Setting aside all of its eyesore-inducing cinematography and wasted cast, cinema’s most blatant attempt yet to capitalize on COVID-19, an action-infused romance set in a nightmare scenario imagined future, can be boiled down to one word: offensive.
Read MoreAfter spending the past few years in the Supporting Role category, Riz Ahmed’s latest performance in Amazon Prime Video “Sound of Metal” pushes him to the Lead and proves, he’s worth the part.
Read MoreAbsent for the last six years, director and auteur, David Fincher returns with an elegant, cynical look at old-school Hollywood and the parallels to today.
Read MoreIn “Letter to You”, Bruce Springsteen captures the creation of his latest album with longtime collaborator Thom Zimny. While it might be a bit too reminiscent of their previous film, it also has enough of a different perspective to offer in order to satisfy fans of The Boss.
Read MoreBill Murray turns in yet another delightful performance in his big-screen reunion with Sofia Coppola, and his chemistry with Rashida Jones allows “On the Rocks” to overcome the flaws that become apparent when he isn’t on screen.
Read MoreIt shouldn’t come as a shock to say that Sacha Baron Cohen, and Borat is the microscope on American society we didn’t know we needed. In fact, we ironically didn’t even know it was coming until it was revealed that Cohen had secretly finished the film last month.
Read MoreEven if you don’t have COVID-19, President Trump’s response to the pandemic is enough to make anyone sick. The new documentary, ‘Totally Under Control,’ demonstrates the recent lack of an efficient and cohesive plan of action to stop the spread of Coronavirus from the current President of the United States.
Read MoreShithouse stars 23-Year-Old director and writer Cooper Raiff, who bases the film after his own difficult college experience. The film won the top prize at the 2020 SXSW and is the first glimpse at Gen Z mumblecore.
Read MoreNetflix’s “Enola Holmes” is a fresh, pop-feminist spin on the beloved detective genre that is well worth your watch time.
Read More“Pieces of a Woman” is not for the faint of heart; it’s a truly heartbreaking, intimate, unflinching, and harrowing look at one woman’s unimaginable loss and her process to recovery.
Read MoreChloe Zhao’s “Nomadland”, based on the novel by Jessica Bruder is the story of a forgotten part of the Boomer generation who has to keep moving to work, and working to live.
Read MoreIt has the makings of a Victorian horror film, however within writer/director Sean Durkin’s “The Nest”, the horror lies in the modern family dynamic.
Read More“Concrete Cowboy” is a story about a forgotten aspect of Black-America which needs to be told. That is why it is such a shame that it gets lost in an otherwise formulaic ‘coming of age’ film for inner-city youth.
Read More“The Devil All the Time” is the newest Netflix Original psychological thriller starring Tom Holland and Robert Pattinson based on Donald Ray Pollock’s best-selling 2011 novel of the same name.
Read More“Lost Girls and Love Hotels” perfectly captures the love story that finds you when you need it the most and changes your entire world before leaving you broken. Through a glossy finish, the film shows an upfront & honest look at depression and how some choose to confront that pain.
Read More“Get the Hell Out” is a Taiwanese horror-comedy from director I-Fan Wang that premiered this weekend at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).
Read MoreDisney’s newest live-action remake, “Mulan”, falls short of its animated predecessor. Though having important films and strong mainstream representation, the film trips over its technical flaws and lack of originality.
Read More‘Bleeding Audio’ documentary about pop punk band ‘The Matches’ is a beautiful homage to the band and their fans from director Chelsea Christer.
Read More“The New Mutants” from director Josh Boone is a film that has become one of the most anticipated movies in recent years purely because of the drama and rumors that circulated around its many pushbacks.
Read MoreAfter watching “Tenet,” I’m not sure how Christopher Nolan’s brain truly functions. Is it on a different wavelength to everyone else’s? I’m not sure, but he’s taken his love of testing his audience with time-bending puzzles to the next level—a level I didn’t even expect Nolan to reach…for better or worse.
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