The film’s aura of sincere, uncomplicated Americana can be intoxicating and hard to resist.
Jaume Collet-Serra’s remake of House of Wax is a nostalgia trip worth taking for fans of noughties horror.
The violence of Jennifer Kent’s film doesn’t seem to build upon its themes so much as repeat them.
The film is Quentin Tarantino’s magnum opus, a sweeping statement on an entire generation of American popular culture.
Director Josh Lawsom dips his toe into the water, checking its temperature, but he doesn’t dive in.
One expects the requisite allusions to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, but an homage to the best scene in Melvin and Howard comes as something of a shock.
Fox’s handsome, if close to barren, two-disc Blu-ray set is just what the vet ordered.
There’s something incredibly strange, frantic, and amazing about Dewey stumbling his way through Lexington trying to raise the money to buy back his own kidneys.
The theme of bloodlines newly woven and long-kindred continues to run through Justified like an un-damable river.
The fragile human body, aging or ailing, has been a favorite theme of director Clint Eastwood at least as far back as 1973’s Breezy.
Heroin is bad and, if used for an extended period of time, will ruin your life.
Nothing here is very fleshed-out, but it really does seem as if Jaume Collet-Serra had a lot of fun making this thing.