Problemista Is a Magical Realist Fable About the Absurdity of America's Immigration System
A story about a young man who just wants to legally work, if only the system would let him.
A story about a young man who just wants to legally work, if only the system would let him.
Also: Oppenheimer and Godzilla win at the Oscars, Virginia state lawmakers nuke plans for taxpayer-funded arena, and more...
A charming story of love, friendship, and impersonal urban bureaucracy.
Decades of protectionism have led to the film industry’s decline, but a free market can make it bloom.
The sequel is about ecology, politics, economics, imperialism, and much more. But mostly it's about worms.
Critics are misreading the movie. The wealthy are not the villains in this story.
A shaggy roadtrip comedy set against the backdrop of late 1990s right-wing family values politics fails to come together.
Listless and incoherent, it's a sign of the genre's struggles.
The credit "is at best a break-even proposition and more likely a net cost" for the state.
The credits cost the state over $1.3 billion per year with a 19 percent return on investment. Lawmakers' proposals will do little to change that.
Director Takashi Yamazaki brings to the screen the most dreadful version of Godzilla since the franchise began.
Plus: Chatbots vs. suicidal ideation, Margot Robbie vs. the patriarchy, New York City vs. parents, and more...
John Stossel and the English actress discuss their shared problem—and why they'd like to destigmatize stuttering.
When regulators block entrepreneurs, they take away a golden ticket.
In Jason Statham's latest lowbrow actioner, the bee puns buzz all the way to the top.
In this bizarre East Coast road trip story, there's no American mainstream, just fringes and subcultures.
The program generates just 19 cents for every dollar spent.
To fight the King of the Monsters, private citizens must band together.
Tony Montana has a bloody rags-to-riches story.
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
A magical, mysterious deeply personal movie about creation and legacy. And also, murder parrots.
The new film is an anti-epic about the petty awfulness of history's great men.
What if Ramona Flowers bears some responsibility for creating her seven "evil exes" in the first place?
Sharp world building and a strong central performance can't save this dystopian disappointment.
Despite Fincher's reputation as a gloom-monger, his movies are often quite bleakly funny, and his lonely, agitated male loser characters are frequently the targets of the jokes.
In the director's own words, this is "a sequel to five different things."
Sophia Coppola's superb drama tackles an age-gap romance with nuance.
A tricky, excellent legal drama shows just how hard it can be to pin down the truth.
The union wants you to throw your Barbie costume in the trash, scab.
A masterful epic from one of Hollywood's most important, most ambitious filmmakers.
The political commentary in Netflix's sci-fi comedy isn't exactly subtle.
With subplots about bite mark evidence and asset forfeiture, it's a parade of shady cop practices.
Conceptually, it's all a bit vague, but it sure looks amazing.
Plus: IRS insanity, robocop photo ops, and more...
A Republican, a Communist, and a Catholic conservative walk onto a movie set...
The film dramatizes the pandemic-era mania around GameStop and WallStreetBets, but misunderstands the realities of financial markets.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law
People should be free to choose how cautious to be. Mask mandates, lockdowns, and closing schools won't stop the virus.
Artificial intelligence is not about to replace your favorite actors.
Jake Gyllenhaal stars in a film that criticizes the U.S. immigration system.
The average working woman in 2023 earns enough money to buy a Barbie doll every 33 minutes. In 1959, it took nearly two hours.
The former Cheers producer explains why the studios are failing, the writers and actors are missing the big picture, and creators fear their audience.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about the Hollywood strikes with television writer and political commentator Rob Long.