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  • Film , Film & TV , Review

Review: Though Familiar, A Quiet Place Part II Scares and Surprises Enough To Warrant A Big Screen Experience

A Quiet Place 2

The justification for making A Quiet Place Part II is simple: the first film was about what brave and strong parents Lee and Evelyn Abbott (real-life married couple John Krasinski […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 19, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: In Perfumes, an Unlikely Friendship Helps Two Lost Souls Find Their Way Forward

    Perfumes

    A doyenne of French cinema teams up with a relatively new French filmmaker and the result is something entirely French and entirely charming. Perfumes (or the more French Les Parfums) is a […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 16, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: New Filmmaking Duo Centers Horror Film The Djinn on Emotions as Much as on Scares

    The Djinn

    The Djinn is the kind of movie that proves that big budgets and a marquee cast are sometimes just icing on the independent filmmaking cake and that a perfectly entertaining […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 14, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Amy Adams Deserves Better than the Messy Mystery at the Center of The Woman in the Window

    Woman in the Window

    It’s always disappointing when a film doesn’t live up to expectations; it’s exponentially worse when that film comes from a filmmaker who is clearly capable of great things on screen. […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 14, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Barely a Saw Movie at All, Spiral Disappoints Across the Board

    Spiral

    My brain is still attempting to understand how Spiral is a Saw movie at all. Okay yes, it takes place in the same universe as the original Jigsaw killings. And […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 14, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: The Killing of Two Lovers Goes Deep Inside Its Character’s Trauma, Heartache and Struggle

    Killing of Two Lovers

    This is a good week for films with captivating opening sequences. In the latest work from Robert Machoian, The Killing of Two Lovers, we open with an image of David […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 13, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: In Profile, an Undercover Journalist Embeds in a World of Extremism and Human Trafficking

    Profile

    From frequently kinetic action director Timur Bekmambetov (Night Watch, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter; Wanted) comes a film that is much more about igniting your synapsis from anxiety and dread than […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 13, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Angelina Jolie May Be the Weakest Part of an Otherwise Often Thrilling Those Who Wish Me Dead

    Those Who Wish Me Dead

    A B-movie disguised as something more grandiose, Those Who Wish Me Dead is a work with great dramatic potential but far too many instances of false emotions and the wrong […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 13, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: A Massive Cast, Countless Zombies and Even Father-Daughter Drama in Zack Snyder’s Army of the Dead

    Army of the Dead

    A brief introduction that involves a super-zombie escaping from a military convoy leaving Area 51 establishes that this latest cinematic zombie outbreak is somehow contained to the city of Las […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 12, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Caught in a Cryogenic Chamber, a Scientist Fights for Her Life in Oxygen

    Oxygen

    A true French master of horror, Alexandre Aja (High Tension, The Hills Have Eyes remake, and most recently Crawl) has never shied away from extreme levels of gore and fear. […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 12, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: A Monarch’s Worth Story Is Muddled in Over-Written, if Well-Acted, Queen Marie

    Queen Marie

    Western monarchies in the modern world are a tricky institution, to say the least. Over in England, the Queen is certainly having a rocky time of it recently, even as […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 11, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Moments of Depth and Female Friendship at the Center of Entertaining Debut Feature Film What Lies West

    What Lies West

    There is nothing more problematic than a college diploma. At least, that’s one of the messages I gathered from writer/director Jessica Ellis’s feature film debut, What Lies West, the tale […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 11, 2021
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