The cinematic cut of BTS: Yet To Come
Prolonged dizzy spell brought on by an ancient Egyptian Soul Sucker who stalks the halls of a Texas rest home till he runs into some stiff opposition from a resident who may or may not be the real Elvis (weighing how he got there, you'd have to guess not) and …
First and foremost a marketing experiment, spearheaded by director Steven Soderbergh, in releasing a film simultaneously in theaters and on cable TV and DVD. Otherwise an exercise in frugality. An hour and a quarter in length. A strummy solo guitar for background music. A chamber-sized ensemble of nonprofessional actors in …
A great documentary portrait. Buck Brannaman, inspiration and advisor for Robert Redford’s The Horse Whisperer, seems able to get inside horses on an intuitive, spiritual level, gentling the animals (except one that is dangerously crazy) as he teaches them and their awed owners. A survivor of paternal brutality, Buck is …
For his first directing try, a yarn about black pioneers. Sidney Poitier seems to have very orderly notions of what he wants to do, especially in the action scenes. Costarring Harry Belafonte with gimmicky bad teeth and Poitier with a gimmicky thunderous gun.
A feel-good death trip, directed by the crowd-coddling Rob Reiner, about two terminal cancer patients, a billionaire WASP and a blue-collar black, who bond as hospital roommates and set out together to do the things and see the sights they never had time for: skydive, car-race, get a tattoo, visit …
Detective Bhamra must navigate through all sorts of misadventures in search of the truth. Directed by Hansal Mehta, starring Kareena Kapoor Khan and Ranveer Brar.
From Adam Sandler and the other schmucks at Happy Madison Productions comes a comedy about a compulsive masturbator who suffers from microphallus. A clueless, virginal dweeb (Nick Swarsdon), whose overbite extends further than his manhood, discovers that Mom and Dad were legendary porn stars and decides to follow suit. Bucky, …
Color-drenched action comedy filmed in Rajasthan, India by writer-director Baoqiang Wang.
True story, incredibly bland in the telling, about an eccentric millionairess who, in the afterglow of the Scopes Trial, attempts to raise chimps and a gorilla as fully constituted, fully clothed members of the family. The parrot in the kitchen gets all the laughs. All two or three. With Rene …