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John Fink

John Fink

Critic at Metacritic

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Location
United States
Covering topics
  • Entertainment
  • Independent Film
Languages
  • English
Influence score
64
Media Database
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John Fink
thefilmstage.com

Montclair Review: ‘Afterimage’ is a Haunting Historical Drama from a Late Master

Early in Afterimage avant garde artist Władysław Strzemiński sits huddled in a cramped apartment painting. When his only light source is blocked by the red of a multi-floor Stalin banner unspooled …
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: ‘The Beach Bum’ is Hilarious, But May Cause a Hangover

The latest opus of debauchery from the great Harmony Korine, The Beach Bum continues his more playful streak, full of carefree possibilities while existing in roughly the same cinematic universe of…
thefilmstage.com

Tribeca Review: Fully Realized Humans Finds Emotional Honesty in Im...

Channeling both his debut feature The Lie and Humpday, his mumblecore outing with director Lynn Shelton, Joshua Leonard’s Fully Realized Humans is an emotionally honest yet minor comedy about…
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: See You Then Captures a Haunting, Dream-Like ... - The...

Flipping a traditional formula on its head, Mari Walker’s haunting feature film debut See You Then begins simply enough: we’re introduced to a reunion that takes place in a sometimes awkward dream-like state in a college town on a weekday night when only a handful of professors and students have ventured out. Perhaps, the long
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: Our Father Sets Estranged Sisters on a Leisurely ... -...

A nuanced and occasionally moving drama about an estranged family, Bradley Grant Smith’s Our Father features an arc that perhaps sounds too common: siblings take a road trip and along the way grow, but here, ending on a note of uncertainty. It may take a little too long for the film to reach that conclusion,
insidehighered.com

Rethinking Dual Enrollment to Advance Equitable Transfer | Beyond ....

Now’s the time to put dual enrollment to work better expanding college access and connecting underserved students to high-opportunity bachelor’s degree pathways.
thefilmstage.com

Sundance Review: The Princess Explores the Media Ecosystem That Bui...

By design, Ed Perkins’ The Princess keeps a healthy, mediated distance from its subject, the late Princess of Wales. After all, the news is the first draft of history, and the film restricts its vi…

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thefilmstage.com

Sundance Review: Navalny is an Essential, Personal, and Urgent Look...

Early in Daniel Roher’s alarming and essential documentary Navalny, Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny sits in Germany, having recovered from being poisoned. Asked what message he might leave…
thefilmstage.com

Sundance Review: Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul. Offers No Salvatio...

Tonally disjointed but at times hilarious, Adamma Ebo’s feature adaptation of her popular short seems to have taken a misguided shape. This religious satire that episodically skewers the theatrics …
capegazette.com

The differences between COVID-19, flu, allergies and colds

When a sore throat, runny or stuffy nose, or cough appear, you might ask yourself, “Do I have COVID-19, the flu, allergies or a cold?” And since all these illnesses share some similar symptoms, it’s hard to know the difference. To know for certain,...
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: Everything Everywhere All At Once is a Rollicking Roll...

A general rule films students learn the first few weeks of their intro class is that a film teaches you how to watch it within the first five minutes. Well, most. The latest outing from Daniels (Da…
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: I Love My Dad Finds Patton Oswalt in a Cringe-Worthy C...

Inspired by actual events, I Love My Dad contains a cringe-worthy premise that should easily fall apart, as Franklin (James Morosini), a young-ish man, should have grown up with an awareness of the…
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: The Cow Milks a Simple Premise with Rich Atmosphere

Eli Horowitz’s The Cow offers a rather convoluted approach to an unfortunately straightforward story. For much of its runtime, however, the film successfully offers the kind of misdirection that be…
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: Under the Influence Finds Casey Neistat Turning His Le...

What initially starts as a light-hearted look at YouTube star David Dobrik and his “Vlog Squad” evolves into a portrait that doesn’t quite know what to make of him and his enablers. The question of…
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: Lily Gladstone Traverses the Lonely Road in The Unknow...

Beginning with a departure in the dead of night in the middle of winter, and ending perhaps where its lead Tana (Lily Gladstone) was destined to go, Morrisa Maltz’s road trip film The Unknown Count…
thefilmstage.com

SXSW Review: Anonymous Club is a Kodachrome Trip Through Courtney B...

A current of loneliness runs through Danny Cohen’s beautifully haunting Anonymous Club, a rich documentary filmed in 16mm chronicling little more than a year in the life of singer-songwriter Courtn…
staradvertiser.com

Column: How Legislature can help ALICE families

All of Hawaii’s families deserve the chance to live a life where their most basic needs are met. However, with one of the highest costs of living in the nation, many of Hawaii’s households still struggle to afford basic necessities like housing, food and health care.
thefilmstage.com

Robert Machoian on The Integrity of Joseph Chambers, Survivalism .....

One of the most productive indie filmmakers working today, Robert Machoian has kept busy making features and shorts, sometimes with longtime collaborator Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck, and sometimes solo. This year Machoian has two films on the festival circuit, debuting his short The Last Days of August (co-directed with Ojeda-Beck) and his solo effort the tense thriller
thefilmstage.com

DOC NYC Review: Barbara Kopple’s Gumbo Coalition is a Thick Stew of...

A sprawling exploration of a progressive coalition that includes the inner-city-focused Urban League and Latinx-focused UnidosUS, Gumbo Coalition is the latest picture by Barbara Kopple. The legend…
thefilmstage.com

Sundance Review: Kim's Video is the Definitive, Highly Entertaining...

A sweeping documentary by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin, Kim’s Video follows the personal-inquiry, man-on-the-street format from their previous works Mardi Gras: Made in China and Girl Model. With Redmon largely remaining behind the scenes, asking questions while holding his camera, the film is simply left to wander where the story takes it: from the
thefilmstage.com

Sundance Review: Fancy Dance is an Indigenous Family Drama ... - Th...

The narrative feature debut of Erica Tremblay traverses much of the same ground as other films set on and around reservations, highlighting poverty, a spirit to hustle, human trafficking, and the quagmire of political relations between sovereign nations. The domain of recent films like the dark thriller Catch the Fair One as well as Tracey