Guy Pearce Slums It In “Disturbing the Peace”
A limp. microbudget Texas actioner that gives whole new meaning to the term “lone-star state.”
A limp. microbudget Texas actioner that gives whole new meaning to the term “lone-star state.”
The military courtroom drama has its moments, but is more notable for where it sent the director next.
An often-overlooked decade for horror gets the spotlight, & we’ll tell you what to watch & what to skip.
Latest Liam Neeson thriller is beneath all involved.
This Australian animated adventure will prove familiar, if inoffensive, even to younger moviegoers.
Michael B. Jordan plays a merciless avenger to great effect in a fascinatingly anti-Tom-Clancy Tom Clancy adaptation.
Gal Gadot remains great in the title role, but the sequel does too little, while doing too much, to match her.
Kathryn Bigelow’s Oscar winning drama tossed aside the bombastic, jingoistic cliches of war pictures in favor of something more chilling.
Damon Gameau’s look at what the planet will be like when his daughter reaches adulthood is a swift, engaging doc despite its cornier moments.
A surprisingly insightful, sensitive entry in the MCU explores Tony Stark’s battle with guilt & PTSD.
Vin Diesel nicely keys into more stoic shootouts, but the movie around him can’t weld together its medley of genre inspirations.
Charles Dickens’ classic holiday story gets the grim, Peaky Blinders treatment.
Barbie, Freaks, ALF, and much more!
New films by Julie Taymor, Dee Rees, and Justin Simien mix with fascinating new docs and debut features in our list of Sundance 2020 must-sees.
Drew Pearce’s pulpy near-future potboiler about a futuristic hotel/hospital for bad guys lets its stacked cast have fun amongst some shaky plotting. This piece was originally posted on Alcohollywood Grungy, retro sci-fi seems to be making a comeback the last few years – cyberpunk potboilers whose scripts wouldn’t be out of place in a direct-to-video … Hotel Artemis Review: A Grungy Sci-Fi Shoot-’em-Up With a Five-Star Staff