Welcome to the Indie Film Minute Blog! Browse our curated collection of film essays and explore unique perspectives on the indie film world. Visit our Facebook page and tweet us at @indiefilmminute to let us know what you think.
If we wait for a movie to infect millions of minds and change the world on its own, we’ll be waiting forever. If we allow it to change us and then take that change out into our daily actions—by donating what we can, supporting noble causes, giving what time we have—then maybe, if we’re lucky, we’ll see that change ripple outward.
Read MoreArtificially slowing down the spread of ideas, knowledge, and creative work—basically, anything that the digital age has made easy to duplicate and share almost infinitely at no extra cost—is counterintuitive. That we’re able to share a film or news with anyone in the world with an Internet connection is not the problem; it’s an incredible advancement.
Read MoreFilm, regardless of the genre, regardless of the budget, regardless of the amount of dialogue, should be preserved and venerated for the powers it possesses for any given individual and for the way that it can tendril into people’s lives in unexpected ways.
Read MoreHawley takes a vastly different approach than the Coen brothers did in his portrait of Minnesota. It is still as magically self-contained, but skillfully blown wider and deeper.
Read MoreWhat Changeling is most remarkable for is delicately depicting not only the raw anguish of the loss of a child, but also the vile treatment of women, the vile disregard for women’s voices, and the imperious manipulation of grief that women experience far too frequently in our society.
Read MorePeople don’t show everyone, or sometimes anyone, the complete picture of who they are. And if they do, they might not like what they find on the other side.
Read MoreOkja does seem like a step in the right direction: a chance for a wall to break down permanently between critic and audience—not to kill film criticism, but to let it grow into a more analytical, thoughtful, and communal art.
Read MorePsykou’s message is that the entire family system—with its perceived obstacles, coming-of-age ordeals, and Freudian family tensions—is a story made up in the self-serving imagination of those whom it exists to empower.
Read MoreMany of our fictions—Nightcrawler, Black Mirror, Mr. Robot, Fight Club, to name a few—are our dreams of enterprise and technology turned nightmares.
Read MoreFilms like this one, gorgeously and relentlessly crafted to show the depths of human depravity and human resilience, attest to why seemingly hyperbolic feminist dystopias like The Handmaid’s Tale are crucial.
Read More