The Aeronauts Review: Going to Heaven in a Handbasket
Tom Harper’s ascent to the stratosphere has moments of tension, but they’re undercut by a choppy narrative and a shallow approach to its true story.
Tom Harper’s ascent to the stratosphere has moments of tension, but they’re undercut by a choppy narrative and a shallow approach to its true story.
Past Lives, The Giant Gila Monster, Poker Face and More!
Asteroid City, Metalocalypse, Impulse, Jon Moritsugu and More!
Build your collection with some (or all!) of these titles, coming to stores in June.
It’s a shallow, sour, bizarrely mean cape flick that prioritizes tacky, hollow nostalgia-baiting over fine work from its co-stars.
Reject modernity, embrace physical media.
Because in the world of streaming, nothing lasts forever.
Simon and Pelecanos’ return to Baltimore is a clear-eyed look at pervasive police corruption.
The composer discusses her big solo break for George Clooney’s awards-season drama.
Sylvester Stallone’s ludicrous tough guy cop picture is the most ludicrous tough guy cop picture.
Ken Loach’s Sorry We Missed You, a thrilling doc about Showgirls, prestige Stephen King adaptations and others mark July’s DVD and Blu-ray releases.
Powerful indies and revisionist superhero series dot some of June’s most addictive home video offerings.
Burton’s most deeply personal film is his humanistic, black-and-white celebration of the Worst Filmmaker of All Time.
Despite brilliant performances and an intriguingly cerebral attitude, Sean Penn’s Hulu-set space race fails to reach for the stars, keeping its feet disappointingly on terra firma. This piece was originally posted on Alcohollywood Let’s get this out of the way first: if you’re looking for The First to be a rollicking space adventure about Sean … The First TV Review: Hulu Ventures Into Space, Stays Disappointingly Earthbound