The film builds to the sort of incredible final bout that makes your hairs stand up.
Despite solid performances, the series gets bogged down by turgid pacing and narrative ambiguity.
Ernest & Celestine: A Trip to Gibberitia Review: A Whimsical Tribute to Music and Rebellion
The film serves as an endearing ode to the joy of music.
The film could have really benefited from at least a more dynamic baddie.
The film has the ethereal feel of a half-remembered, mostly pleasant dream.
The show’s fourth season is a mad blend of pop-cultural references and meta-gags, some of which land and some of which don’t.
Travolta’s scenes are islands of tranquility in a jittery sea of rote crime-movie pyrotechnics.
The First Slam Dunk Review: Inoue Takehiko’s Exhilarating Anime Leaves It All on the Court
The film turns a showdown between two basketball teams into an exhilarating experience.
The series proves that it’s still got plenty of life left in it, even after a decade in the deep freeze.
They Cloned Tyrone is a satirical science-fiction story styled as a Blaxploitation film.
The series is buoyed by a sharp script but fails to develop a real sense of momentum.
Mel Eslyn’s film is a thoughtful drama about life, gender, and male friendship.
Aside from the red stuff, the film is scarcely interested in what’s inside its characters.
As a locked-room mystery set 30,000 feet in the air, the series does a decent job of keeping you guessing.
Eva Longoria’s film is simply a 99-minute commercial for the Frito-Lay corporation.
The series is far better when it focuses on its characters’ shenanigans than on social commentary.
The film is an impressively complicated and compassionate drama about shame and desire.
The series is formally playful, deftly balancing its absurdity with healthy doses of sincerity.
Big George Foreman Review: George Tillman Jr.’s Biopic Is a Big Loss for a Boxing Legend
The film stumbles sluggishly from one chapter in Foreman’s life to the next.
The series takes itself a touch too seriously to succeed as a farce but draws its characters too broadly to achieve any real pathos.