“Dune: Part Two” Movie Review
In “Dune: Part Two,” there are startling developments with its hero that complicate matters for, well, the audience.
In “Dune: Part Two,” there are startling developments with its hero that complicate matters for, well, the audience.
Didn’t get your fill of giant monsters with “Godzilla vs. Kong”? There is the Japanese box office and critical smash, “Shin Godzilla.”
set aside a couple hours in the screaming and the chaos that is surrounding us now and watch The Man Who Killed Hitler And Then The Bigfoot
Heroic deeds have long been the base alloy of cinematic storytelling. Add in a heroic dog, and you have a story that just screams for a Walt Disney Movie.
This is not a super hero movie. There is nobody in a spandex costume. Nobody has super powers. There are minimal special effects.
A (fairly) recent movie asks if God can forgive us for what we’ve done to His creation.
The movie is disturbing. You find yourself sympathetic to her and rooting for her; then you are horrified to realize where Lisa’s desperation has led her.
Even if your arms aren’t full of parental baggage, Noah Baumbach’s “The Meyerowitz Stories” is a must see.
The excellent “Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse” accomplishes something that few superhero movies can manage: it makes us care.
One of the best films of the first half of the year, a sci-fi/horror mashup, is now available on streaming and disc.
The Giant Mechanical Man tackles a subject that Hollywood pretends to care about but actually ignores: falling in love.
I really wanted Man of Steel to be fun movie. And at times, it was. It was worth the matinee price. [Continued at NaPP]