While this is undeniably a poor movie, it is indeed fun to watch, but not taken as a representation of Juan Piquer Simón’s finest work.
Read MoreFor an adaptation of an ancient work, it is startling how much Nolan’s recontextualizing of Troy’s destruction speaks to societal failures we are living through over 2,000 years later.
Read MoreThis is no cloying tale of Americana, all wrapped in nostalgia and summertime haze. Clad in cool undertones, this is an ultra-realistic, dreary portrayal of life in rural small-town America, where mundanity and its discontents take center stage.
Read MoreBack to the Future is not about time travel. It is about the universe looking at the McFly family tree, sighing deeply, and sending an Appalachian Time Lord in a DeLorean to make sure the branches do not touch.
Read MoreTruth be told there’s a lot to like here, but unfortunately the movie kinda whiffs a lot more.
Read MoreI’m not sure about Penny Slot, but I’m pretty sure that Showgirls 2 is a gift from heaven. Doubly so for the woman who created it.
Read MoreObsession offers a more existential terror by pulling no punches and offering no grace to its characters. But a predictable plot and messy construction can’t save the movie from itself.
Read MoreThe Toy accidentally lets Richard Pryor be Richard Pryor, not the cleaned-up, family-friendly studio product Pryor, but the Pryor who understood that being a black man in America meant performing a version of yourself that kept the room comfortable while the actual work happened somewhere behind your eyes.
Read MoreOlivia Wilde’s The Invite might aim to be a meaningful excavation of a relationship on the rocks, but this marriage drama isn’t covering any new terrain.
Read MoreHayley Kiyoko knows that not everyone watching Girls Like Girls was a teenage lesbian, but we all were teenagers at one point. We all dealt with a world that didn’t understand us in some way. And if we were lucky, at some point during those years we got to fall in love for the first time.
Read MoreIn the mid-1990s, Japanese filmmaker Kaizo Hayashi took a crack at the Hammer character in a trilogy of offbeat crime capers.
Read MoreIt’s as if Michael Sarnoski was so put off by the success of A Quiet Place: Day One that he decided to make a movie that is nearly impossible to enjoy.
Read MoreIn Tuner, the narrative feature debut of co-writer/director Daniel Roher, Roher puts the risk-taking in the hands of the filmmakers in attempting to make the romantic plot the focus of the film, with the criminal storyline taking a backseat.
Read MoreJust like Nope gives us a thrilling finale and a printed image that means our heroes “succeeded,” The Drama gives us the messiest wedding possible while leaving us with an image of the happy couple in their wedding clothes ready to start their new life. They’re completely disheveled and all of their other relationships are in shambles, but they are ultimately still together.
Read MoreRudd is charming, and Jonas is excellent. Power Ballad isn’t a bad film, but it doesn’t measure up to either the fine work of its leads or the best of Carney’s past work. It’s good for one go round.
Read MoreLayering imagery in its liquid prowling camera, inky shadows and foggy alleys, Terrible exudes effortless cool with splashes of modern ultraviolence, ending in a downbeat cliffhanger and a switch to eye-popping color for a preview of the sequels.
Read MoreMake no mistake, The Sheep Detectives, as a film, is strange. However, using sheep as a metaphor for groupthink versus individualism, commodification, and prejudice works.
Read More‘I’m here, I’m Homoti, get used to it.’
Read MoreDespite its oddball ending and workmanlike production, Riverbend is a noteworthy blend of drive-in shoot ‘em up and radical historical revisionism.
Read MoreThe act of watching Alpha is better described as deflating and tedious, a filmmaker doing some impressive moves, but ultimately stumblingly to the finish line.
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