• Latest
  • Trending
The Welcome Table Review

The Welcome Table Review: Climate Grief Takes a Seat on the Levee

Lionel Review

Lionel Review: Real Family Wounds Drive a Tender Road Movie

Direction Quad Review

Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

See You at Work Tomorrow! Review

See You at Work Tomorrow! Review: Office Burnout Finds a Deadpan Spark

The Fabulous Gold Harvesting Machine Review

The Fabulous Gold Harvesting Machine Review: Gold Dust and Family Duty

Shadows of Willow Cabin Review

Shadows of Willow Cabin Review: Two Men, One Cabin, Too Many Speeches

Benita Review

Benita Review: Grief Sorts Through the Archive

R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

Landship Review

Landship Review: Inside the Fray Bentos Nightmare

Rogue Trooper Review

Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

We Are Pat Review

We Are Pat Review: Reclaiming a Punchline Through Static

Hungry Review

Hungry Review: Tourist Horror With Tusks

Deer & Boy Review

Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Widow’s Bay

    Widow’s Bay Star Kingston Rumi Southwick Learned the Finale Twist From a Stranger Who Vanished the Next Day

    Zoey Deutch

    Netflix’s Voicemails for Isabelle Took Eight Years and a Last-Minute Magic Card to Reach the Screen

    Toy Story 5 Review

    Toy Story 5’s $312 Million Opening Makes the Case Hollywood Has Been Ignoring Families for Years

    Olivia Cooke

    ‘They Don’t Want to See Women Age’: Olivia Cooke on Playing a Grandmother at 32

    Tom Hanks

    Tom Hanks Warns Disney Could Clone Woody’s Voice With AI for Toy Story 6 — With or Without Him

    Adrian Chiarella

    Leviticus Is the Queer Horror Film of the Year — And Its Director Won’t Let the Parents Off the Hook

    Madonna

    Madonna Spent Four Years on a Biopic Universal Wouldn’t Fund and Netflix Couldn’t Unlock

    Carlos Mencia

    Carlos Mencia Pleads Not Guilty to 12 Felony Tax Charges, Walks Free After Bail Cut to $50,000

    Tom Holland and Zendaya

    Tom Holland Calls Insomniac’s Spider-Man Games “Absolutely Sensational” — and Zendaya Won’t Let Him Touch the Controller

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Lionel Review

    Lionel Review: Real Family Wounds Drive a Tender Road Movie

    The Welcome Table Review

    The Welcome Table Review: Climate Grief Takes a Seat on the Levee

    See You at Work Tomorrow! Review

    See You at Work Tomorrow! Review: Office Burnout Finds a Deadpan Spark

    The Fabulous Gold Harvesting Machine Review

    The Fabulous Gold Harvesting Machine Review: Gold Dust and Family Duty

    Shadows of Willow Cabin Review

    Shadows of Willow Cabin Review: Two Men, One Cabin, Too Many Speeches

    Benita Review

    Benita Review: Grief Sorts Through the Archive

    Landship Review

    Landship Review: Inside the Fray Bentos Nightmare

    Rogue Trooper Review

    Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    We Are Pat Review

    We Are Pat Review: Reclaiming a Punchline Through Static

  • Game Reviews
    Direction Quad Review

    Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

    Deer & Boy Review

    Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

    Craftlings Review

    Craftlings Review: Tiny Workers Build a Smarter Puzzle Machine

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

    Secret Paws - Cozy Apartments Review

    Secret Paws – Cozy Apartments Review: Tiny Cats, Big Perspective Tricks

    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Widow’s Bay

    Widow’s Bay Star Kingston Rumi Southwick Learned the Finale Twist From a Stranger Who Vanished the Next Day

    Zoey Deutch

    Netflix’s Voicemails for Isabelle Took Eight Years and a Last-Minute Magic Card to Reach the Screen

    Toy Story 5 Review

    Toy Story 5’s $312 Million Opening Makes the Case Hollywood Has Been Ignoring Families for Years

    Olivia Cooke

    ‘They Don’t Want to See Women Age’: Olivia Cooke on Playing a Grandmother at 32

    Tom Hanks

    Tom Hanks Warns Disney Could Clone Woody’s Voice With AI for Toy Story 6 — With or Without Him

    Adrian Chiarella

    Leviticus Is the Queer Horror Film of the Year — And Its Director Won’t Let the Parents Off the Hook

    Madonna

    Madonna Spent Four Years on a Biopic Universal Wouldn’t Fund and Netflix Couldn’t Unlock

    Carlos Mencia

    Carlos Mencia Pleads Not Guilty to 12 Felony Tax Charges, Walks Free After Bail Cut to $50,000

    Tom Holland and Zendaya

    Tom Holland Calls Insomniac’s Spider-Man Games “Absolutely Sensational” — and Zendaya Won’t Let Him Touch the Controller

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Lionel Review

    Lionel Review: Real Family Wounds Drive a Tender Road Movie

    The Welcome Table Review

    The Welcome Table Review: Climate Grief Takes a Seat on the Levee

    See You at Work Tomorrow! Review

    See You at Work Tomorrow! Review: Office Burnout Finds a Deadpan Spark

    The Fabulous Gold Harvesting Machine Review

    The Fabulous Gold Harvesting Machine Review: Gold Dust and Family Duty

    Shadows of Willow Cabin Review

    Shadows of Willow Cabin Review: Two Men, One Cabin, Too Many Speeches

    Benita Review

    Benita Review: Grief Sorts Through the Archive

    Landship Review

    Landship Review: Inside the Fray Bentos Nightmare

    Rogue Trooper Review

    Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    We Are Pat Review

    We Are Pat Review: Reclaiming a Punchline Through Static

  • Game Reviews
    Direction Quad Review

    Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

    Deer & Boy Review

    Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

    Craftlings Review

    Craftlings Review: Tiny Workers Build a Smarter Puzzle Machine

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

    Secret Paws - Cozy Apartments Review

    Secret Paws – Cozy Apartments Review: Tiny Cats, Big Perspective Tricks

    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
The Welcome Table Review

Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

Lionel Review: Real Family Wounds Drive a Tender Road Movie

Home Entertainment Movies

The Welcome Table Review: Climate Grief Takes a Seat on the Levee

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
8 minutes ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

A thousand-foot table on a New Orleans levee is a blunt image, which is exactly why it works. Josh Fox’s HBO documentary The Welcome Table places climate displacement inside a ritual of hospitality, then asks why the same world that can build such a table keeps spending its wealth on walls, raids, detention centers, and bureaucratic cruelty.

The setting carries its own indictment. New Orleans, marked by Hurricane Katrina and the political abandonment that followed, becomes a gathering point for people uprooted by fire, flood, drought, mudslides, extraction, and rising water.

Fox, returning to environmental filmmaking after Gasland, chooses performance and assembly over the colder grammar of graphs and expert panels. The result is messy, generous, often moving, and sometimes too convinced that its own gesture has solved its formal problem.

Disaster With Faces

The film is strongest when it leaves the table and follows the people who will later sit at it. Survivors of the Paradise, California fires describe fleeing with their baby, being told to seek safety in a parking lot, then watching flames swallow the place that was supposed to protect them.

Their return to the remains of their home gives the documentary one of its sharpest images: burned appliances and mattresses standing where ordinary life used to be. A climate crisis becomes a ruined bedroom, a blackened kitchen, a family memory turned into ash.

Fox finds a similar force in the coastal aftermath of Hurricane Irma, where a piano remains because it was too heavy to be carried away. That object says what several speeches cannot. It is domestic, absurdly stubborn, and useless in the way grief is useless. The Brazil section follows queer activists rebuilding after mudslides and torrential rains, giving the film a brief but vital sense of mutual aid as lived practice rather than slogan.

Also Read

  • Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time Review
    Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time Review: An…
  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Katrina: Come Hell and High Water Review
    Katrina: Come Hell and High Water Review: Dissecting…
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • best 2025 tv shows
    Gazettely's 30 Best TV Shows of 2025

In the Peruvian Amazon, a guide shows both the wounds left by resource extraction and the forest’s capacity to repair itself. The Australian families who must leave homes that technically survived floods widen the film’s definition of loss: a house can still stand after the world around it has become unlivable.

The Calabria sequence is the most politically charged. In Riace, a nearly emptied town becomes a counterargument to the panic around migration. Empty facilities could house newcomers. Migrants could revive a place hollowed out by earlier departures. Instead, a mayor faces punishment for treating hospitality as policy. The irony is severe: nations built by movement now criminalize movement.

The Wall Against the Table

Fox’s governing metaphor has the virtue of being almost childishly clear. A wall refuses. A table receives. The film returns to that contrast through images of immigration enforcement, anti-migrant politics, and border spectacle, positioning climate displacement as the next great test of political imagination.

The Welcome Table Review

The argument is not gentle. Carbon wealth has been accumulated by those least likely to drown first, burn first, starve first, or be told to move along first. The people who created the conditions of displacement are often the same people funding the architecture of exclusion.

That charge gives The Welcome Table its moral heat. It refuses the comforting fantasy that disaster is natural in any pure sense. A hurricane may be weather, but abandonment is policy. A wildfire may begin with wind and flame, but who gets warned, who has a car, who has insurance, who is allowed to rebuild, and who is treated as trespasser after losing a home are questions of power.

The wide shots of the levee table give this idea its cleanest cinematic form. Bodies stretch across the frame in communion, with clouds massing above them like an argument the sky has not finished making. When New Orleans music enters, especially through John Boutté’s presence, the gathering gains texture. Song here is not decoration. It is a civic language, the sound of people insisting on relation in a culture trained to sort suffering by passport, property value, and accent.

The Host in the Frame

The film’s weakness is also a question of power: who gets to speak, and for how long. Fox clearly wants to honor testimony, but his narration often steps between the audience and the people whose lives hold the film together. The problem is not the presence of a filmmaker. First-person documentary can be an honest form. Here, the voiceover too often explains what a face, a house ruin, a vacant street, or a song has already made plain.

At 130 minutes, the film also wanders through historical and legal frameworks that deserve attention, from colonial violence to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 1951 Refugee Convention. These passages are relevant, yet they flatten the film’s rhythm by turning lived experience into lecture architecture. The people at the table begin to feel like supporting evidence for an argument Fox has already prepared.

The music frequently rescues the film from that imbalance. Jazz, brass, and communal singing let grief breathe without polishing it into inspiration. The best moments allow catastrophe and joy to occupy the same air: a ruined town, a shared meal, a song that does not deny loss. Still, the documentary’s most radical promise is also the one it breaks most visibly. Everyone deserves a seat at the table, but the host keeps reaching for the microphone.

The HBO Original global crisis documentary The Welcome Table premiered across the United States on June 23, 2026, and is available for streaming on Max, Crave, and premium digital platforms. Directed by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Fox, the film charts a six-year journey across six continents to investigate the human toll of climate-driven displacement. It follows survivors of devastating environmental disasters who gather at a massive 1000-foot communal dinner table on a New Orleans levee to share personal histories of loss, policy failures, and mutual aid while building a collective vision for global refugee hospitality.

Where to Watch The Welcome Table (2026) Online

Unfortunately, we couldn't find any streaming offers.
Source: JustWatch

Full Credits

  • Title: The Welcome Table

  • Distributor: HBO, Max

  • Release date: June 23, 2026

  • Rating: TV-MA / 13+

  • Running time: 124 minutes

  • Director: Josh Fox

  • Writers: Josh Fox

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Josh Fox, Gabrielle Alicino, Doug Chapman, Molly Gandour, Darren Dean, John Boutté, Nancy Abraham, Lisa Heller, Anna Klein

  • Cast: Leo Farah, Chris Achilo, Nelton Yankur, Allie Stratta, Chris Obehi, Pauleteh Araújo, John Cameron Mitchell, Sunpie Barnes

  • Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Josh Fox

  • Editors: Josh Fox

  • Composer: John Boutté, Josh Fox, Handmade Moments, Don Vappie, Chris Obehi, Sabine McCalla, Helen Gillet

The Review

The Welcome Table

7 Score

The Welcome Table reaches its greatest force when people, ruins, music, and policy occupy the same frame. Its levee table is a magnificent civic image, and its stories of fire, flood, extraction, and migration give climate collapse human scale. Fox’s narration and 130-minute sprawl weaken that promise, often placing the filmmaker between the audience and the displaced people he gathered. Still, its central demand for hospitality over exclusion carries real moral pressure.

PROS

  • Striking levee-table image
  • Powerful climate-displacement stories
  • Rich New Orleans music
  • Sharp wall-versus-table metaphor

CONS

  • Fox’s narration crowds testimony
  • Overlong 130-minute structure
  • Some theoretical drift
  • Several subjects feel underused

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Allie StrattaChris AchiloChris ObehiDocumentaryFeaturedHBOJosh FoxLeo FarahNelton YankurPauleteh AraújoThe Welcome Table
Previous Post

Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

Next Post

Lionel Review: Real Family Wounds Drive a Tender Road Movie

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1117 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Citizen Vigilante Review: Uwe Boll Mistakes Vengeance for Justice

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Season Review: Hong Kong Glows While the Dialogue Sputters

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Time of Death Review: Michael Kelly Anchors a Grim Prison Mystery

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Sugar Season 2 Review
TV Shows

Sugar Season 2 Review: A Noir With a Telescope It Barely Uses

4 days ago
Voicemails for Isabelle Review
Movies

Voicemails for Isabelle Review: No Tom Hanks, and It Knows

4 days ago
EA Sports UFC 6 Review
Reviews Games

EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

5 days ago
I Will Find You Review
TV Shows

I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

5 days ago
Girls Like Girls Review
Movies

Girls Like Girls Review: Hayley Kiyoko Finds Her Voice Behind the Camera

6 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply