It would take a holy miracle to salvage Father Stu
Mark Wahlberg and director Rosalind Ross can’t make this faith-based drama work.
Mark Wahlberg and director Rosalind Ross can’t make this faith-based drama work.
Antoine Fuqua directs Mark Wahlberg in a tired load of action nonsense.
Peter Berg and Mark Wahlberg’s latest exercise in macho posturing is both aesthetically and thematically ugly.
Engage in holiday self-care with some movies that put a stake in the heart of romance.
If, for whatever reason, you find yourself missing the foul-mouthed sentient teddy bear Ted (Seth MacFarlane), then you’re in luck: Peacock is set to premiere a prequel series following life with Ted and his pal John (Max Burkholder, previously Mark Wahlberg) in 1990s Massachusetts. The premise is simple: John is struggling to fit in his … How to Watch Ted
Because in the world of streaming, nothing lasts forever.
Shyamalan’s eco-horror misfire almost ended his career, but 15 years later, the film comes off more as a goofy cult classic than box office bomb.
Despite a strong lead performance from Tom Holland, this video game adaptation doesn’t fully escape the curse of its forebears.
Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest won’t be available in wide release until the end of December, so in the meantime here are a handful of movies that also capture that unique lurid sunniness of 70s & 80s Southern California to tide you over.
PSH makes the most out of sparse screentime in Paul Thomas Anderson’s 1997 classic.
With his 2001 epic, Michael Bay solidified himself as an all-American auteur, as well as the bombastic concept of Bayhem.
Soleil Moon Frye directs this bittersweet albeit breezy look back at the Hollywood teen stars of the ’90s, and their difficult road to now.
Now 10 years old, Adam McKay’s screwball screed against Wall Street is hindered by being a cop-centric affair.
Patrick Vollrath’s feature debut shifts from Hitchcockian claustrophobia to tone-deaf xenophobia.
Hanna-Barbera gives Scooby-Doo a superpowered reboot and loses most of its charm along the way.
Jonathan Demme’s remake of Charade marks a low point in his career from casting and acting to pacing and direction.
The blue blur’s sequel rolls around at the speed of sound to the tune of messy but often fun results.
Paramount’s adaptation of the mega-hit video game series shines when digging into the Master Chief’s long-suppressed sense of self and the schemes of the galaxy’s power players.
For better or for worse, Lawrence Kasdan’s adaptation of Dreamcatcher captures the strange, ambitious essence of a Stephen King novel.