Brief, but uniquely life affirming, Georges Hannan’s Undertaker for Life! spends time with some rather chipper and well spoken folks about their jobs as morticians, funeral directors, and embalmers.
Andrew Parker
Andrew Parker
Andrew Parker fell in love with film growing up across the street from a movie theatre. He began writing professionally about film at the age of fourteen, and has been following his passions ever since. His writing has been showcased at various online outlets, as well as in The Globe and Mail, BeatRoute, and NOW Magazine. If he's not watching something or reading something, he's probably sleeping.
Canadian filmmaker Rama Rau’s latest documentary, Coven, looks at a trio of women continuing their ongoing exploration and education of witchcraft and Wicca, in the hopes of not only answering …
Love to Love You, Donna Summer chronicles the life and career of an iconic artist who rode the cutting edge between soul, disco, rock, and electronica with effortless ease.
It’s a small miracle that a big screen adaptation of Judy Blume’s seminal young adult bestseller Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. even exists. It’s an even more remarkable …
Skin deep, but satisfying, the ultra-gory Finnish action thriller Sisu is a movie that fits perfectly in line with audience expectation these days.
A raucously entertaining and innovative genre mash-up, writer-director Nida Manzoor’s action-comedy-thriller Polite Society throws everything it can at the wall, and a lot of it sticks.
Based on a real life case of love, infidelity, fractured families, and murder, series creator David E. Kelley’s latest, Love & Death, is a straightforward, but impeccably crafted bit of …
The documentary Satan Wants You looks back on the now surprisingly unremembered ground zero for the “Satanic Panic” moral craze of the 1980s: a highly contentious memoir based around dubious …
A look at the impact of depression and grief across generations – thought not always as grim as that description makes it sound – director Christian Einshøj’s personal essay film …
What starts out as a cheeky, purposefully cringe reliving of one’s adolescent nightmares and neuroses slowly turns into a deeper, meaningful examination of the human condition in documentarian Cecilia Aldarondo’s …