Review: A Cure for Wellness
If you're looking for a film in which someone rips their own face off, people are set on fire, eels are forced down people's throats, the...
Review: The Discovery
The Discovery begins with Robert Redford's Dr. Thomas Harper as he begrudgingly agrees to a television interview about his compelling and...
Review: Life
Though its essential premise is Alien meets Gravity, Life is nonetheless a wholly solid and satisfying space thriller. It may have the...
Review: A United Kingdom
At the beginning of A United Kingdom, set in post-WWII London, Seretse Khama (David Oyelowo) is being recalled by his uncle (Vusi Kenene)...
Review: Beauty and the Beast
Most remakes, adaptations and updates are superfluous by nature and Disney's $160 million live-action re-staging of its 1991 animated...
Review: T2 Trainspotting
It's been 21 years since Renton chose life (and stole his mates' money) at the end of Danny Boyle's generation-defining Trainspotting,...
Review: The Space Between Us
"I want to go to Mars...to live there...because I would be living proof that life on Mars is possible...that mankind can make a fresh...
Review: Palm Trees in the Snow (Palmeras en la nieve)
Based on the best-selling novel by Luz Gabás, Palm Trees in the Snow (Palmeras en la nieve) is a visually beautiful multi-generational...
Review: Brimstone
Brimstone, the first English-language film from Dutch director Martin Koolhoven, is a two-and-a-half-hour period drama that often plays...
Review: Kong Skull Island
At its most entertaining when one doesn't take it as seriously as it often takes itself, Kong: Skull Island is an exhilarating...