Though Voyagers is free of really explicit content, it’s still chockful of PG-13 levels of violence and suggestive scenes.
The Mitchells vs. the Machines is fun, sweet and smart. It strays just a bit—but for some, that’ll be enough …
Walking With Herb (screened by Fathom Events at theaters nationwide April 30, May 1 and May 3) left me scratching …
A thoughtful cinematic journey of recovery for some, but a potentially dark road for others.
The Marksman makes for a rather depressing and cheerless trip to the movies.
Together Together offers an interesting, at times crude, springboard into a conversation about surrogacy.
If the screenwriters had throttled back, if they’d kept what you hear as clean as what you see, this Netflix …
Heart-snatching, entrail-spilling, limb-hacking, body-splitting Mortal Kombat gore flows unabated.
As superhero sequels go, especially DC superhero sequels, Wonder Woman 1984 is pretty top-shelf.
What starts out as a grotesque horror movie morphs into something more akin to sci-fi about halfway through.
It’s violent and crass and profane, of course. And it still manages to be very dull and tedious anyway.
This gruesome, unsettling horror pic mixes pagan mysticism, science, witchy ritual and torn flesh.
This film’s focus on Eastern spirituality—especially reincarnation—will make it a nonstarter for many Christian viewers.
This film about acceptance also embraces thinly veiled visual and verbal nods that reference LGBTQ stereotypes.
These more realistic-looking heroes can go raw in all the wrong ways. Fun? Maybe. For families? Maybe not.