There’s a bit of comedy and some heroism in Venom: Let There Be Carnage. But mostly there’s just … carnage.
Copshop stirs its mystery, manslaughter and muck into a moussaka of ’70s pulp and winking bravado.
Nobody is truly “perfect.” But that doesn’t mean they can’t be perfect for you, this raunchy Netflix comedy reminds us.
Passing comes with a heavy message, a few content concerns and, unfortunately, no real redemption.
Red Notice is full of the same formulaic and shopworn content you might expect from a pic like this.
If Tammy Faye is humanized here, the faith that drove her can be dehumanized much of the time.
Army of Thieves steers clear of brain-gnashing and delivers a light-hearted heist tale with a romantic-comedy twist.
This tale starts off as a wounded woman’s search for resolution and slowly inches its way into palpable darkness.
Most of this pic feels a bit too aimlessly rambling, impossibly coincidental and pointlessly thin.
Tournament of Champions is little more than 90 minutes of evil torment, frantic searches, overacted screeches and foul language.
Kristen Bell stars in Queenpins, a dramedy about a desperate former Olympian running a massive and illegal coupon scam.
To get into this pic, you have to kinda enjoy seeing a woman being pounded, stabbed and bloodily abused.
The vast majority of this film wallows in unnecessary violence, a handful of profanity and a storyline that doesn’t quite …














