Wendy is an imaginative and, I think, moving rumination on youth and age, dreams and grief.
Mark Wahlberg stalking the streets of Boston, sporting his accent, a stream of profanity and beating up bad guys? Check.
Bombshell’s core message is one of empowerment. But the story it tells is a messy one.
This critically acclaimed Adam Sandler tragicomedy likely features the most vulgarity per minute of any film Plugged In has ever …
The movie’s friendship and self-sacrifice-promoting decoder signals counterbalance its gratuitous guffaws.
This reboot’s empowering messages are ultimately undermined by its content concerns.
This YA adaptation features tons of teen drama as well as a storyline that perhaps glorifies suicide.
The Banker offers respect for capitalism, a social conscience and a sense of fun—not a combination you find often.
This horror/comedy/fantasy mash-up tries to make light of Satan worship and spiritual hauntings.
For some families, Playmobil: The Movie will teeter right on the edge of what’s appropriate for their kids.
This film proffers a disturbing message: that murder can be inspirational if it’s a certain kind of “justified” murder.
While this film is factual, well-made and eye-opening, it isn’t necessarily … enjoyable.
This movie delves deeply into the true wages of sin—what it costs the sinner, and what it costs those impacted …
Frozen II is not a slam-dunk, take-the-whole-fam movie for everyone.
Knives Out layers on a bit more content than your typical Agatha Christie story.