Star Wars Jedi: Survivor tells a story of great power and complexity.
At its best, the show’s second season is a frustrating reinforcement of the previous season’s problems.
Andor has all the scruffy charm and boundless raw potential of its eponymous main character.
Star Wars: Visions refreshes the Star Wars universe with an eclectic range of styles and tones and a subversive streak.
Star Wars Squadrons proves that last year’s excellent Jedi: Fallen Order was no fluke.
Fallen Order is powerful in ways that Star Wars hasn’t been in video game form in over a decade.
Throughout, the exhilaration of gameplay takes a backseat to the gaping Sarlacc-like maw of unadulterated greed.
It too often fails to examine how the long shadow cast by Star Wars affected its its background actors’ lives.
Those desperate for a way to stay busy will find a seemingly inexhaustible number of grains of gameplay here.
The data reveals that anticipation for the film is reaching something closer to outright hysteria.
On paper, Advanced Warfare is the best kind of step forward, taking any semblance of our modern world out of the equation.
Outside of the earnest and grounding turn by Warwick Davis, the characters and accompanying performances are uniformly maladroit.
From the animated to the animalistic, the perfect to the perverse, this list is one royally diverse bunch.
Since Drew Struzan is a god to a whole generation of genre nerds, his forthcoming bio-doc has been a hit at Comic-Con and the like.
Even two years ago, when they started, he could imagine a game that would be a new standard in interactive entertainment.
Here’s a list of 15 memorable movie ledges, from cliffs to rooftops to ominous subway platforms.
It’s ironic that the talking-heads interviews in Alex Stapleton’s documentary feel so self-conscious.
Full Frame Documentary Film Festival 2011: Corman’s World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel
Roger Corman has had as much influence over modern Hollywood as Spielberg or Scorsese, and for good reason.
Fortunately, almost all of the bullshit cutscenes are skippable, and if the only thing you want from a Star Wars FPS is to slash your way through Lucas-scapes, dropping bodies, and smashing AT-ATs, this is the game.
The People vs. George Lucas is entertaining even when it’s just exploring the filmmaker’s relationship with his rebellious army of fans.