“There’s only one guarantee,” Irish crime boss John Rooney tells his No. 1 enforcer, Michael Sullivan. “None of us will see heaven.”
“There’s only one guarantee,” Irish crime boss John Rooney tells his No. 1 enforcer, Michael Sullivan. “None of us will see heaven.”
There’s no escaping the fact that “Boys and Girls” is a sloppy, teen-ized retread of the 1989 R-rated comedy “When Harry Met Sally.”
There’s a profound question lurking in this twangy tearjerker: Why is the word strong in its title? Gwyneth Paltrow’s crooning character may claim she’s hearty, but she’s far from it. Is her story?
We all know that our lives are deeply interwoven with those people who share our time and space. But every once in a while something happens that jolts us into a greater appreciation of how entwined we truly are.
Christian director Michael Landon Jr. turns his attention away from Janette Oke and toward Francine Rivers, trading the open prairie for the coves and confines of Appalachia.
Lemony Snicket’s Roald Dahl-inspired writing takes on a decidedly Tim Burton-esque tone as it mopes its way onto celluloid.
A quarter of the world’s population looked to England for leadership before WWII. But its own people doubted the competence of their stammering king.
“Erin Brockovich” presents moviegoers with the true story of a woman who transcends her surroundings, takes on the big dogs, and wins.
Mandy Moore stars as a Christian teenager who faces down fear, loneliness and loss while searching for ‘her miracle.’
Evan Rachel Wood is Diana before the school shooting. Uma Thurman is Diana 15 years after. Together they show her making the many choices that form her.
Disenchanted with her role as a maid, Amy Adams gets into a life of crime … scene cleanup in this indie-style film from the producers of ‘Little Miss Sunshine.’
‘The Matrix is everywhere. It is all around us. … It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you to the truth.’