AVClub: Stultifying in spots, the period drama Sunset Song marks an unexpected misstep for Terence Davies, the eccentric filmmaker whose movies evoke limbo states of memory and repressed feeling using a very British vocabulary of drab spaces. Davies’ features, none of which are set past the 1950s, trade in the dreary day-to-day of generations past: bedrooms as tragic places of sex and death, defined by their potential for both closeness and loneliness; staircases climbed again and again, never leading anywhere new; communal songs as transcendent moments in a hushed world. All are present and accounted for in this long-in-the-works adaptation of Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s novel; it’s just as personal as Davies’ other literary and theatrical adaptations (The Neon Bible, The House Of Mirth, The Deep Blue Sea), but nowhere as inspired or affecting. Studiously classical, the movie commits to its leaden pace and to the least compelling heroine in Davies’ otherwise remarkable body of work.
Rest In Peace Review: This gripping thriller will captivate you from start to finish, leaving you pondering the boundaries between right and wrong long after the credits roll.
Inspector Rishi Review: Amazon Prime Video's horror-mystery series, starring Naveen Chandra, is mysterious and thrilling, as promised.
Testament The Story of Moses Review: The series depicts Moses' journey from an outcast and murderer to a prophet and liberator of the Hebrews. It interweaves docudrama and interviews, to present a more humanly image of the prophet.