The Only Living Boy in New York Review
The Only Living Boy in New York is an engrossing ride filled with insight and intrigue.
The Only Living Boy in New York is an engrossing ride filled with insight and intrigue.
Brigsby Bear simply fails to recognize when to play it straight.
Dunkirk is often jaw-dropping and unforgettable.
A Ghost Story is as thin as the literal white sheet that our ghost wears throughout.
War for the Planet of the Apes is a fitting conclusion to a solid trilogy or a wonderful launching pad for what comes next.
The Beguiled is an uncomfortable and memorable slow burn on the verge of exploding at any time.
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword takes the elegance, mystery, power and romance of a timeless classic and spits on it.
The Wall is a Grandmaster chess match played on a sand-covered, heat-tempered battlefield.
Norman is a flaccid, mediocre bore of a film.
The Lost City of Z is more lost than the fabled city.
The Promise is a land-based version of James Cameron’s Titanic.
The Fate of the Furious capitalizes on stunts and familiar characters and still manages to surprise.