Deep Focus

Brehm Film

Brehm Film brings together filmmakers and film-viewers, Christian leaders and laity, scholars and students for dialogue between our culture's primary stories and the Christian faith.

kutter and scorsese
kutter and scorsese
Brehm Film

Brehm Film brings together filmmakers and film-viewers, Christian leaders and laity, scholars and students for dialogue between our culture's primary stories and the Christian faith.

Brehm Film

Brehm Film brings together filmmakers and film-viewers, Christian leaders and laity, scholars and students for dialogue between our culture's primary stories and the Christian faith.

kutter and scorsese
Latest Review

Wicked

Everything that is good about Wicked is unrelated to it being a film.

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Listen and subscribe to our new podcast produced in partnership with Christianity Today and Uncommon Voices. It is an exploration of fear, faith, and stories that scare the daylights out of us.

Latest Review

Wicked

Everything that is good about Wicked is unrelated to it being a film.

Recent Reviews

Moana 2

Moana 2 is gorgeous. You just want to see it on as big a screen with as much light bounding into your eyes as possible.

Gladiator II

Gladiator II is taffy, which isn’t to say it’s not tasty. It’s just not a meal in the same way its predecessor was.

Conclave

It’s not often you go to a movie and hear an actual sermon. It’s even more rare for that sermon to be erudite, biblically literate, and theologically challenging.

Anora

Sean Baker’s Palme d’Or winning film is so light on its feet, you’ll think you’re watching an Astaire and Rogers musical… if Fred played the son of a Russian oligarch and Ginger played a stripper.

Saturday Night

Will the show go to air? Of course it will. The fun is in watching all the little plots within the big plot arc and resolve.

Piece By Piece

Autobiography is an exercise in making sense of what was actually just a random series of events. It’s putting together pieces into a whole. It’s not real, so in that sense, the use of LEGO is appropriate.

Leap of Faith

Leap of Faith is both a hope-filled picture of an impossible possibility and a chance to consider whether, as Christians, we really do have the courage of our convictions.

Joker: Folie à Deux

I have never seen a film exhibit such contempt for its audience as Joker: Folie à Deux. You have to see it to believe it.

The Wild Robot

What a lovely film!

Megalopolis

Watching Megalopolis is like passing from surprise to surprise, some delightful, others confounding, but always interesting.

Horizon: An American Saga, Chapter One

There are segments throughout the film that feel spacious, like Costner is reveling in the opportunity—maybe his last opportunity; there’s a “shoot your last shot” air to all of this—to create iconic “American” images, to commit them to the screen, as they used to say.

The Bikeriders

I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a film that was so obviously fictional but which feels so anthropological and which has this strong meta-commentary element running through it.

Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

Fury Road’s staging and spectacle are exhilarating while the film’s pace is ultimately numbing. Furiosa’s saga is more poetic, using of surprising visual symbolism and editing rhythms to make the film more dynamic.

Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

The Apes movies are at their best when they show us something akin to our human world but reflected through the series’ monkey-shaped mirror. In this installment, that simian similarity has to do with Caesar’s legacy.

Challengers

Challengers gives us the sport as an allegory for love, an intense physical, emotional, and psychological relationship between two people so riddled with the trappings of our economic reality, genuine connection becomes almost impossible.

Dune: Part Two

Like Fremen on the back of a worm, Dune: Part Two’s storytellers ride the story and beckon the audience to do the same.

Poor Things

Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things parses the difference between morality, immorality, and amorality with a butter knife recently used to spread clotted cream on a scone. He doesn’t wipe it off first.

Godzilla Minus One

Godzilla is scary in Godzilla Minus One, like, heart-racing, muscle-tensing scary.

Sundance 2024

There are over a thousand film festivals in the U.S. alone each year, but Sundance is the one we keep returning to. Why?

Ferarri

Mann’s protagonists are always haunted by time. In Ferrari, the end has caught up to Mann’s protagonist before the movie begins.

Licorice Pizza

Licorice Pizza is like a trip to a record store. It’s a great hangout movie, awash in music and shining with all the adolescent feelings pop music so perfectly captures.

Spider-Man: No Way Home

In Spider-Man: No Way Home, Peter Parker is given the gift of layered experience due to a rift in the space-time continuum. It’s fun for fans who have watched all the Spider-Man movies made since 2001. It is enlightening for Peter.

Nightmare Alley

Nightmare Alley is merciless. It’s a lot like the “geek show” we see near the beginning of the film in which a man bites the head off a live chicken.

West Side Story

The primary point of view in West Side Story is that of a wrecking ball, like the inverse of below-the-water shots that begin Jaws. Death is coming, this time from above.

House of Gucci

Most acting is so good we don’t notice it. We accept the characters as real and forget they are being performed by actors making choices. House of Gucci doesn’t let us do that.

Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time

The film is a celebration of Vonnegut on multiple levels: as a novelist, writer, and public intellectual, but also as a friend, a father, humorist, aficionado of life, and finally a loved one.

tick, tick… BOOM!

There is something inherently, necessarily myopic about the creative process where an artist has to focus on their unique work to such a degree that it’s easy to lose sight of the web of loving relationships that surround and support them.

Dune: Part One

Dune: Part One is an inherently ecological tale. It’s about the preeminence of the natural world in the workings of our governments, economies, and religions.

The Last Duel

The Last Duel isn’t a subtle film. Ridley Scott’s latest is a medieval #MeToo movie with a dash of Rashomon.

The French Dispatch

In the beginning was the word in The French Dispatch, Wes Anderson’s long release-delayed ode to the literary magazine ideal.

The Rescue

The Rescue allows us to catch a glimpse of what true heroism looks like.

No Time To Die

No Time to Die is an admirable farewell for Daniel Craig’s take on Bond. The movie is maybe a little long, but it’s long in the way that a dinner with friends stretches into the evening when you don’t really want it to end.

The Alpinist

Leclerc invokes the theological language of awe, the feeling of absolute dependence, as he seeks the visceral awareness of “being so small in a world that’s so big.”

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is a very good Marvel movie, which is akin to saying that there is a great new item on the menu at Applebee’s.

The Lost Leonardo

Through the twists and turns of the story, you’ll doubt that a work of such importance could possibly have remained hidden all these years, but by the second half of the movie, you’ll find yourself thinking more about the relationship of art to money and power, as the question of… Read more »

CODA

CODA puts a hearing viewer in the shoes of someone who is deaf. The sound cuts out at multiple points throughout the film and you’re invited to sit with the silence that many experience during events, social gatherings, or in the workplace.

Free Guy

Free Guy is Tron with an aw-shucks A.I.

Val

Val Kilmer uses the time he has left to pour himself into making art of various kinds in his modest Los Angeles studio, a place that he calls his “sacred space,” while he attempts to grapple with the inevitability of death.

The Green Knight

The Green Knight is the old tale told rather straight with a gothic sensibility, meaning there are no contemporary action theatrics to see here, just weird fantasy stuff.

Roadrunner

Roadrunner resists the urge to neatly package Bourdain’s life and death. It is a bold move.

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FULLER studio is pleased to partner with Brehm Film for this series. The reviews, articles, and other content in this series is entirely the work of Brehm Film.