Dumb and Dumber To
A joyous return to form after the – frankly pretty boring – misfire that was Dumb and Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd.
Keep ReadingA joyous return to form after the – frankly pretty boring – misfire that was Dumb and Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd.
Keep ReadingThere is a great poster for this ‘film’, and it’s a great title. But it lives and dies on the promise of those two things, and completely wastes them.
Keep ReadingI can see why the subject matter might put people off. We’ve got yet another race-based, popcorn dissection of social ills, and the potentially frivolous treatment of a period of history that still stings like a motherfucker for Black Americans and whites alike.
Keep ReadingIs this better than Train to Busan? No, probably not, but it’s close in its own way. It’s better than Seoul Station, which was OK, but Peninsula is a must-see.
Keep ReadingA feature-length, non-theatrical anime from Toho and Netflix, which forms the first chapter of a series in three parts. This was good, mostly. The CGI-hybrid style of animation was equal parts stunning and distracting. It’s obviously computer-rendered, but shaded in a way that simulates the flat look of hand-drawn. It can sometimes look weirdly cheap-looking, to my eyes at least, …
Keep ReadingPure popcorn thriller, despite its many, many attempts to appear otherwise.
Keep ReadingThere’s no real need to make pastiche good/bad movies when bad movies like The Ninja Squad are so, so good.
Keep ReadingAn extremely stylish and exuberant take on the money-for-dares/dangerous game narrative, buoyed by a brilliant, catchy soundtrack, and propelled along by beautiful neon colours.
Keep ReadingIn a nutshell: not just a bunch of stuff you’ve seen before in every other dark Victorian London-set mystery tale.
Keep ReadingIt looks so bad I almost wanted to design them a few pop-up banners to place in the background for a more professional look.
Keep ReadingThe joke about this film was always that, historically, humans meeting dinosaurs and Raquel Welch’s salon-perfect hairdo are both naively inaccurate. Which kind of misses the point. This is a fantasy romp.
Keep ReadingMeticulously-constructed, actors deploying their craft with expert precision, and never once pandering to the idea that the audience requires spoonfeeding. These are the hallmarks of this film.
Keep ReadingThere are downsides to Tusk for sure. But whatever. It’s a fairly tight ride with little flab. And the fate of our would-be walrus protagonist is, against all odds, surprisingly sad.
Keep ReadingThis near-epic return to the world of The Shining is world-building in the way that all the best sequels are.
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