Category: Streaming

Total 176 Posts

‘Rez Ball’ Film Review: Grief Becomes Hope

Rez Ball is a beautiful, moving, and encouraging that tells its powerful true tale with respect and dedication to the Navajo nation and to all Native American and First Nations people.

‘Sleep’ Film Review: An Involving and Inescapable Nightmare

An eerie and atmospheric new horror film that becomes a layered and inescapable waking nightmare

‘Night of the Harvest’ Film Review: A Fun Slasher Throwback

A gruesomely entertaining beginning to this year’s spooky movie season.

‘Agatha All Along’ Series Review: A Spookily Entertaining Witches Brew

A visually captivating, darkly comedic, spooky cauldron of fun that is a tribute the witchy television shows and films that have thrilled genre fans throughout the decades. A gift for the talented Kathryn Hahn.

‘Omni Loop’ Film Review: Life, Love, and Time Travel

The great Mary-Louise Parker gets her own Groundhog Day, albeit with a Science Fiction slant in Bernardo Britto’s Omni Loop. Written by the director, this is a clever and heartfelt work full of interesting ideas, big emotion, and just the

‘His Three Daughters’ Film Review: A Moving Examination of Grief

Azazel Jacobs’ quietly moving chamber piece, His Three Daughters, begins with a monologue that will set the cadence of the film. Katie (Carrie Coon) is the oldest of three sisters who have convened in their dying father’s (Jay O. Sanders)

‘Rebel Ridge’ Film Review: A Wire-Tight, Unique, Thriller

Writer-director Jeremy Saulnier knows how to craft suspense. His 2007 debut feature, Murder Party, was a fun low-budget horror comedy that was filled with film references. It was a wild picture, but tightly designed. With 2013’s Blue Ruin, 2015’s Green

‘The Killer’ Film Review: A John Woo Classic Reimagined by Woo Himself

With this year’s The Killer, legendary filmmaker John Woo remakes one of his finest. His 1989 blood and bullets masterpiece of the same name is widely (and rightfully) regarded as one of the great action pictures. Redoing such a beloved

‘The Omicron Killer’ Film Review: Low-Budget Slasher Fun

For horror purists, there is nothing like a good old-fashioned slasher movie. A little blood, a lot of victims, and a mad killer makes the perfect slasher stew. Director Jeff Knite (who co-wrote the screenplay with Paugh Shadow and Johnny

‘Happy Campers’ Film Review: A Tender Tribute to Community

Deserving mention alongside Errol Morris’ wonderful 1981 documentary, Vernon, Florida, Amy Nicholson’s Happy Campers is an empathetic and heartfelt film. The doc is an empathetic and moving celebration of community. Nicholson examines the lives of the people who reside (seasonally)