This fast-moving, rock-’em-sock-’em pic is what it is: a matinee creature-feature begging for a tub of butter-soaked popcorn.
The more you like a flick, the more it’ll potentially influence you. And Love, Simon aims to influence.
This Lara Croft reboot does female empowerment right, albeit in a slightly over-the-top, cinematic video game sort of way.
This dark comedy paints its supposed hero’s south-of-the-border torments in crude and nasty brush strokes.
Thoroughbreds uses its detached female leads to unfold a slow-boiling commentary on our emotionally damaged society.
I think we can all agree that actioners like The Hurricane Heist major in what we might call “the unbelievable …
This horror flick is exactly what you think it is: would-be killers chasing around would-be victims with sharp things.
This film is emotionally raw, sometimes gruesome, and scattered with wince-inducing interactions.
Death Wish suggests that society’s most troubling issues can best be addressed by the blazing barrel of a vigilante’s gun.
Along with its madcap mishaps, Game Night also slaps viewers upside the head with some less-than-savory stuff.
There’s a lot going on in Annihilation—a tense, freaky, bloody sci-fi rumination on the cyclical nature of life, death and …
Romantically minimizing the profound reality of gender, as this film does, is a recipe for confusion and heartache.
This movie tells us that Samson was “a man whose heart was as vast as his strength.” It seems to …
Alek, Spencer and Anthony are heroes whose courage saved myriad lives. It’s no mystery why someone would want to portray …
Throughout this dual-language film one thing is certain: family can be crazy.














