YouTube giveth stardom. But what doth YouTube taketh away? Directed by Jon M. Chu (G.I. Joe: Retaliation).
Cue the TV announcer: “A small town family, deep in denial, is rocked to find a lesbian among them in Gidget Goes Sappho, or ‘Who ordered the Katherine Heigl Gay Marriage project?’” It starts with a strong supporting cast reciting reasonably authentic dialog, but this isn’t the first time Mary …
The Chinese superhero parody film featuring JCVD that you've been waiting for!
Internet-famous youngsters set out to become movie-famous via this road trip movie. Brian Klein directs.
A handsome lad heads off to college. Will he forget his high-school crush? Will she forget him? Directed by Janet Chun. Subtitled.
Writer-director David O. Russell serves notice that there have always been multi-generational stories of strong women who figure out how to make their way in a so-called man’s world — on television soap operas. He even helpfully opens this (based-on-a-true) story of one woman’s (Jennifer Lawrence) struggle to become the …
How can something so busy be so boring? Maybe it's because the Wachowskis have officially begun cannibalizing their own work. Way back in 1999, The Matrix gave us a Chosen One who gets introduced to a reality entirely beyond his experience, a reality based on a terrifying premise: humanity reduced …
Director Colin Trevorrow dumps out his Steven Spielberg Family Thriller Kit and makes sure all the pieces are there: squabbling siblings (young and old!), divorce, kids in peril, endearing childlike wonder vs. the threat posed by self-serving grownups, moral musings on science and nature, and oh yes, dinosaurs. Lots and …
The story of a man who sought to forgive the man who killed his family.
A longtime married couple agree to blind date each other in an effort to rekindle the romance.
With its opening splash of decidedly Disney water rippling in the wake of an artist’s paintbrush, The Prophet boldly announces its intentions: director Roger Allers (The Lion King) aims to out-Disney Disney on their own turf. Given the animation giant’s recent slate of non-Pixar related big-screen babysitters, this sumptuous, old …
"We're all niggers now," says bruised Georgia peach Augusta (Brit Marling), early on in Daniel Barber's (Harry Brown) rather literal take on Sherman's rape of the South. What she means is, when the menfolk are gone and the living's precarious, everybody's got to pitch in and do the dirty work, …
What are you doing for Thanksgiving? You know — after dinner? How about watching Judi Dench in Shakespeare's A Winter's Tale? Beats football.