Boyle’s addiction to the cinematic image is as unremitting as Renton’s love affair with the spike.
The film finds pitch-black humor, horror, tragedy, and violence in a series of asides and digressions.
T2 seeks to recreate its forbear’s blend of grime, bliss, rebellion, and cynicism in a more globalized Scotland.
Compared to its predecessor, director Danny Boyle’s T2 Trainspotting is a relatively aimless and sedate experience.
California Solo can’t keep pace with its main character.
The show’s long-term success rests in the hands of at least one anchoring character with which the audience can relate to.
Time has been exceedingly kind to Boyle’s excellent breakthrough film and Lionsgate has done a great job preserving it on Blu-ray.
Antonia Bird’s Ravenous is an exciting, new kind of gothic horror film.
28 Weeks Later rolls in like a poisonous dust cloud of nihilism.
The fantastical milieu of Eragon may be third-class Lord of the Rings, but its story is pure Star Wars.
There’s dancing all right but not a whole lot of charm.
Some very good actors speak in some very funny voices in Marilyn Hotchkiss’ Ballroom Dancing and Charm School.
Mad props for Meat Loaf getting blown to pieces.