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F9 review: Vin Diesel & co back for bonkers sequel
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I Carry You With Me review: Moving gay immigrant romance
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Summer of 85 review: François Ozon movingly sums up career
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The Times is committed to reviewing theatrical film releases during the COVID-19 pandemic. Because moviegoing carries risks during this time, we remind readers to follow health and safety guidelines as outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local health officials.
The great German writer-director Christian Petzold has a number of recurring fixations: women in trouble, doomed romance, the specters of a grim past hovering over an unsettled present. In film after mysterious, melancholy film, he’s shuffled and reshuffled these noirish elements, placing them in revealing new configurations even when he sometimes relies on the same faces. In his brilliant 2019 drama, “Transit,” Franz Rogowski and Paula Beer played two almost-lovers caught in a kind of temporal loop: It was a wartime melodrama that kept running in circles, turning its characters into captives of history or genre or both.
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The Times is committed to reviewing theatrical film releases during the COVID-19 pandemic. Because moviegoing carries risks during this time, we remind readers to follow health and safety guidelines as outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local health officials.
More than once during “All Light, Everywhere,” you may find yourself wondering exactly what you’re looking at. This is entirely appropriate, since one of the key points of this expansively brainy cinematic essay concerns the limitations of human vision, perception and understanding. You’ll puzzle over some of the images, many of them arrestingly shot (by Corey Hughes), gradually tease out their meanings and perhaps even synthesize them into a narrative. Curious metal gadgets pass through an automated assembly line. Throngs of people don protective glasses and gaze skyward on a hot day. A veiny, pulsing blob of light reveals itself as a closeup of an optic nerve a disorienting, brain