Sundance 2026 Review: RUN AMOK, Must-See Hard-Hitting, Heart-Shredding Comedy-Drama

Echoes: How Young and Veteran Filmmakers in Pakistan Differ in Style and Storytelling

Echoes: How Young and Veteran Filmmakers in Pakistan Differ in Style and Storytelling

Pakistani cinema has been shaped by both veteran and emerging filmmakers, whose contrasting approaches to style and storytelling define the industry today. While pioneers worked within technical and structural constraints to establish cinematic traditions, the new generation is pushing boundaries with modern narratives and innovative techniques. Veteran Pakistani filmmakers have shaped the nation’s cinema through diverse genres. Some of the well-known names are Syed Noor, Shamim Ara, Sangeeta, Pervez Malik, Riaz Shahid, and many more. There was a time when their films not only dominated popular culture but also reflected the social and cultural sensibilities of their respective eras. The films produced particularly from the 1960s to the 1990s used limited resources, however, relying on older camera equipment, which often forced the recycling of the…

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THE INFINITE HUSK Review: The Human Body Is a Prison and a Wonder

THE INFINITE HUSK Review: The Human Body Is a Prison and a Wonder

While many films (and art in general) grapple with the question of what it means to be human, science fiction offers the tropes and syntax to make that question more palpable, or give means to approach it from an atypical perspective. For filmmaker Aaron Silverstein, approaching the question of what makes our existence unique (as far as we know) finds engagement in the form of an alien presence deeply hostile to human shape and existence in his feature film debut, The Infinite Husk. While not entirely successful in its execution, it nonetheless asks familiar questions in a philosophically surreal tone, anchored by an excellent lead performance. Vel (Peace Ikediuba) is the member of an alien species: one that exists without physical form, able to roam the…

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Rotterdam 2026 Review: THE NIGHT Holds Horrors And Wonders

Rotterdam 2026 Review: THE NIGHT Holds Horrors And Wonders

The International Film Festival Rotterdam has started its 2026 edition. And even though the festival slants towards arthouse as always, there are plenty of genre films to enjoy as well. Case in point: Paul Urkijo Alijo’s Gaua a.k.a. The Night, which is an example of European folk horror at its finest. It is Alijo third feature film, and like the previous two (Errementari: The Blacksmith and the Devil and Irati) it is based on myths from the North-West of Spain, the Basque country. In The Night, we see Kattalin, a young woman, running into the woods after trying to poison her husband. According to myth, you shouldn’t venture in the woods after dark. It doesn’t take long for Kattalin to find out why: some… thing…

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