wife of the commandant of Auschwitz prison camp, is able to completely distance herself from those she has been conditioned to look ...

Review by Susanne Nielsen “The Iron Claw” – the name of Fritz Von Erich’s trademark grip on his opponent in his early wrestling career serves as the film’s title, and stands equally for the grip of the patriarch on his ...

Review by Susanne Nielsen Migration is an (animated) adventure told from a child’s point of view by director Benjamin Renner (written by Renner and Mike White), produced for Illumination with an amusing family-friendly story complete with a a happy ending ...

Review by Susanne Nielsen The name Leonard Bernstein evokes awe in anyone who knows anything about this larger than life personality in the world of American music – Maestro is the perfect title of this film by director Bradley Cooper who ...

Review by Susanne Nielsen  Paul Giamatti is excellent in his role as Paul Hunham, a luckless adjunct professor of ancient history at a private boarding school, where he is left behind during the winter holidays with a group of “hold-overs”. ...

Review by Susanne Nielsen In its 100th year Disney is reaching back to some of its original successes – to the magic it created with all-time favorites like its first full-length animated feature film, Snow White, its first technicolor marvel ...