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Review: The 15:17 To Paris Fails On A Fundamental Level
Some true stories cry out to be adapted into film. They're filled with acts of heroism, insurmountable odds and exciting stories, all the...


Review: The Cloverfield Paradox, In Space, No One Can Hear You Reason
The Cloverfield Paradox continues the now trilogies bizarre tradition of having little to nothing to do with a found footage monster...


Review: 10 Cloverfield Lane Is A Great Thriller, Right Up Until It Isn't
A bad ending can break a movie. The ending of 10 Cloverfield Lane came all to close. Following a car crash, Michelle (Mary Elizabeth...


Review: Cloverfield Is A Monster Movie From A Different Perspective
I hate found footage. Almost all of it in fact. They're lazy, messy and usually boring. Somehow, Cloverfield isn't. A big monster attacks...


Review: Altered Carbon, The Hardcore Blade Runner
The latest and greatest series from streaming giant Netflix is packed with cool tech, brutal violence and excessive depravity, and it's...


Review: Den Of Thieves, An Overly Short Mess That Could Have Been Something Good
Clocking in at 2 hours and 20 minutes, Den Of Thieves, already a long film, feels like it's missing at least half an hour of footage,...


Review: Bullet Head Explores The Real Monsters
Pitched as Reservoir Dogs by way of Cujo, Bullet Head is quite blatantly neither of these. Stacy (Adrien Brody), Walker (John Malkovich)...


Review: The Commuter Is More Than Taken On A Train
From the director of the best shark movie since Jaws and Taken on a plane comes an enjoyable thriller with a bit too much Hollywood for...


Review: The Shape Of Water Is So Weird It's Great
The master of monsters, Guillermo Del Toro, brings romance between an Amazonian fishman and a mute woman. Ladies and gentlemen, things...


Review: Darkest Hour Is All Oldman
Winston Churchill is one of, if not the most, recognizable British leaders in both reality and with the world of film. Everyone from...
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