Oh, Canada reunites director Paul Schrader with American Gigolo star Richard Gere almost 45 years later. Oh, Canada sees Gere ...
“Oh, Canada” is probably the only movie about ... For all its rich and thorny subtext about guilt, shame, and accountability, Paul Schrader’s latest feature works nicely as a satire of ...
Jacob Elordi is suddenly everywhere in Hollywood — so much so that he thinks he must be dreaming. Amid a remarkable streak of ...
W hile his work often carries a certain subtlety, Paul Schrader himself tends to be more direct. The 78 year-old filmmaker ...
N ostalgia for Sixties radicalism infects Hollywood. Robert Redford’s cheesy ’60s remembrance The Company You Keep tried to ...
This article was originally published on culturess.com as Paul Schrader gets reflexive and conscious of mortality in Oh, Canada ...
That’s a question posed by decorated documentary filmmaker Leonard Fife in Paul Schrader’s meandering ode to death, dying, aging, and regret, “Oh, Canada.” It’s inevitably one also felt ...
Forty-five years after Paul Schrader immortalized Richard Gere as an “American Gigolo,” he’s cast him again as a rather run-of-the-mill American cad. “Oh, Canada,” a stiff and cerebral ...
A story that unfolds on death's doorstep, Oh, Canada is a thoughtful, reflective work from Paul Schrader, if an occasionally rushed one. Whether or not its hurried approach is a defect — it most ...
that I see the best parts of Paul Schrader’s fragmented Oh, Canada. Decoupled from its mélange of aspect ratios, timelines and narrative inconsistencies, the latest from the scribe of Taxi ...
This image released by Kino Lorber shows filmmaker Paul Schrader, left, with actor Jacob Elordi on the set of "Oh, Canada." (Jeong Park/Kino Lorber via AP) LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jacob Elordi is ...