Movie Review: Memory
Memory, the newest drama from writer-director Michel Franco and starring Jessica Chastain and Peter Sarsgaard, is a scene around halfway through that draws attention...
Movie Review : Til Death Do Us Part
From Nobody to Gunpowder Milkshake, many films have attempted to capitalise on hidden assassin organisations and tragic protagonists yearning to shift away from a...
Movie Review: Palm Trees and Power Lines
The coming-of-age picture may be a flexible genre to work within on the big screen. This is true not just in the sense that...
Movie Review – Temporaries
Cinema, being a kind of art, may be utilized for a variety of reasons. A film can entertain or move an audience, but it...
Movie Review: Afire
There are not many things in this world that are more destructive to the human soul than unfulfilled promises of love. The most recent...
Movie Review: Mother, Couch
To begin, there is an unavoidable element in Niclas Larsson's debut picture Mother, Couch that feels progressively similar to Beau is Afraid. The particular...
Movie Review: Restore Point
Humanity's understanding of medical and computer technology has grown so swiftly in the last several decades that we now worry about what will happen...
Movie Review: Blue Beetle
DC isn't normally concerned about the small guy. While Marvel has many underdogs who rise to become heroes, DC's superheroes are more comparable to...
Movie Review – History of the World: Part II
The Kent-Lane family relocates from Metropolis to Clark Kent's hometown of Smallville at the beginning of the television series Superman & Lois, which airs...
Movie Review: Painkiller
Watching Netflix's drama Painkiller is odd — but not in the strange way it intended. Those who have seen the story of how the...