Military Wives deals realistically with the reality of war and deployment—especially its effects on those who stay behind.
A strong undercurrent of introspection swirls about as Coogan and Brydon explore the inevitability of aging and mortality.
This big-screen take on Sega’s anthropomorphized cobalt cannonballer is mostly cute and cuddly.
By Pixar’s own high standards, Onward is a bit of a disappointment.
As bleak and as uncomfortable as this film often feels, Downhill ultimately has some heartening things to say about marriage.
The promise of this witty, PG-rated period piece is briefly undermined by some surprising content.
Scoob! is a movie that doesn’t quite know what it wants to be when it grows up.
Strip away the language, airbrush out the blood, and you’ve got pretty much the same movie, only better.
Valley Girl—a remake of Nicholas Cage’s much raunchier, R-rated 1983 version—still has its fair share of PG-13-level concerns.
The Half of It comes packing the two-punch combo of same-sex attraction and subtle elbows thrown at people of faith.
Despite embracing some admirable goals, this R-rated dramedy comes with a slew of content issues.
Through this terrible family, we see what a good family looks like—and why, in fact, it’s so important.
It’s been 25 years since these self-proclaimed “bad boys for life” first arrived on the big screen, and not much …
Although The Sword in the Stone certainly delves into the world of magic and sorcery, it’s meant to be light …