The Ballad of Wallis Island is a resonant, serene picture whose cast doesn't go to waste.
All by mike crowley
The Ballad of Wallis Island is a resonant, serene picture whose cast doesn't go to waste.
Warfare is simply about an event that's about survival and heroism over a traditional narrative
A Working Man is a clichéd one-liner B-grade movie, and there's nothing wrong with that.
As long as audiences keep paying money for the live-action remakes, Disney will continue to fall into that black hole of trite movies.
The Alto Knights is just another mob movie that's overshadowed by Nicholas Pileggi's previous superior work.
There's some dark humor to be had here, and I like it.
The plot is a little muddled. It was difficult to figure out what was going on at times. Yet, it doesn't hinder an intricate study of what love really is and the strained reliance we have on our protection agencies.
Nobody does zany quite like Bong Joon Ho. Mickey 17 is no exception.
With enough tension and strong aesthetics, Last Breath is an absorbing enough story that will have you rooting for the characters during their retrieval mission.
Although The Monkey is a horror film, it's far more effective as a comedy.
Captain America: Brave New World isn't brave or new. It's very much the same, with a sense of disorganization.
Parthenope is the type of film cinephiles, and people pretending to be cinephiles like to drool all over instead of seeing it for what it really is.
Like many logical loopholes the movie takes, Love Hurts lacks whatever sweetness it pretends to have in a disposable film that will be forgotten as fast as a piece of heart candy.
The movie is laugh-out-loud funny while being fully engrossed in its pleasure for gore.
By making the wolf more of a man, the audience sees something that's tangible and gritty, resulting in something scarier than the typical werewolf pic.
The movie's trying to be smart, but it's far from
If you love Se7en and have the newest 4K television with a DTS-HD 5.1 surround home theater, you might be in for a more delightful treat than I had.
In many ways, Babygirl is a spiritual successor to Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut. Both films are about sexual temptation that disrupts a marriage. Plus, both films take place during Christmas! It's what I like to call an unconventional Christmas film
Other than impressing audiences with its musical numbers, there's a complete numbness of interest in A Complete Unknown.