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  • Film , Film & TV , Review

Review: Stunning and Slightly Sickening, Caveat Marks One Helluva Feature Filmmaking Debut

Caveat

In Caveat, the stunning and slightly sickening feature debut from writer-director Damian McCarthy, a man named Isaac (Jonathan French) wakes up with partial memory loss and is a bit adrift in […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • June 2, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It Replicates the Franchise’s Style But Lacks its Heart, Real Scares

    The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It

    In many ways, I consider the first two existing Conjuring movies the gold standard of horror movies. By casting Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson as real-life paranormal investigators Lorraine and […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • June 1, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Two Teens Hit the Road for Birth Control in Contemporary, Funny Plan B

    Plan B

    Although the structure of the central friendship is remarkably similar to that in Book Smart, and the storyline somewhat resembles Never Rarely Sometimes Always, Plan B, the latest directing effort […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 28, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Funhouse Creates a Reality Show of Death With a Cast Too Large to Invest In

    Funhouse

    Without meaning to alarm anyone, we have not run out of Skarsgårds on this planet yet. Valter Skarsgård (Lords of Chaos) stars as Kasper Nordin, a recently dumped former backup […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 28, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Practical Gore and Sheer Audacity Make Skull: The Mask A Highly Watchable Horror Film

    Skull The Mask

    My knowledge of Brazilian genre films is…we’ll call it limited. But after watching the latest from writers/director Armando Fonseca and Kapel Furman (2016’s Uptake Fear), I’m game for just about […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 27, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Disney Aims to Create a Following for Cruella; Barely Manages More than Great Costumes

    Cruella

    On the surface, there’s nothing terribly objectionable about the idea to make a film centered on the villain of Disney’s classic animated feature One Hundred and One Dalmatians. Cruella De Vil […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 26, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Final Account Records a Time and Mindset That Proves a Cautionary Tale for Today

    Final Account

    There will likely be some people who question the need for a film that collects stories of the Holocaust and Nazism from the German perspective. But director Luke Holland (who […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 22, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Tiny Tim: King for a Day Recounts the Odd Musician’s Brief but Robust Fame and Influence

    Tiny Tim

    If the name Herbert Butros Khaury doesn’t ring a bell, fear not: the Manhattan-born musician popular in the 1960s and ’70s was better known by his stage name, Tiny Tim. […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 22, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: From Survivors to Activists, Us Kids Follows Teens Determined to Change Country’s Gun Laws

    Us Kids

    It may be understandably difficult to watch a film like Us Kids, as it not only recounts some of the most horrific mass school shootings of recent memory but unblinkingly confronts […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 22, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Meaningless Brutality and Bloodshed Muddle Whatever Message is at the Center of New Order

    New Order

    Michel Franco’s New Order (or Nuevo Orden in its original Spanish) traveled quite the prestige film festival circuit last year, premiering at the Venice Film Festival and subsequently included in the Toronto […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • May 22, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: A Town in Decline Gets a Shot at First Place in Feel-Good, if Lightweight, Dream Horse

    Dream Horse

    A few months ago, in my review of the Netflix drama The Dig, I discussed my love of a certain type of British film that was popular in the 1990s. […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 21, 2021
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Australian Crime Drama The Dry Solves Two Mysteries in the Midst of Drought and Despair

    The Dry

    It’s been four years since I’ve seen actor Eric Bana in a film, and the film was one (Guy Ritchie’s appalling King Arthur: Legend of the Sword) I didn’t even […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • May 21, 2021
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