Nuremberg Dir: James Vanderbilt (13th Floor Film Review)
Nuremberg: A thought provoking, exploration of one of history’s most divisive moments.
Nuremberg: A thought provoking, exploration of one of history’s most divisive moments.
Die My Love delivers a visceral, unflinching portrait of postpartum depression and psychosis, anchored by a career-defining performance from Jennifer Lawrence.
Directed by Jon M. Chu and written by Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox, Wicked: For Good covers the second act of the 2003 stage musical — which itself was loosely based on Gregory Maguire’s novel, which was loosely based on L Frank Baum’s book… which is based on, well, Oz.
Unless you’ve been living under a rock, or deep in a creepy forest with no Wi-Fi signal, you’ll be familiar with the eternal “man vs bear” question.
I was 14 years old when I read Stephen King’s The Running Man and it blew my teenage mind.
Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, Bugonia stars Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Stavros Halkias, and Alicia Silverstone, who makes the absolute most of her limited screen time.
Just months after her death comes this film about Marianne Faithfull. Is it a documentary? A biopic? Is it any good? Let’s find out.
Erebus, Cave Creek, White Island, and Pike River. In a country the size of New Zealand, where six degrees of separation is a very real construct, our national disasters are writ large upon the collective psyche.
Roofman gives Channing Tatum the opportunity to show off his acting chops as the real-life spree robber Jeffrey Manchester who relieved a succession of McDonalds franchises of their takings and hid out in a Toys are Us store.
Bruce Springsteen…the Boss? Or dross? Unfortunately this new biopic has me leaning toward the latter.