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  • An unexpected but fitting epitaph for a film preoccupied with the ephemeral, glancing briefly into a mundane future we’ve already left behind. It’s the magic hour in San Diego, city of god and tragedy.

    My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done
    selected by Jonathan Foltz
  • Killer Klowns From Kansas On Krack
    selected by David Carter
  • As the unbearable panic mounts, a touch of release in the fantasy that the world – with its painful shortcomings, responsibilities, and consequences – could be forgotten or repressed. In this, we get a momentary reflection on just how unstable things have become in the last hour and thirty minutes. A film whose potency is discernible in our relief at having escaped it.

    Forest For the Trees
    selected by Jonathan Foltz
  • Pop Culture Archeology, Artistic Terrorism, and montage theory in Crazy Dave Tape Part 2

    Crazy Dave Tape Part 2
    selected by David Carter
  • Domesticity is unnatural, it seems. Your voice will never reach him across that shaggy growth of bark and shadow, and junior will never grow up to be a football star.

    Bigger Than Life
    selected by Jonathan Foltz
  • Rampage
    selected by Cullen Gallagher
  • An aperture of rock looms prominently in the frame, reminding us that nature is alive with its own uncommon manner of looking in which we are rendered curious objects of fascination and remembrance. This may help explain why all the ghosts take on photography as a hobby.

    Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
    selected by Jonathan Foltz
  • Meek’s Cutoff
    selected by Rumsey Taylor
  • Mother
    selected by Michael Nordine
  • Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
    selected by Michael Nordine
  • Flooding With Love for the Kid
    selected by Cullen Gallagher
  • Inception
    selected by Victoria Large
  • The Expendables
    selected by Cullen Gallagher
  • Black Swan
    selected by Victoria Large
  • la mort des jeunes in Super Badass

    Super Badass
    selected by David Carter
  • Scott Pilgrim vs. The World
    selected by Victoria Large
  • Enter The Void
    selected by Rumsey Taylor
  • Gates of Heaven
    selected by Michael Nordine
  • “Be grateful for the music. Most of us die in silence.”

    The Baby of Mâcon
    selected by Rumsey Taylor
  • True Grit
    selected by Cullen Gallagher
  • A Brief History of Time
    selected by Rumsey Taylor
  • The Other Guys
    selected by Cullen Gallagher
  • Seven Samurai
    selected by Michael Nordine
  • A film that really did mean to be good, and was. Thank you, John Paizs.

    Crime Wave
    selected by Leo Goldsmith
  • Zealots convene for their massive idol’s violent marching orders, and the rest is history

    Zardoz
    selected by Glenn Heath, Jr.
  • There are all sorts of beings in the jungle, and their sublime coexistence haunts me.

    Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
    selected by Glenn Heath, Jr.
  • Offscreen violence leaves both memoir, memory, and malfeasance dancing in the wind.

    The Ghost Writer
    selected by Glenn Heath, Jr.
  • Heartbroken Luisa sits by herself, yearning for a reversal of fortune that will never come.

    Eccentricities of a Blonde-haired Girl
    selected by Glenn Heath, Jr.
  • Lloyd and his nurse share one last moment before the silence comes, changing this viewer forever.

    Dying at Grace
    selected by Glenn Heath, Jr.
  • Un Lac
    selected by Anna Bak-Kvapil
  • Barbe Bleu
    selected by Anna Bak-Kvapil
  • Runaways
    selected by Anna Bak-Kvapil
  • Please Give
    selected by Anna Bak-Kvapil
  • The Ghost Writer
    selected by Anna Bak-Kvapil
  • Trafic
    selected by Evan Kindley
  • Stranded in Canton
    selected by Evan Kindley
  • Scott Pilgrim vs. The World
    selected by Evan Kindley
  • Peter Greenaway’s The Last Supper
    selected by Evan Kindley
  • The Fighter
    selected by Evan Kindley
  • Black Swan
    selected by Jenny Jediny
  • Out of the Past
    selected by Jenny Jediny
  • Carlos
    selected by Jenny Jediny
  • Greenberg
    selected by Jenny Jediny
  • The Last Days of Disco
    selected by Jenny Jediny
  • Alamar
    selected by Leo Goldsmith
  • World on a Wire
    selected by Leo Goldsmith
  • Michael Jackson’s Ghosts
    selected by Leo Goldsmith
  • Disorder
    selected by Leo Goldsmith
  • Halfway through this bloody summer horror-comedy, we are treated to the two most unabashedly gorgeous minutes put to film last year: a naked, underwater dance, set to “The Flower Duet.” The only thing I saw all year that is actually even better in 3-D.

    Pirahna 3-D
    selected by Teddy Blanks
  • A half-a-century old piece of Jerome Robbins choreography, re-staged by dancers from the New York City Ballet and filmed in abandoned lots and old gymnasiums throughout New York.

    NY Export: Opus Jazz
    selected by Teddy Blanks
  • In their darkest, bleakest moment, as they slowly slide toward the roaring incinerator amidst a mountain of shredded garbage, these abandoned, once-beloved toys hold hands and bravely face their certain death together. Incredible.

    Toy Story 3
    selected by Teddy Blanks
  • Because it was financed by Disney, this doc about the studio’s renaissance period of the early 90s could only briefly touch on the drama surrounding the partnership of Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg. But my interest was peaked enough to read three excellent books on the subject.

    Waking Sleeping Beauty
    selected by Teddy Blanks
  • Gordon Gekko is with us throughout the either-too-short-or-too-long, ultimately disappointing sequel to Wall Street, but we don’t really believe he’s back until we get to see him, hair-slicked-back, talking on his cell phone and buying suits.

    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    selected by Teddy Blanks
  • Toy Story 3
    selected by Adam Balz
  • Town Called Panic
    selected by Adam Balz
  • A Single Man
    selected by Adam Balz
  • Mary and Max
    selected by Adam Balz
  • Inception
    selected by Adam Balz