A you-too-can-make-a-movie movie. All you need is a camera, a willing group of college kids, a makeup kit, and a familiarity with a few horror movies that had no more to work with. This one, which has a better stocked makeup kit than most, and which describes itself as the …
An overexplained nightmare: explanations are what this remake has in place of the anarchic whimsy of the original. Why are the pretty young people going to hang out at a creepy cabin in the woods? Because they're trying to help their friend quit drugs, and this is her childhood getaway. …
Alice is a grieving widow who recently lost her abusive husband, William, in a car accident. Seeking solace, she joins her hostile in-laws at their secluded family home. The family reunion quickly turns into a bloodbath when the demonic infestation spreads, forcing Alice to confront literal and metaphorical demons to …
Two estranged sisters (Lily Sullivan and Alyssa Sutherland) find their big city reunion is cut short by the rise of flesh-possessing demons, thrusting them into a primal battle for survival as they face the most nightmarish version of family imaginable. Executive produced by series creator and Sam Raimi and star …
Takumi and his daughter live in Mizubiki Village, close to Tokyo. One day, the village inhabitants become aware of a plan to build a glamping site near Takumi's house, offering city residents a comfortable escape to nature. Directed by Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, starring Hitoshi Omika, Ryo Nishikawa, and Ryuji Kosaka.
The movies that men do, likewise, live after them, and this one, while not exactly evil, is pretty bad, and not one of the glories of the long careers of Charles Bronson and director J. Lee Thompson, nor even of their short string of mutual collaborations. A litany of grisly …
Was this where the shame began? Or rather, where the shame died and the rage began? Was this when it was all over but the shouting? Because it's been shouting ever since. Morton Downey, Jr. was Colbert before Colbert, or maybe Limbaugh before Limbaugh. It's hard to say.
Derivative and undemanding and slightly diverting s-f spoof to do with a single-cell alien species that touches down in Arizona and evolves at an accelerated rate into computer-animated worms, bugs, lizards, and ultimately, thanks to a massive intake of napalm calories, into a humongous amorphous chewing-gum blob. Foremost among the …
When a post-coital Mieke (Lily James) informs the Nazi spy (Jai Courtney) in her bed that she’s a Jew, what else is there for him to say but “I’m not.” That kind of pillow talk is just one of the more refreshing dialog exchanges in this rousing, old fashioned espionage …
Gimpy romance between the poor little rich girl who has faked her own kidnapping to get Daddy's attention and the car thief who makes off with the BMW in whose trunk she has locked herself. The self-conscious affectations of the stars -- the halting, tremulous line-readings of Benicio Del Toro, …
Four female friends are held hostage in a lakefront mansion by unknown intruders. But as the woman fight back, will they get a taste for violence?
An unassuming, undemanding, and utterly unconvincing disaster thriller, or pending-disaster thriller, to be more exact. We hadn't had an entry in the Airport series since 1979, or significantly ever since the advent of the Airplane! series. This, braving the possible raspberry, serves as a revival. It distinguishes itself from the …