GHOST LIGHT Review
Ghost Light squanders what goodwill its cast builds up on a confused deluge of lackluster plots.
Ghost Light squanders what goodwill its cast builds up on a confused deluge of lackluster plots.
The restrained twistedness of Kindred Spirits makes an impact.
The scariest part about Deadcon is the social media influencers it portrays.
After a promising start, Belzebuth descends into demonic balderdash.
An overwhelmingly stagnant watch from beginning to end.
Glenn Danzig’s VEROTIKA is an amazingly bad film primed for Midnight Movie greatness.
Plus One finds the heart and hilarity in taking on the chaotic onslaught of wedding season with cringey glee.
It's undeniably messy, but there's enough comedic heft here to make it a good time at the movies.
While 1991’s Double Impact may not be his most critical or commercially successful title, its release helped cement Van Damme as a bona fide action star.
If you’re in the market for some intense ’80s camp, then look no further than the largely unknown little thriller Trapped Alive (originally titled Forever Mine) from 1988, now on Arrow Video Blu-ray.
Despite the promise of a fiery conclusion with Dark Phoenix, it instead fizzles out with no gas left in the tank.
From the film’s gorgeous opening sequence, it quickly becomes clear that Joe Talbot’s The Last Black Man in San Francisco is going to be something special.
Promising sex, murder and revenge, Drew Barnhardt’s Rondo, I can say, does indeed deliver on those three things. How well those three things are executed, however, is an entirely different matter.
#Like is a well intentioned thriller that plays with themes we’ve seen many times over in recent years but lacks a cohesive structure to convey the weight in which it intends.
The Perfection could inspire a meme called “Netflix and recoil,” and that’s mostly a good thing.