“Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story” Review
Even after the tsunami of superhero films that have swarmed the cinema of the 21st century, my favorite of the sub-genre still remains 1978’s Superman. Beyond its retro wholesomeness and
Even after the tsunami of superhero films that have swarmed the cinema of the 21st century, my favorite of the sub-genre still remains 1978’s Superman. Beyond its retro wholesomeness and
The world of parents and teachers is painted with thick claustrophobia in Armand. The inciting incident is in regards to the titular six-year-old boy having been accused of raping his
While the surface of MadS seems like another horror film trying to match the one-shot wonder of One Cut of the Dead, that would reduce such gritty brilliance. The film
Stop-motion animation has the remarkable quality of feeling real with its practical puppets while remaining whimsical in a world built one frame at a time. From the adapted conversations of
Heretic is as much a religious horror-thriller as it is a philosophical mind game. It challenges faith, sure, but it also questions trust and control. This isn’t a simple debate
Brothers is a dumb comedy that’s just dumb enough to work. Not to be so dumb, it’s brilliant, as was the declaration in the Glass Onion, which Detective Blanc shot
Lonely Planet is a romance flick so timid that it feels like a waste of Laura Dern and Liam Hemsworth. Both are excellent choices for a romance, and they seem like a unique
True crime tales of serial killers have become so abundant that they tend to blur and desensitize the very subject. Woman of the Hour could have fallen into that same
This movie’s sobering moment is when the one-legged wrestler Anthony Robles receives a pep talk from his high school coach Bobby Williams. Bobby tells the conflicted Anthony that there’s no
Lurking within every scene of Conclave is an abundance of questioning, stretching further than the primary proposition of who will be the new Pope. Faith, politics, and gender all swirl