A Man Called Ove (En man som heter Ove) is a humanist piece of new Sweden cinema originally released in 2015, reminiscent of last year’s excelle...[Read More]
College is a crazy ride. From living on your own for the first time to trying to balance school and a social life, it’s a time of finding out who you ...[Read More]
The Birth of a Nation is so heart-wrenchingly moving. A biography of the emancipation movement that began with Nate Turner, slave and preacher, a char...[Read More]
Alice (Rachel Weisz) is in China cut open by a magician, in an ER room telling a patient to breathe, in Tanzania researching insects, and in a parked ...[Read More]
A couple months ago my friend and I went to go see Lights Out on the opening Friday night. A trailer started playing where it showed a couple of kids ...[Read More]
Morris from America is about xenophobia and stereotypes, bullying, living as expatriates and mourning the death of a wife and mother, but mostly it is...[Read More]
The Big Short was one of the strangest success stories of 2015. It was directed by Adam McKay, the guy who gave us Anchorman and Step Brothers and had...[Read More]
“If you must blink, do it now,” Kubo warns the audience in the first seconds of Kubo and the Two Strings. One of the truest lines to ever open an anim...[Read More]
It can be very difficult to judge a film on its own merits, especially when it is a story that has been retold several times, and when one of those ti...[Read More]
Hell or High Water succeeding in conning me, an innocent bystander, within the first five minutes of the film. As the screen lights up, viewers are im...[Read More]
The Finest Hours is a weak film if you are into true stories. It will not blow you away and there are countless examples of better made historical dis...[Read More]
I thoroughly enjoyed London Has Fallen as a brainless action flick. It might not be as good as the first installment, but it is still an entertaining ...[Read More]