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.
Let’s just say that The Harder They Fall is pretty much a dissertation on how not to follow the Ten …
Candyman isn’t sweet. It was never intended to be. But its excesses are enough to choke on.
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.
The Electric Life of Louis Wain proffers a poignant look at a strange man who made the world we live …
Snake Eyes knows what its audience wants: action, action, action. And that’s just what it delivers—in scores of body bags.
For those who deign to brave the perils and let their feet sink into the surf-soaked sand, it’s an interesting …
A gruesome, eye-gouging, hack-me-with-a-machete smorgasbord.
There’s Someone Inside Your House feels like an updated version of past gorefests. But it’s mired in the same predictable …
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.














