Archives: Movie Reviews
Movie Reviews.
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Recent Posts
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Movies Back In Mattituck: Beloved Cinema Reopens With First-Run Films
Posted on: Nov. 14, 2024
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After Trump Win, Hollywood Prepares for Megamergers – and Volatility
Posted on: Nov. 08, 2024
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Disney’s Earnings Outlook Rises as Streaming Unit Posts Gains
Posted on: Nov. 14, 2024
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Movie Review – Gladiator II
Posted on: Nov. 11, 2024
Marcos Almada
Marcos Almada is a children’s book author, illustrator and filmmaker. He has created characters such as Oscar the Possum and Domingo Teporingo, as well as those starring in Dr. Gecko’s Show, a TV series developed by CONACYT and INMEGEN. Alongside producer and animator Carlos Azcuaga, he has directed and written several short films such as We Were Colors for Canal 22 and We, an animated documentary short about the earthquake in Mexico City in 2017. In the meantime, he has brought animation, ilustration and literature workshops to children in communities all across Mexico.
Read More >>The Flash
The first and last 10 minutes demonstrate the winning superhero saga this might have been, but the middle two hours are devoted to sloppy, shameless fan service.
Read More >>Transformers: Rise of the Beasts
It might be damning with faint praise, but this reboot finds more fun (and visual coherence) in the toy robots than the five earlier efforts directed by Michael Bay.
Read More >>Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
Breathtaking maximalism, for fans of ‘RRR’ and ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ (not to mention the previous animated Spider-Man movie).
Read More >>Hounds
A taught failed caper story with film noir elements set during a long night amongst the underbelly of Casablanca, well-paced and grittily shot.
Read More >>Salem
A powerful, at times remarkable sophomore feature from Jean-Bernard Marlin that takes the usual “Romeo and Juliet” plot, drops it into the projects of Marseille, and then widens its scope with a story of an apocalyptical plague and magical redemption.
Read More >>The Old Oak
After angry, affecting portraits of northern England’s working class families in his previous two films, director Ken Loach travels to a former mining village where Syrian refugees are being resettled, to tell a moving but more generic, less engaging story than its predecessors.
Read More >>La Chimera
The latest wondrous creation from Italian filmmaker Alice Rohrwacher casts Josh O’Connor as a grave robber in 1980s Etruria.
Read More >>In Our Day
The latest feature from South Korean auteur Hong Sangsoo, a rather slender drama, closed the Directors’ Fortnight.
Read More >>Perfect Days
In this low-key but charming Cannes competition contender, German art-house veteran Wim Wenders delivers a poetic paean to Zen and the art of toilet maintenance.
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