The 7 Indie Films You Must See This April

April is here and with it comes a considerable month for specialty film releases Stateside thanks to new films from Jim Jarmusch, Lars von Trier, Jonathan Glazer, David Gordon Green and Errol Morris, among others. It

certainly makes for a lot of options, though here’s a lucky 7 in particular we

think you should check out:

Director: Jim Jarmusch

Cast: Tom Hiddleston, Tilda Swinton, Mia Wasikowska, John Hurt, Anton Yelchin, Slimane Dazi

Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics

Current Criticwire average: A- (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? If the fashionable bloodsuckers

of the “Twilight” movies traded their frantic stares for expressions of

ennui, they might have something in common with Adam (Tom Hiddleston)

and Eve (Tilda Swinton), the retro cool vampires at the heart of Jim

Jarmusch’s “Only Lovers Left Alive.” But that could never happen.

Jarmusch’s characters are always too hip for the mainstream, which he

reminds viewers by making a welcome return to the realm of deadpan

comedies that put his work on the map in the first place. Not that he

ever drifted too far from it. A centuries-old couple bored with

contemporary society, Adam and Eve spend part of the movie living

separately in Detroit and Tangiers before uniting at each location,

muttering refrains about modern culture and recalling better times. They

have sparse company in their understated despair: An enjoyable John

Hurt surfaces in a few scenes to play the stately Christopher Marlowe,

still hurt by living eternally in the shadow of William Shakespeare.

Eve’s horny younger sister Ava (Mia Wasikowska) crashes at Adam’s

Detroit home in search of an excuse to party and briefly causes problems

that, if they didn’t involve casual violence, wouldn’t seem out of

place in a chick flick. But “Only Lovers Left Alive,” despite its

unapologetically silly developments, also contains the wistfulness and

wine-drenched romanticism of “Before Sunrise” and its sequels. For Adam

and Eve, however, the coming dawn presents a literal barrier to enjoying

their lives together to the fullest extent. Read Indiewire’s full review here.

Watch the trailer below:

Director: Jonathan Glazer

Cast: Scarlett Johansson, Robert J. Goodwin, Kryštof Hádek, Paul Brannigan, Michael Moreland, Scott Dymond, Jeremy McWilliams

Distributor: A24

Current Criticwire average: A- (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? The premise is deceptively simple:

Michel Faber’s 2000 science fiction novel “Under the Skin” follows an

alien tasked with kidnapping earthlings and selling their bodies for

consumption back home. Adapting the material into his first feature

since 2004’s “Birth,” music video director Jonathan Glazer only borrows

half that scenario, following the extraterrestrial seductress (a

virtually unrecognizable Scarlett Johansson) as she repeatedly nabs

hapless male victims while her motives remain mysterious. A totally

wacky head-trip with midnight movie sensibilities and a daring avant

garde spirit, Glazer’s movie meanders aplenty, but owes much to

Johansson’s intense commitment to a strangely erotic, unnerving

performance unlike anything she has done before. Read Indiewire’s full review here.

Watch the trailer below:

3. Nymphomaniac, Volume II (April 4)

Director: Lars von Trier

Cast: Charlotte Gainsbourg, Shia LaBeouf, Uma Thurman, Connie Nielsen,

Stellan Skarsgård, Stacy Martin, Christian Slater, Jamie Bell, Willem

Dafoe, Mia Goth, Sophie Kennedy Clark, Michael Pas, Jean-Marc Barr, Udo

Kier

Distributor: Magnolia

Current Criticwire average: B (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? A new Lars Von Trier movie always elicits a mixture of excitement and unease, but “Nymphomaniac” is on another level. Part two of his two-part, four-hour-plus epic (the first volume is in theaters now, just FYI), which stars Charlotte Gainsbourg as the sex-addicted woman of the title, promises plenty of explicit nudity and outrageous exchanges — along with more than a modicum of brains. Reviews suggest that Von Trier’s film, which features a cast that also includes Jamie Bell, Stellan Skarsgaard and Shia LaBeouf among many other familiar faces, brings an enticing literary and philosophical sensibility to its lewd subject matter. It’s another reminder that no matter how much people like to characterize Von Trier as a provocateur, the ideas embedded in his work resonate even louder than the shocks.

Watch the trailer below:

4. Joe (April 11)

Director: David Gordon Green

Cast: Nicolas Cage, Tye Sheridan, Ronie Gene Blevins, Gary Poulter

Distributor: Lionsgate

Current Criticwire average: B+ (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? A dozen years ago, Nicolas Cage

was still considered a serious actor and David Gordon Green was

considered a promising new filmmaker. A few years later, both of their

reputations shifted dramatically: Cage became the butt of countless

jokes about his overacting in subpar genre efforts and Green took a

curious detour into largely derided studio comedies. Green started

crawling back to the understated narrative style that put him on the map

with his strange twist on the buddy movie formula “Prince Avalanche”

earlier this year, while Cage hasn’t done much worth talking about since

2009’s “Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans.” But both men finally

get the chance to hit their sweet spots with the moody Southern gothic

drama “Joe,” the very definition of a return to form. Read Indiewire’s

full review here.

Watch the trailer below:

5. Blue Ruin (April 25)

Director: Jeremy Saulnier

Cast: Macon Blair, Devin Ratray, Amy Hargreaves, Kevin Kolack, Eve Plumb, David Thompson, David W. Thompson, Brent Werzner, Stacy Rock, Sidné Anderson

Distributor: RADiUS-TWC

Current Criticwire average: A- (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? The quiet life of a beach bum is upended by dreadful news. He sets off for his childhood home to carry out an act of vengeance but proves an inept assassin and finds himself in a brutal fight to protect his estranged family. This is “Blue Ruin,” which has been winning over film festival audiences left and right since it debuted at Cannes last Spring, and almost a year later will surely do the same in US theaters. A tense and unexpected film from up and coming filmmaker Jeremy Saulnier, it is most surely a film you should go see this April…

Watch the trailer below:

Director: Errol Morris

Distributor: RADiUS-TWC

Current Criticwire average: B+ (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? There’s no doubting Morris’

presence in “The Unknown Known,” both as the aggressive interrogator

behind the lens and through the darkly witty aura of mystery he uses to

enshroud Rumsfeld’s testimonies. Aided by a typically first-rate score

by Danny Elfman, the documentary creates an ominous atmosphere to frame

Rumsfeld’s unsurprisingly disingenuous and frequently digressive

anecdotes as the aging government official recounts his final days in

the Bush Administration with a mixture of pragmatism and naïveté. Read

Indiewire’s full review here.

Watch the trailer below:

7. Locke (April 25)

Director: Steven Knight

Cast:

Tom Hardy, Ruth Wilson, Andrew Scott, Olivia Colman, Tom Holland, Ben

Daniels, Bill Milner, Alice Lowe, Danny Webb, Lee Ross, Silas Carson,

Kirsty Dillon

Distributor: A24

Current Criticwire average: B+ (see all grades)

Why Is It a “Must See”? You’ll want to see “Locke,”

opening in limited release in the U.S. on April 25th, because it stars

Tom Hardy as a guy who spends the whole movie in his car rushing

someplace important we aren’t immediately made privy to, and dealing

with a whole lot of consequences via numerous phone conversations. It’s

from British writer-director Stephen Knight (he wrote “Eastern Promises”

and “Dirty Pretty Things”), and it is unexpectedly riveting, thanks to

an intense performance from Hardy that will come as no surprise to those

who’ve seen him in far bigger films.

Watch the trailer below:

Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.