Mike Tyrkus

An independent filmmaker, co-writer and director of over a dozen short films, the Editor in Chief of CinemaNerdz.com has spent much of the last three decades as a writer and editor specializing in biographical and critical reference sources in literature and the cinema, beginning in February 1991 reviewing films for his college newspaper. He was a member of the Detroit Film Critics Society, as well as the group's webmaster and one-time President for over a decade until the group ceased to exist. His contributions to film criticism can be found in Magill's Cinema Annual, VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever (of which he was the editor for nearly a decade until it too ceased to exist), the International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, and the St. James Film Directors Encyclopedia (on which he collaborated with editor Andrew Sarris). He has also appeared on the television program Critic LEE Speaking alongside Lee Thomas of FOX2 and Adam Graham, of The Detroit News. He currently lives in the Detroit area with his wife and their dogs.

Movie Review: The Trial of the Chicago 7

Over half a century has passed since the events portrayed in the outstanding courtroom drama from Netflix, The Trial of the Chicago 7, took place and, given the current politically charged times, our relationship with authority and authoritarian rule hasn’t gotten any less prickly. When first envisioned, the protest accompanying the Democratic National Convention in 1968, was intended to be a peac...[Read More]

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The War with Grandpa Takes the Box-Office Weekend

Audiences returned to movie theaters this weekend and the winner was the new family comedy from 101 Studios and Brookdale Studios, The War with Grandpa, starring Robert De Niro and Oakes Fegley. The film debuted at the top of the box office over the weekend with $3.6 million. Check out a new clip from the film above. In a distant second-place, well a full $1.5 million behind The War with Grandpa a...[Read More]

Movie Review: The War with Grandpa

It is a sad state of affairs indeed, when a boy and his grandfather must do battle due to their shared claim over a little thing like a bedroom. But, that is exactly the premise of the new comedy The War with Grandpa, that stars Robert De Niro and Oakes Fegley respectively as the grandfather and grandson. But, make no mistake, there is very little that is actually funny in this film. It starts off...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Tenet

Even though it may be the most anticipated theatrical opening of the past year, especially given that we are ourselves caught in a bewildering pandemic reality wherein each one of us we may tend to question what exactly is reality these days, the fact that writer/director Christopher Nolan’s long-awaited Tenet is both equally remarkable and utterly confounding, yet somehow entirely forgettable, ma...[Read More]

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Movie Review: The Glorias

Director Julie Taymor’s often entertaining, yet occasionally whimsical, biography of the feminist icon Gloria Steinem, The Glorias, covers over eighty years of Steinem’s amazing and remarkable life. A feat that is achieved by the portrayal of the subject by no less than four distinctly original actresses at four disparate periods of Steinem’s story. Crafted from Steinem’s memoir, My Life on the Ro...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Kajillionaire

At first glance, writer/director Miranda July’s film Kajillionaire may seem like a stark commentary on the times as well as a sardonic look at the familial dynamic in the twenty-first century, but there is a lot more to unpack in the filmmaker’s third theatrical offering. Aided by a stellar performance from Evan Rachel Wood, Kajillionaire manages to create a snapshot of a specific moment in histor...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Enola Holmes

With Enola Holmes, Netflix seems hopeful to establish a franchise based on the teenaged sister of super detective Sherlock Holmes, as portrayed by Millie Bobby Brown. The fact that she herself is a similarly gifted, if not more so, detective in her own right as her sibling only adds to the charm and likability of the character, and the film as a whole. Enola Holmes (Brown) sets out on her sixteent...[Read More]

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Movie Review: The Way I See It

The captivating new documentary, The Way I See It, chronicles the years that photographer Pete Souza spent as the White House Staff Photographer—first, briefly under Ronald Reagan, and then Barack Obama (though it mostly focuses on the Obama years)—and then on a tour promoting his bestselling book from 2018, Shade: A Tale of Two Presidents. Following the Obama presidency, Souza became a celebrity ...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Antebellum

The provocative and timely thriller/pseudo horror film Antebellum arrives at a particularly divisive time in American history that, perhaps mirrors the period it depicts so splendidly onscreen. As the country struggles to finds its moral way amidst a tide of social change that seems to be pushing the ideals of the Constitution aside for those of individuals, this film serves as a reminder of exact...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Rent-A-Pal

Although the new thriller, Rent-A-Pal, is an occasionally encouraging debut feature from director Jon Stevenson, it fails to succeed fully on enough levels that it leaves less on the table for this particular outing than it does setting the table for the director’s next endeavor, whatever that may be. Set in a dreary Denver, Colorado in the early 1990s, Rent-A-Pal follows David (Brian Landis Folki...[Read More]

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Movie Review: I’m Thinking of Ending Things

There is a certain cinematic gravitas associated with the name Charlie Kaufman when it appears in the credits either before or after the title of a film. He has, after all, delivered some of the more stunning screenplays of the past couple decades (films like Being John Malkovich [1999], Adaptation [2002], and Anomalisa [2015] are particular highlights). So, it is a bit disappointing then that his...[Read More]

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Movie Review: Centigrade

Even though the new thriller, Centigrade, is beset by a few issues that prevent it from being a truly great entry to the genre, it is still a tremendously effective exploration of the effects a fight for survival has on a relationship that perhaps is not as strong as was initially thought. The scene is set somewhat simplistically as a young American couple, Matthew (Vincent Piazza) and pregnant Na...[Read More]

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