The first season of gets an image/sound presentation that’s practically beyond reproach.
By stripping the gameplay out of a game that’s fleshed out by televisual tropes, the series ends up as mostly just the latter.
The overriding despair of Winter’s War’s imagery calls into question who, exactly, the film is for.
The Hangover Part III is a sequel every bit as disposable as its predecessor.
Director Seth Gordon knows not just where to point the spotlight, but when to relinquish the reins.
The Hangover Part II is something like the contents of a fraternity house’s toilet the morning after an insane kegger.
The film panders to those short on memory as if its central inspiration, Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man, were just released last week.
The film is scary all right, usually for all the wrong reasons.
The Scary Movie franchise seems well on its way to becoming as indestructible as Jason Voorhees or Freddy Krueger.
Okay, so the scene where Pamela Anderson talks to Jennie McCarthy’s severed head is kind of funny, but that’s about it.
Even the usually reliable Leslie Nielsen looks baffled by his involvement in this dud.