Five women participate in a hiking retreat but only four come out the other side. Federal agents Aaron Falk and Carmen Cooper head into the mountains hoping to find their informant still alive.
Members of the crack narcotics team begin turning up dead, with their windpipes perplexingly crushed, and one of their surviving teammates theorizes, "Maybe it's one of them karate weirdos like in the movies." Enter Chuck Norris, who takes time off from training for his next defense of the middleweight full-contact …
Grind-it-out road comedy about a slightly uptight hunk (Ben Affleck, as loose-limbed as usual) who sows his first and last wild oats between New York City and Savannah, under the guidance of a free-spirited cutenik (Sandra Bullock, the Kerouac of cuteniks), while on his way to his own wedding. The …
No, not the Ben Affleck Sandra Bullock mutual career low point. This is about forces even more devastating. If you can believe that. Volcanoes and earthquakes and stuff.
Come for the metal, stay for the mettle. Because as only-American-to-win-LeMans Carroll Shelby (Matt Damon) tells you at the outset, once you get your snarling, straining beast of a race car up over 7000 rpms, you go to the Race Place, where everything fades away and you’re left with the …
Matt Damon and Christian Bale star as car designer and driver in James Mangold's high octane (we hope) biopic.
Hitchcock's eerie visual gimmicks are not often as catchy as in the early going here: an assassin makes his getaway by slicing a path through a field of umbrellas, and then the hero figures out his hiding place in a windmill conspicuously spinning opposite to its surrounding mills. Mostly polite, …
Jackie Chan stands curbside within inches of an exploding car, yet it’s his daughter inside the store who falls victim to an IRA terrorist attack. Martin Campbell’s implausible staging of the revenge-motivating blast sets the tone for this dopey but nonetheless entertaining goulash of equal parts Death Wish, Taken, and …
Not a total misfire, but this first feature from Jason Zada fails to capitalize on its fine setup, its competent cast, and its exquisite location. Natalie Dormer prettily occupies most of the screen’s time and space as identical twins; thanks to a childhood trauma, one is dark and one is …
The trailer is a two-minute music video. That sould tell you something about this C&W romantic drama.
Something of a cross between Late for Dinner and, oh, let's see, out of unnumbered E.T. imitators, let's pick Starman. Ostensibly an ode to emotional openness and honesty, formulated in terms of a science-fictional gizmo and an unlikely chain of plotmaking convenience. The gizmo -- what looks like a locomotive …