Tag: Movie Review
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‘Moonlight’: A Retrospective on Barry Jenkins’ Masterpiece
Barry Jenkins’ masterpiece holds up as the story of a lifetime centered on the intersection of Blackness and gay identity.
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Halle Sings Her Heart Out in ‘The Little Mermaid’ But Ursula Gets ‘Drag’ged Without Nuance
Disney’s live-action remake is vibrant and beautiful, with updated music and classic enthusiasm, but it fails to push the envelope and provide nuance for Ursula.
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Revisiting ‘Rocketman’
Falling in love with ‘Rocketman” all over again.
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Incluvie Classics: Strong Women and Gender Expression in Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho.”
Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 film “Pyscho” is an American film classic that still resonates today.
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Mortal Kombat: Scorpion’s Revenge Gives Fans a Gory Good Time
Ever since the mid-’90s, the Mortal Kombat game franchise has seen multiple attempts to make it on the big screen, or at least adapted into other media.
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Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens…Safe Start to a Promising Sequel Trilogy!
The Force Awakens is A New Hope 2.0, in essence. The story structure is virtually unchanged, marking a safe opening to the new trilogy.
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Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi. The Best Post-Disney Star Wars Film
I love The Last Jedi. I don’t think there has been a Star Wars movie in quite some time that brought something new, something fresh to the table.
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‘Luther: The Fallen Sun’, Idris Elba’s Netflix Vehicle, Fails to Make the Point
By undermining the appeal and credibility of black characters, the show compromises the very idea of diversity and representation it sets to promote.
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“Birds of Prey” and the Fantabulous Emancipation from the DCEU
Birds of Prey has some of the best stunt work and choreography of 2020, and was the most fun I’d had in an action film since John Wick 3.
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Just Mercy: An Admirable Picture
In all actuality, “Just Mercy” should be labeled a “wall punching narrative.” Constantly, the flick throws high forms of adversity our way, amping up our most inner levels of discomfort. Filmmaker Destin Daniel Cretton wonderfully paces the film in such a way that replicates the slow-burn nature of justice.