If there ever was a scene-stealing role, the Grand High Witch in Roald Dahl’s “The Witches” would certainly qualify.
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
Amidst the many horror film offerings dumped upon us this time of year, “Come Play” emerges as a cut above the rest.
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
I’d be hard-pressed to think of another film where a director had fashioned a part so attuned to the strengths, stylings and idiosyncrasies of one performer as is the case in Sofia Coppola’s “On the Rocks.”
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“I believe there are very few people in the journalism business today who can actually define the word journalism,” Richard Frank says. “I believe it is a morphing definition, and I think we see it every day.”
It takes a certain degree of fearlessness to be a stand-up comic, and a bit of arrogance as well, I think.
The Ottawa International Animation Festival, North America’s largest animation celebration, like so many other film festivals this year, went online and made other changes to accommodate an audience watching from home.
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
Engaging from first minute to last, Aaron Sorkin’s “The Trial of the Chicago 7” is a captivating look back at one of the seminal events of the 1960s.
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
I suppose everyone is entitled to have a little fun at work. So I’m taking that into account as I come to terms with Robert De Niro’s latest comedic foray, “The War with Grandpa,” a harmless trifle an upstart distributor company is throwing into empty multiplexes in an effort to lure people back.
Continuing the cinematic legacy of his father, David, writer/director Brandon Cronenberg’s “Possessor” looks at the draining of our humanity thanks to the proliferation of technology.
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
Something is seriously wrong at Covington High School. Students are exploding. There’s no rhyme or reason to it.
Tom Dolby’s “The Artist’s Wife” is a movie featuring two character studies — one wholly complete and fully realized, the other done in broad strokes and woefully lacking.
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There’s a great deal going on in Philippa Lowthorpe’s “Misbehaviour.”
About six months after C U Woodshop Supply went out of business, it’s on the way back under two new formats.
Derivative and immature, “Antebellum” is a lazy piece of work, an exploitation film posing as social commentary that aims to enlist the viewer to its noble cause by fanning the flames of righteous indignation.
International police dramas have proliferated on streaming services like Netflix and Amazon Prime, and I’ve written about some of the more interesting series in past columns.
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
Once we experience physical or emotional trauma, it’s always with us. Therapy and other coping strategies my help us get through the day, while various attempts at self-medication, though often ill-advised, shepherd us through the darkest of times.
“When you don’t see someone who looks like you, remember they’re painting you out.” — Mario Martinez
Can you identify the screenshot of this home from a movie or TV show?
Lucy has certain ideas about love. Every boyfriend she’s had was going to be THE ONE! Her former partners used string to bind their relationship together. Lucy used logging chains. Her level of commitment has never matched that of anyone she’s been with, making heartbreak an inevitability. A…
What’s in a name? At least half of the brand names in tech and consumer electronics bear no relation to the people or companies who founded them.
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A vile, nasty piece of work, Derrick Borte’s “Unhinged” is an irresponsible bit of exploitation cinema that couldn’t be released at a more inopportune time.
Warner Bros. was concerned that in releasing Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” in overseas markets first, key plot points would flood the internet, ruining the film’s many secrets.
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