Pixar once again encourages us to think as we laugh and marvel and cringe and smile.
This animated film offers young filmgoers an age-appropriate look at one of the worst conflicts in history.
This drama reminds us that dwelling on the ifs in life is no way to live it.
This film does something unexpected: It suggests that winning the culture war isn’t what matters most for Christians.
Isle of Dogs has some nice messages and a worthy moral. But it also can be sad and kinda disturbing …
This is your standard, plastic, pink flamingo of a movie—colorful and cute and maybe even fun, but kinda tacky, too.
I was skeptical that a movie based on a song could work—no matter how great that song was. But I’ll …
A Wrinkle in Time is no masterpiece. But it still has a wrinkle or two of its own that families …
This stop-motion flick is all just zany, cockamamie clay craziness designed to make your kids cackle.
Peter Rabbit is exactly what you’d expect¬¬—except for a few scenes that are actually more redemptive than the trailers suggest.
Mixed in with all the magicking in this animated flick there’s a very firm message about rejecting all that spellcasting …
This tender tale’s portrait of brokenness and emotional healing is more appropriate for older audiences than younger ones.
Paddington 2 is just about as cuddly—and surprisingly inspiring—a sequel as you could hope to find.
The Greatest Showman paints a portrait of the metaphorical tightrope P.T. Barnum walked, and we’re drawn into his mesmerizing world.
Like the flower-loving bull at its heart, this Ferdinand isn’t just another one-trick Toro.














