The film exhibits the telltale signs of a series struggling to justify its existence.
John Wick: Chapter 4 Review: Keanu Reeves’s Assassin Kills Again in Marvel-Sized Sequel
If anything, the film proves that John Wick is doomed to further Marvelization.
One of the great animated films of the 21st century looks utterly dazzling on this UHD release.
The hot streak for Irish animation studio Cartoon Saloon cools with My Father’s Dragon.
This is a game where the triumphs come from tiny marvels of efficiency and careful planning rather than kinetic skill.
If the movie has the ring of a high school or college reunion, that’s because that’s pretty much what it’s like.
The choreography is as brutal as you expect, but the repetition in style from the first two films makes the effect less surprising.
In its second season, the show’s leisurely road trip downshifts into a total lethargy.
Bilal: A New Breed of Hero’s animation feels like the result of the cold calculus of an algorithm.
It’s time for the series to push beyond thematic foreplay and embrace the flawed and terrifying present tense.
A worthy escalation of its predecessor’s sleek charm, John Wick: Chapter 2 is the finest action film since Mad Max: Fury Road.
In American Gods, deities work in a fashion similar to that of politicians, as both bedazzle the public.
The episode satirically equates exposition to sales as necessary binding agents of contemporary life.
The notion of transcendence runs through the latest episode of American Gods as a thematic thread.
The episode is deeply critical of America, yet offers a glance toward the possibility of salvation.
Like many pilot episodes, the premiere of American Gods mows through a wealth of exposition.
The film remarkably balances its predecessor’s spartan characterizations and plotting with an expansion of scale.
Gonzalo López-Gallego’s direction isn’t confident enough to allow us to ignore The Hollow Point’s contrivances.
When Game of Thrones leans on its history, it takes on a resonance rarely found in fantasy.
The entire world of Ray Donovan feels typified by nothing more than pent-up machismo.