Review: Girls Trip
Tiffany Haddish. Remember the name. Best known for her work in Keanu and television's The Carmichael Show, Haddish is sure to break...
Review: Chuck (aka The Bleeder)
"You don't know me. Well, you don't know you know me," says Chuck Wepner at the start of Chuck (originally titled The Bleeder). Indeed,...
Review: Atomic Blonde
Atomic Blonde, based on Antony Johnson and Sam Hart's 2012 graphic novel The Coldest City, is the first solo directorial effort from...
Review: The Wall
The year is 2007, President George W. Bush has declared victory in Iraq, and operations are winding down. Somewhere in the Iraqi desert...
Review: Everything, Everything
Movies about the beautiful dying girl finding love are modern-day fairy tales. Never mind that death is around the corner, a girl's happy...
Review: Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets
The plot of Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets goes something like this: an unnamed paradise planet populated by the iridescent,...
Review: The Big Sick
Romantic comedies traffic in conflict. It's not necessarily the will they or won't they, but rather how will they despite all the reasons...
Review: Wakefield
"Who hasn't had the impulse to put life on hold for a moment?" says Howard Wakefield (Bryan Cranston). Impulse yes, but very rarely the...
Review: Dunkirk
Simplicity is often the most difficult achievement. There's nowhere to hide - every element must be unimpeachable. Christopher Nolan...
Review: L'odyssée (The Odyssey)
Distilling a life into two hours is no easy task. Cover the milestones and a biographical film comes off as by-the-numbers and lacking in...