Over the last forty years, the singular artist Guy Maddin has been celebrated as one of Canada’s most well-known and idiosyncratic filmmakers. Hailing from Winnipeg, Maddin’s films are a genre unto ...
Cate Blanchett stars as a lusty, preening stateswomen in a geopolitical satire from the experimental filmmaker Guy Maddin. By Jeannette Catsoulis When you purchase a ticket for an independently ...
Enter the Canadian trio of Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson, and Galen Johnson, who give it a good try via the wry new corridors-of-power comedy Rumours (note the Canadian spelling). The film, which ...
“Rumours” is an unexpected development in the career of Canadian filmmaking maverick Guy Maddin: It almost looks like a normal movie. Don’t be fooled. Collaborating for the second time with ...
In a directorial career defined by alluring strangeness, Guy Maddin’s new comedy is radical for being almost … normal. Credit...Grant Harder for The New York Times Supported by By Mark Binelli ...
Guy Maddin’s “Rumours,” a satire of the impotent inefficiencies of global leadership, is nuts. That’s both a compliment and a criticism. It’s a withering satire and a horror movie.
There’s something so unique about the dry, wry Canadian sense of humour — and Guy Maddin‘s latest movie, Rumours, captures it perfectly. Set during a fictional G7 summit, Rumours sees ...
Written by Evan Johnson. Directed by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson. Opens Friday at TIFF Lightbox, Imagine Cinemas Market Square and Cineplex Cinemas Varsity and VIP. 103 minutes.
“Rumours” is an unexpected development in the career of Canadian filmmaking maverick Guy Maddin: It almost looks like a normal movie. Don’t be fooled. Collaborating for the second time with ...
“Rumours” is an unexpected development in the career of Canadian filmmaking maverick Guy Maddin: It almost looks like a normal movie. Don’t be fooled. Collaborating for the second time with ...